Target Corp. is expanding next-day delivery to 20 additional metropolitan areas, bringing the total number of cities where consumers can quickly receive online orders to more than 50.
The nationโs eight-largest retailer by revenue announced Tuesday, during its fourth-quarter earnings presentation, that it is rolling out next-day delivery to more locations in the spring, as it continues modifying stores to be mini-fulfillment centers. The expanded footprint will bring next-day delivery to 60% of the U.S. population.
Faster delivery service is coming to places like Birmingham, Alabama; Santa Barbara, California; Fort Myers, Florida; and Honolulu, according to a Target fact sheet. Target currently delivers next day in about 35 large markets.ย The expansion is part of $2 billion in incremental investments during 2026 for stores and operations.
Target (NYSE: TGT) ย says that two-third of digital sales are fulfilled the same day, through drive-up, in-store pickup or same-day delivery for Target Circle 360 members.
โOur same-day services generated more than $14 billion in sales last year, accounting for two-thirds of our total digital sales. And weโre investing to make those services even faster and more efficient,โ said Chief Financial Officer James Lee. โWe are already fast. We are cost competitive, and weโre continuing to get more efficient, and we own all the core elements of our digital fulfillment,โ which is flowing to the bottom line.
Target also reported more than 30% growth for Target Plus, its third-party marketplace.
Next-day delivery is free for orders over $35 or with no minimum order amount if a person is a Target Circle 360 member or uses a Target credit card for purchases. Most items eligible for shipping are eligible for next-day delivery, including 85% of goods sold in physical stores,
Under Targetโs logistics model stores serve as fulfillment hubs, which the company says increases efficiency and lowers cost. Depending on the location, Target retrieves packages from local stores and brings them to one of 11 sortation centers to sort, batch and route for delivery to local neighborhoods by Shipt, its delivery subsidiary, or third-party carriers. About 30 to 40 local stores feed each sortation center, based on the market. Orders are assigned to stores based on inventory, staffing levels, backroom size and cost-to-serve.
Target says that removing the sorting and packing process from certain store backrooms saves valuable time and space for store teams to fulfill additional orders and serve customers. Also, because sortation center technology presorts and arranges packages for easy pickup, it reduces processing time for delivery partners.





