17 March 2025

'It's quite a triggering experience': Coles' automatic gates have to go

| Jarryd Rowley
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Supermarket self-checkouts have always been a point of contention but now, automatic doors that prevent customers from leaving have only added fuel to the fire.

Supermarket self-checkouts have always been a point of contention but now, automatic doors that prevent customers from leaving have only added fuel to the fire. Photo: Ian Bushnell.

Last year I wrote a silly little opinion piece about Coles’ new automatic doors that lock customers into the self-checkout area if the supermarket’s ‘smart’ technology determines they haven’t scanned all their grocery items.

At the time it was a means to vent frustrations about adding time to the already mundane task of shopping for groceries. Twelve months on, it’s no laughing matter.

In the past week, three National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) participants and their carers have reached out to express their concerns about the anxiety it causes them and the people around them. Each group wished to remain anonymous, but their experiences are eerily similar.

“As someone with PTSD, getting locked into a busy and tight location, it’s quite a triggering experience. I feel like I’m being accused of a crime I haven’t committed,” one person shared.

“My son gets really overwhelmed. Going to the supermarket is already a challenge with his different sensory issues. We spent a lot of time teaching him, to scan your items, pay for your groceries and try and get out of people’s way. To have that thwarted by a gate, that he’s not allowed to touch or move goes against everything we’ve taught him,” another shared.

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The gates themselves were integrated in late 2023 as a means to prevent shoplifters from leaving without paying. The issue plaguing the thoughts of many other shoppers however, is the question of whether it’s ethical.

The smart gates use AI technology to determine whether people have purchased items.

If you walk up to a self-serve checkout and pay for your items, the gates, in theory, determine the next customer to walk out and if they have paid for their items. If it determines you have, you walk free. If not, it will lock you in until an attendant lets you out.

Annette, a regular Coles shopper who didn’t want to share her surname, has experienced the negative effects of this first-hand.

“I went into the store; I was looking for a Coke and they weren’t cold so I wanted to leave. I walked through the self-checkouts and was blocked by these doors,” she said.

“I have complex PTSD and really struggle with confined spaces, so when this machine didn’t open, everyone was looking at me and it wouldn’t let me out. It turned a quick trip to buy a Coke into a nightmare.”

The gates can also be controlled by a switch, held by a staff member monitoring the self-checkout. In theory, they can determine whether someone is only passing through and open the doors manually, eliminating the need for the AI to make a decision.

The question then becomes, how is this any different to a security guard monitoring the entrance and blocking someone from exiting?

Region reached out to Coles’ media team for comment about the new gates, the guidelines Coles is required to follow and the concerns customers have.

“These gates are designed to open automatically for customers after they have completed their shop at the checkout. While the gates don’t automatically open if a customer doesn’t make a purchase, we have team members in the checkout area who can manually open the gates for people who were just browsing,” a spokesperson said.

“In regards to the gates being triggering for people, we have carried out extensive reviews specifically focused on Disability Discrimination Act (DDA) compliance – and our smart gates fulfil all requirements to ensure accessibility for all customers, including those with disabilities.

“The new smart gate technology is designed and tested to global and Australian standards. The technology has sensors and inbuilt detectors to ensure the gates open for customers after their transaction is completed, and our team are always available to manually open the gates for any customers who were just browsing.

“Safety is always our priority, and we take all concerns seriously – we encourage customers to share their feedback with us directly so we can investigate and work with the team on how we can improve their experience in our stores.”

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Independent support worker Jacob Howard expressed his contempt for the gates, explaining that while he himself has not had a participant experience trouble with the gates, he believes it is a disaster waiting to happen.

“I hate them already,” he said.

“I can’t imagine someone with sensory issues who is already overstimulated in a shopping mall wants to leave, just for a big flashing door to say no.

“If you were someone who was locked in with an intellectual disability, there is no way they would understand what would be going on; it would just be a wild experience.”

After researching this matter, I can’t comprehend how these gates are ethical or pass any kind of disability guideline. The fact that Coles says it has passed every compliance it needs to is a blight on the system that regulates what is and isn’t suitable for shoppers, with or without a disability or mental health-related issue regarding confined space.

