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Papa John’s tests drone delivery in North Carolina suburb

By Thomson Reuters May 11, 2026 | 11:08 AM

By Waylon Cunningham

May 11 (Reuters) – Papa John’s International is testing U.S. drone deliveries in a small market in North Carolina, ​the pizza chain announced Monday.

The test ‌is a partnership between the pizza company and Wing, a drone delivery company owned by Google parent company Alphabet.

The chain said deliveries would begin on Monday ‌for ​customers near Sun Valley Commons, ⁠a shopping mall ⁠in a suburb near Charlotte, North Carolina. Customers must order through an app managed by Wing and drone deliveries are only available ​for a few select sandwiches.

The move is part of a larger effort by Papa ⁠John’s to modernize its ⁠technology. Executives last year told Reuters ​they felt the company had fallen behind its ​peers in some respects. In April, it ‌announced a new AI-powered chatbot in its app that customers can use to place pizza orders.

In China, drone deliveries of food have ⁠become popular in many cities, but such deliveries are virtually non-existent in the U.S.

Chains like Chipotle and ⁠Dave’s Hot ‌Chicken have in recent months announced ⁠small-scale tests similar to Papa ​John’s.

Industry ‌experts say the technology is available ​in the ⁠U.S. but its use in food delivery is restricted by regulations such as those that require drone operators to maintain a line of sight with their drones.

(Reporting by Waylon CunninghamEditing by ​Bill Berkrot)