Not a Costco member? Shoppers have tips to skip new entry scanners

Nothing gets California shoppers more fired up than changes at their beloved weekend hangout, Costco.

The club is rolling out new technology to keep nonmembers from venturing inside.

Entry scanners are popping up at warehouses nationwide. Shoppers must pass their membership card under the scanner in order to enter the store.

That means no more cheap pizza, hotdogs and diet-busting chocolate chip cookies at the food court — and no more sharing the deep discounts found in the warehouse aisles.

Employees will be watching for a matching face to appear on a tablet device positioned behind the scanner. If the face doesn’t match the membership, shoppers can expect a staffer to turn them away, offer up a membership or another line to get a new photo taken.

Why the sudden pivot by Costco?

In an earnings call in March, Richard Galanti, the company’s outgoing chief financial officer, said the company is paying more attention to membership sharing after relaxing the rules during the pandemic. The launch of self-checkout also meant shoppers could flash a card at the door and pay at a register without an employee realizing they’re not members.

“And so there’s probably an increasing but still small level of abuse of that privilege,” Galanti said. “We also had complaints from members saying, ‘I pay. Why shouldn’t they?’ So the view was we needed to just shore that up a little bit, and we did.”

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