Region reached out to the Federal Government department administering NDIS for comment on the issue and its stance on the gate, but it declined to comment.

This is a pathetic stance from the Australian Government scheme that funds reasonable and necessary supports associated with significant and permanent disability for people under 65 years old.

But I’ll say what they’re afraid to – these gates have got to go.

Original Article published by Jarryd Rowley on Region Riverina.

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An anonymous spokesperson for Coles claims that they want to improve our experience in their stores, yet they’re doing all they possibly can to make the experience more and more stressful, impersonal, difficult, so that is obviously not true.

It’s a great scam to make things much, much worse and then claim any slight improve as a win….a bit like what Trump and Musk are doing in the US. IDK that they’ll get away with it, the supermarket or the dopes in the Whitehouse but it’s certainly a tactic.

If you find going grocery shopping “stressful”, you have far bigger problems.

Surely it’s illegal detention when the person hasn’t done anything wrong.

People hate supermarkets because they treat customers like criminals and all because they’ve cut staff to cut costs. They seem to have forgotten that customers matter.

I had an experience with a supermarket checkout when I was pregnant and suffering from morning sickness. Because I thought I was going to throw up, I went through the “12 items or less” line, and the salesperson chewed me out for having extra items. I didn’t reply because I couldn’t speak, and made it outside to vomit. My other choice would have been to abandon my shopping which I often had to do later when a toddler became impossible. Both those choices now might leave me behind a locked gate. Presumably Coles is willing to risk vomit on the floor or a screaming child. More fool them.

devils_advocate8:55 am 09 Mar 25

Why is anyone still shopping at Coles anyway? Absolute ripoff.

Not everyone has a choice.

Gregg Heldon3:08 pm 11 Mar 25

Cheaper than Woolies for our shopping needs by about $5 a week.

simple don’t go to coles.in woden i miss out because they are always reluctant to have maned checkouts

robert faulks11:03 pm 06 Mar 25

False imprisonment, aka kidnapping is a criminal offence.
I had an issue at a supermarket where I went checked price and availability of a couple of items, decided not to buy anything and walked though the self serve area and there were gates that would not open. I was in a hurry so I vaulted them and went on with my day.

P “フィル” C10:26 pm 06 Mar 25

Fun fact Tuggeranong woolies and Coles alone pulls in about >$50,000,000 a year this and using marketing data from my retail analytics data aquasition job Tuggeranong spending power is significantly less then the other 3 major town centres and if we are to assume this data from Canberra alone any theft that might be happening barely scratches their bottom line, factor in Canberra sales are an absolute fraction of any other cities

P “フィル” C10:20 pm 06 Mar 25

These gates can honestly say a d#$k, if Coles cared about theft they hire staff to man the counters and no rely on the computer and surveillance Camera’s… I swear the more Coles and Woolies get greedier the more it blows me a way… Like South.points cools and Woolies total yearly profit is >$50,000,000, assuming this is the smallest of the 4 major city centres just Canberra revenue and profits is insane and any 20 or so thefts that happen a day barely scratch their bottom line

Jonathan O'Brien9:39 pm 06 Mar 25

You can only be physically restrained if they’re sure you shoplifted and are ready to charge you. If you’ve not shoplifted they’re liable for false imprisonment. If gates block me I’m either pushing through or filling charges for false imprisonment.

Felix the Cat2:52 pm 08 Mar 25

Look forward to the report about your court appearance and how you lost and had to end up paying the supermarket thousands of dollars in court costs.
If gates worry you that much I’d suggest pick a different place to shop.

scott burrows9:18 pm 06 Mar 25

I don’t shop at Coles but I was in one and the gate didn’t open I can guarantee you I’d just push the bloody gate open myself. You have no right to detain me… Open staffed checkouts or trust me to check out myself

Anthony Fritz6:36 pm 06 Mar 25

So I was having a particulary bad sensory day last year and the gates didn’t open. I was at the end of my rope and without thinking / in a panic I just dragged the gates open. They made a funny mechanical sound. A similar sound to when you used to push a CD/DVD tray in. I just want people to know that you can do this. I don’t care WHAT coles thinks about me doing this. Coles has gone bonkers.

