Asda has agreed a landmark technology partnership with Ocado that will reshape how millions shop for groceries online, promising more delivery options and a faster, smarter ordering experience when the upgrade starts in 2027.
What shoppers can expect from the Asda–Ocado partnership
The deal brings Ocado’s Smart Platform into Asda’s online ecosystem. Customers should see more available delivery slots, smoother ordering and a more consistent digital experience across the website and the app.
- Improved delivery capacity: More slots for home delivery.
- Simpler ordering: Faster, more reliable checkouts and order processing.
- Better in-store picking: Technology to speed up how staff assemble online orders.
When the changes will arrive and how they’ll be rolled out
The migration to Ocado’s platform is scheduled to begin in 2027. Rollout phases will cover the online storefront, mobile app and the systems used in stores and distribution centres to pick and route orders.
Asda says the new software will be layered into its existing operations rather than replacing the store network. Customers using rapid-delivery apps will not be affected.
Why executives say the move matters now
Allan Leighton, who returned to Asda late in 2024 to steer a recovery, has pushed for rapid improvements. The Ocado tie-up is a strategic step to modernise Asda’s online arm and regain competitive footing.
Ocado’s chief executive, Tim Steiner, welcomed the collaboration as support for Asda’s next growth phase. Observers see it as an opportunity for both companies after recent operational and market challenges.
Market implications: rivals, investors and the grocery landscape
Analysts note the agreement strengthens Asda against rivals such as Tesco and Sainsbury’s by boosting its online capabilities. For Ocado, the deal is a positive development after a difficult stretch for the business.
Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, called the partnership encouraging. He said it offers a more modest but meaningful path for Ocado’s growth, even though the company’s shares remain far below their 2020 peak.
How day-to-day operations will be handled
Under the agreement, Asda keeps control of pricing, product range and overall online strategy. Fulfilment will continue to be carried out from the supermarket’s stores and distribution hubs.
- Click-and-collect and standard home deliveries remain managed by Asda teams.
- Third-party rapid delivery partners will still pick up orders from Asda staff as before.
- Asda products will not be listed on the Ocado website as part of the deal.
Scale and technical reach behind the Smart Platform
Ocado’s Smart Platform already supports tens of millions of orders each year across multiple countries and thousands of supermarket locations. The technology handles complex fulfilment, routing and inventory tasks at scale.
The platform processes more than 70 million orders globally and is active across 11 countries. That footprint helps explain why Asda chose the system to expand its online capacity.
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