Chipotle Will Now Deliver Burritos To Your Front Door -- For A Price

Chipotle Will Now Deliver Burritos To Your Front Door
|
Open Image Modal

Do you love Chipotle's huge, environmentally conscious burritos, but hate walking along the counter to order? Do you often find yourself craving barbacoa soft tacos, but shuddering at the thought of getting off your couch? Do you smoke a lot of weed?

You're in luck. This week, Chipotle announced (deep within the company's first-quarter earnings call) a new partnership with food delivery app Postmates that brings home delivery to Chipotle locations in 66 cities across the country. That means that if you live in one of those cities, you can now get Chipotle burritos without ever leaving your house.

Technically speaking, you could get Chipotle delivery from Postmates before this announcement. The app is really less of a traditional food delivery platform like Seamless or GrubHub than it is a food-focused courier service. San Francisco-based Postmates works with drivers who will go to any restaurant, order takeout and bring it to you, for a fairly hefty fee. So plenty of people have already used it to get Chipotle: Re/Code reports that $500,000 worth of Chipotle food was delivered via the service in the first quarter of this year.

But here's the rub: Only restaurants that have partnered with Postmates have menus and detailed logistical information, like hours, readily available on the app. To order food from an out-of-network restaurant, you have to type in the menu items you want individually, and you have no idea how much the bill's going to be. Sometimes, the restaurant you're trying to order from will even be closed -- a major bummer.

Chipotle's new partnership with Postmates eliminates those issues completely. It's now very easy to order Chipotle on the app. It is not, however, cheap. A carnitas burrito with guacamole that would cost $9.10 ordered in-store at a Chipotle in Los Angeles would cost $15.42 if delivered about half a mile using Postmates, once the 9 percent service fee and $5.50 delivery fee are added into the mix.

Still, Chipotle is not the first chain to partner with the company. Starbucks recently announced its own partnership with Postmates, which will bring delivery to customers in selected cities on a trial basis at the end of this year. From the chains' perspective, this makes a lot of sense: Postmates takes care of all the logistics, so it's incredible easy on their end. Starting a delivery service from scratch, as Burger King is attempting to do, requires a lot more effort, time and risk.

Plus, there are obviously quite a few people who'd gladly pay a few extra bucks to have their food brought to them. Maybe almost as many people as are willing to pay $1.80 to get guacamole on their Chipotle burrito.

Our 2024 Coverage Needs You

As Americans head to the polls in 2024, the very future of our country is at stake. At HuffPost, we believe that a free press is critical to creating well-informed voters. That's why our journalism is free for everyone, even though other newsrooms retreat behind expensive paywalls.

Our journalists will continue to cover the twists and turns during this historic presidential election. With your help, we'll bring you hard-hitting investigations, well-researched analysis and timely takes you can't find elsewhere. Reporting in this current political climate is a responsibility we do not take lightly, and we thank you for your support.

to keep our news free for all.

Support HuffPost

Before You Go

Chipotle's Influence
A mockup of the exterior of a new Chipotle(01 of12)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Architecture Outfit)
The exterior of a new Taco Bell in Sanger, Tex.(02 of12)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Taco Bell)
Another view of that same Chipotle(03 of12)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Architecture Outfit)
Another view of the Sanger Taco Bell(04 of12)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Taco Bell)
The interior of a new Chipotles(05 of12)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Architecture Outfit)
The interior of the Sanger, Tex. Taco Bell features high bars with stools just like Chipotle(06 of12)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Taco Bell)
A new Chipotle look at night(07 of12)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Architecture Outfit)
A redesigned Wendy's at night(08 of12)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Wendy's)
Inside a new Chipotle(09 of12)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Architecture Outfit)
The interior of a new Wendy's in Bethel, Ohio(10 of12)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Wendy's)
Inside a new Chipotle, the only non-natural color is red(11 of12)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Architecture Outfit)
An interior shot of the new Wendy's look reveals much the same color scheme(12 of12)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Wendy's)

HuffPost Shopping’s Best Finds

MORE IN LIFE