Why you can’t use Apple Pay at Walmart

Walmart store logo at night.Walmart

Apple Pay is an extremely convenient way to purchase items without needing to carry around a wallet or credit card. Over the last few years, more and more vendors have started accepting Apple Pay, making it easier to use than ever before.

Contents

  • Can you use Apple Pay at Walmart?
  • Why Apple Pay doesn’t work at Walmart
  • How to use your iPhone to pay at Walmart

But one major retailer still doesn’t support Apple Pay — and it seems like it never will. Here’s everything you need to know about Apple Pay, how it works at Walmart, and how to use a different phone-based payment method when checking out at the retailer.

Recommended Videos

Can you use Apple Pay at Walmart?

Christine Romero-Chan / Digital Trends

The simple answer is, “no” you cannot use Apple Pay at Walmart. Despite the widespread popularity of Apple Pay, Walmart doesn’t seem to be interested in supporting the payment method. Whether you have an aging iPhone 8 or the latest iPhone 14 Pro, Apple Pay does not work at Walmart.

Related

  • The 16 best messaging apps for Android and iOS in 2023

  • The best iPhone 14 Pro Max cases: top 15 you can buy

  • WWDC 2023: everything announced at Apple’s huge event

Ever since Apple Pay was introduced in 2014, frequent Walmart shoppers have asked the company time and time again to add it to its list of accepted payment methods, but Walmart has continued to ignore it. In fact, Walmart doesn’t accept Google Pay, Samsung Pay, or any other mobile payment methods. Instead, it prefers to push its own internal mobile payment app: Walmart Pay.

Why Apple Pay doesn’t work at Walmart

Digital Trends

While it might seem senseless for Walmart to ignore Apple Pay and other mobile payment options given how overwhelmingly popular they are, it’s because the company wants people to be using the Walmart Pay app instead. Walmart Pay is exactly what it sounds like — Walmart’s mobile payment app that functions similarly to the other, more popular ones.

Walmart once claimed that Walmart Pay is more popular than Apple Pay, but even if that were true when the company said it back in 2017, it certainly isn’t true anymore. The company used Walmart Pay’s supposed popularity as an explanation for why it doesn’t support things like Apple Pay and Google Pay, but the reasoning didn’t make a ton of sense in 2017 when the company first said it, and it makes even less sense now.

Regardless of why, the unfortunate reality of the situation is that Apple Pay isn’t available at Walmart, so if you want to use a mobile payment option, you’ll need to download the Walmart app and use Walmart Pay instead.

How to use your iPhone to pay at Walmart

Digital Trends

To use an iPhone to check out your items at Walmart, download the Walmart app and sign up for a Walmart account, or log into your account if you already have one. Select the Account tab at the bottom of the screen on the right side and then select the Wallet card. Here, you’ll be able to enter whatever payment method you want to use — such as credit cards, debit cards, or gift cards.

With a card connected to your account, go to a Walmart store and either scan your items using self-checkout or checkout with a cashier. When using self-checkout, scan all of your items and then select Pay on the checkout screen as normal. Once you’ve made it to the payment screen, open the Walmart app on your phone and select the Walmart Pay card on the home screen. When you do, the app will open a QR code scanner. Scan the QR code that’s displayed on the self-checkout screen, and a tab will pop up with your payment methods. Select the card you want to use, and the items will be charged to it.

When checking out with a cashier, tell them that you want to use Walmart Pay when they ask what payment method you’ll be using. They should direct you to a QR code either on the screen that they’re using or on the card reader. Use the QR code scanner in the Walmart app as detailed above to complete your purchase.

Latest posts

Why Sonos can’t afford to lose the Music Intelligence race

Sonos’ software has historically been one of its biggest differentiators…but Amazon is leading a wave of improved AI in music appsSonos knows change is...

“It’s incredible to revisit this after almost a decade” – step inside Zootopia 2 early with Disney’s new 4D attraction

Walt Disney Animation Studios’ next feature film is swiftly approaching, or should we say hopping toward, its theatrical release date. Nearly a decade after...

You can now interrupt ChatGPT as it learns to take feedback on the fly

OpenAI has added a new feature to ChatGPT that lets users interrupt the AI mid-responseUsers can write context or corrections to a prompt without...

Perplexity upgrades Comet to multitask across your tabs

Perplexity has updated its Comet Assistant AI to multitask across browser tabsComet can also complete more difficult and complex quests with multiple stepsThe AI...

Visible Wireless launches early Black Friday deal with an unlimited data plan for just $19/mo

Switching up your expensive cell phone plan could just be the best way to save some cash this November - particularly because one of...

The best Fitbits for your fitness and health

In 2025, you might wonder if Fitbit is still relevant. Despite being acquired by Google, Fitbit remains one of the most recognizable names in...

Maybe Peloton is its own worst enemy

A good product and loyal audience is a winning formula for everyone except, it seems, Peloton. For years - through its pandemic-fueled highs and its...

Halo Infinite is about to get its last major update

On November 18th, Operation: Infinite will be released for Halo Infinite players with a battle pass and lots of new customizations, but according to...

The redesigned Disney+ app is rolling out to more users in the US

Disney is rolling out its redesigned interface for Disney+ to more users in the US today. The redesign brings the streaming service in line...

The Lisbon Airport is turning away private jets inbound for the Web Summit

Startup founders and government officials have been confronted with a unique flavor of first-world problem at this year's Web Summit, Financial Times reports. The...