Home Depot acquires warehouse automation firm to speed fulfillment
Acquisition Details
Home Depot has acquired a warehouse automation firm to accelerate order fulfillment across its distribution network. The acquisition is part of the home improvement retailer’s broader strategy to enhance operational efficiency, reduce labor dependency, and improve speed-to-customer in both e-commerce and in-store pickup channels.
Strategic Rationale
The move reflects intensifying pressure on big-box retailers to modernize legacy fulfillment infrastructure amid rising consumer expectations for faster, more accurate deliveries. Home Depot’s existing network includes over 80 distribution centers and more than 2,300 retail stores across the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Integrating advanced automation is expected to support same-day and next-day fulfillment targets, particularly for high-volume, low-weight SKUs such as hardware, lighting, and seasonal goods.
Industry Context
- Walmart acquired Symbotic in 2023 for $4.2 billion to deploy AI-powered robotic warehousing systems across 25 distribution centers by 2027.
- Amazon continues expanding its Amazon Robotics footprint, now operating over 175 robotic fulfillment centers globally.
- Target partnered with Locus Robotics in 2022 to deploy autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) in 10 distribution centers.
data from MHI and Deloitte’s 2024 Annual Industry Report, 73% of supply chain leaders cite warehouse automation as a top-three priority for investment over the next three years — up from 56% in 2021. The global warehouse automation market is projected to reach $39.1 billion by 2028, growing at a CAGR of 12.4%,
Practitioner Implications
For supply chain professionals, Home Depot’s acquisition signals continued convergence between capital expenditure and labor strategy: automation is no longer solely about throughput but also about workforce stability, safety compliance, and scalability during peak demand cycles. Integration timelines, interoperability with existing WMS platforms (e.g., Manhattan SCALE, Blue Yonder), and change management for frontline associates remain critical success factors — especially given Home Depot’s reliance on hybrid human-robot workflows in regional distribution hubs.
Source: FreightWaves
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.









