The change is based on feedback from customers, and will have no impact on the prices shoppers pay at the checkout, an ALDI spokeswoman said this morning. Credit card companies charge businesses fees for each credit transaction.
“We care about being able to make our customers’ shopping experiences simpler and better every time they come to see us; and offering them the convenience of using their credit cards will help us do just that,” ALDI CEO Jason Hart said in a statement.
ALDI operates multiple stores in the region, including locations in Dayton, Springfield, Hamilton, Franklin, Piqua, Kettering, Riverside, Huber Heights, Dayton and Englewood.
In 2015, the grocery chain gutted and substantially renovated its Kettering and Huber Heights locations. ALDI officials also announced it would build a free-standing grocery store near Ohio 48 and I-70 in Englewood and shut down a store that is currently operating in nearby Northmont Plaza in mid-year 2016. A regional ALDI official said the chain is actively “looking for opportunities” in markets such as Beavercreek and Xenia to add new stores in the region,
ALDI operates nearly 1,500 U.S. stores in 32 states.
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