Research from the University of Leicester analyzed about one million transactions and found nearly $850,000 worth of items were not properly paid for. A separate survey revealed that 19 percent of participants admitted to taking items without paying correctly, most acting not out of necessity but because they believed they could get away with it. Psychologists explain that the absence of a cashier reduces accountability, and some individuals rationalize the behavior by telling themselves large corporations can absorb minor losses.
Despite these issues, retailers continue expanding self-checkout technology because hiring staff has become increasingly expensive. Even with losses from theft, self-checkouts often remain cheaper than maintaining a full team of cashiers. To improve control, many stores are now upgrading systems with artificial intelligence, weight comparison, and surveillance cameras to detect inconsistencies in real time.
The self-checkout era is not disappearing, but the early phase of easy manipulation is clearly coming to an end. Methods that once exploited system gaps are becoming increasingly difficult to use undetected. While many shoppers appreciate the convenience for quick purchases, stores are cracking down on misuse, turning what once felt like a digital Wild West into a much more controlled environment.