Walmart To Use RFID To Improve 'Store Level' Inventory Accuracy In Home Goods, Consumer Electronics
Given Walmart's excellent prices and its sheer size, it's a big deal any time it expands its use of RFID technology to improve the capabilities of its stores.
What is Walmart changing about its use of RFID?
Walmart is expanding its use of RFID (radio-frequency identification) beyond the initial categories it focused on a few years ago.
Previously, Walmart’s U.S. division required suppliers in Apparel, Footwear, Sunglasses, Watches, much of Jewelry, and Tires to apply RFID tags to their products. Now, Walmart has advised suppliers that it is extending RFID tagging requirements to additional categories, including Home Goods, Wireless, and Consumer Electronics.
By September (as referenced in the memo cited in the article), products in these new categories are expected to arrive at Walmart stores with RFID smart labels already applied. This move is intended to bring the same inventory visibility and operational benefits that Walmart has seen in Apparel and related categories to a broader range of merchandise across the store.
Why is Walmart expanding RFID to more categories?
Walmart is expanding RFID because its earlier rollout in Apparel has delivered measurable operational and commercial benefits.
According to Walmart’s memo to suppliers, the company has:
- **Improved on-hand inventory accuracy** in Apparel departments.
- **Grown online order fulfillment** as a direct result of better inventory data.
- Seen **major impacts on sell-through and customer satisfaction**, driven by having the right products available when and where customers want them.
With these results in hand, Walmart is now extending RFID to Home Goods, Wireless, and Consumer Electronics to:
- Further **improve store-level inventory accuracy**.
- Enhance the **in-store shopping experience**, by reducing out-of-stocks and making it easier for associates to locate items.
- Strengthen **online and pickup-in-store capabilities**, which depend on accurate, real-time inventory.
- Unlock **additional sales opportunities**, since better visibility into inventory typically supports higher sell-through and fewer missed sales.
In short, Walmart is using RFID to reimagine how it manages inventory across more of the store, building on proven gains in Apparel rather than treating RFID as a limited, one-category initiative.
How does Walmart’s RFID move fit into the broader retail landscape?
Walmart’s latest RFID expansion is part of a broader, long-running shift in retail toward item-level tagging and more accurate inventory data.
**Relative to other retailers:**
- Walmart initially moved toward RFID in Apparel and Footwear over a decade ago, but patent litigation and shifting priorities slowed its progress.
- By the time Walmart formally directed its Apparel and Footwear suppliers to tag products in 2019, **Target had already rolled out RFID across Apparel, Footwear, and Soft Home goods about two years earlier**.
- In Europe, **Tesco** and **C&A** had significant RFID programs in Apparel underway by the mid-2010s.
- In the U.S., **Macy’s** made RFID tagging a requirement for most of its merchandise, with **Nordstrom, Belk, and Dillard’s** also adopting similar requirements.
This means that every product in Walmart’s new RFID expansion is already being tagged for at least one other retailer. For suppliers, Walmart’s move doesn’t introduce an entirely new practice; it increases the scale and consistency of RFID use across their customer base.
**For international Walmart businesses:**
- There is no confirmed timeline for RFID adoption outside the U.S.
- Former Walmart executive Myron Burke notes that decisions about RFID in other countries are typically made by each country’s CEO.
- **Walmart Canada and Walmart Mexico** are seen as the most likely next adopters because their IT platforms have significant overlap with Walmart U.S., making it easier to leverage existing RFID capabilities.
Overall, Walmart’s decision helps normalize RFID as a standard tool for managing inventory in categories beyond Apparel, encouraging suppliers and other retailers to rethink how they track products and support omnichannel shopping experiences.

Walmart To Use RFID To Improve 'Store Level' Inventory Accuracy In Home Goods, Consumer Electronics
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