Dave Marriott10:04 pm 06 Mar 25

I hope you had a padded room to go cry in when you got home…

Gregg Heldon3:57 pm 08 Mar 25

I get it Anthony. I have C-PTSD, so I get bad sensory days, hours and minutes too. My noises and situations are probably different to mine but it’s all relatable. Good on you for sharing, too. It’s a brave and strong thing to do because there is a stigma and not everyone will understand.
Weak people try to make jokes about crying and padded cells.

how about employing a few more people so they can deal with the cost of living crisis?

They won’t do that. It is all about replacing people with machines as they’re cheaper to maintain. Sadly, these organisations seem to have forgotten that they’re supposed to be in the business of customer service. As they continue to treat customers with contempt, they will find they have fewer and fewer customers as well as more astute customer friendly competitors.

ChrisinTurner4:55 pm 06 Mar 25

Lifts have auto doors too.

They are only for safety travelling between floors, not designed to restrain you for any other reason. You can open the doors at will when on a floor, so not entrapped by a business until someone decides to free you.

John Campbell4:20 pm 06 Mar 25

I know for a fact no AI controls the gates at Coles Hornsby, and staff are in control of the button. Sometimes staff are so busy they neglect the shoppers and fail to let them out until there is a massive queue of customers who’ve paid and have to wait for someone to press a button to let them out.

Just a little problematic if you have to catch a bus or train! Aside from the atrocious customer ‘service’.

Thieves have already worked out you just need to linger near them until someone makes a purchase then swiftly walk towards them.
The bigger issue is there is very little consequence for shoplifting.

Oh grow up. It’s a little plastic gate.

It’s not. As ever besides being wrong about size it’s not the point, Coles don’t have the right to detain customers unless there is a reasonable suspicion of theft which is clearly not the case here.

It helps to be informed.

It is. And coles aren’t “detaining” anybody.

It helps to not be an overly dramatic baby.

Tony Schumacher-Jones6:05 am 06 Mar 25

What triggers me most is having to pay for the groceries.

Felix the Cat2:54 pm 08 Mar 25

Yeah supermarkets should definitely give groceries away for free, how dare they charge money for them.

It would be a shame if someone was pushing their heavy trolley towards these gates and couldn’t stop in time if they failed to open. They might break, wouldn’t that be a shame?

Great idea! If it happened often enough they might discover that it’s cheaper to have a staff member serving instead of a machine that costs a fortune to fix, repeatedly.

HiddenDragon8:48 pm 05 Mar 25

The Coles self-serve checkout machines do have the advantage of a volume control which allows you to silence the passive-aggressive voice, and they seem somewhat less obsessed with fruit and veg fraud than their Woolies counterparts, but the Coles self-serve checkout areas are typically more claustrophobia-inducing than at a similarly-sized Woolies store – which is not a happy combination with the Stasiland/convict colony turned full circle vibe created by the gates.

Before too long, the Coles gates will have been in use for a sufficient period for there to be useful figures on their impact on “stock loss” compared to Coles’ competitors which don’t have gates. That might be a time for people who are seriously concerned about the gates to have the issue raised in a relevant federal parliamentary committee/inquiry.

GrumpyGrandpa8:09 pm 05 Mar 25

Gates are annoying, however, my biggest gripe is the dodgy checkouts, touchy sensors etc that result in the checkout locking up and the need to call for a supervisor.

When resetting it, the supervisor is shown camera vision of your recent transactions. It’s an automatic assumption of guilt, when the problem is their crappy checkouts!

Woolworths checkouts and Aldi checkouts work, without a problem.

Hayley Nicholls7:00 pm 05 Mar 25

I honestly can’t believe they’re ‘allowed’ to do this! The first time I went into the new Coles I absolutely HATED them, went on a research binge trying to figure out if it was legal, and reached out to Coles myself – and I haven’t been back. I think it’s shocking.

Good on you Hayley.

As near as I can make out a staff member can detain you if they have reasonable suspicion of shoplifting, but they can’t detain you for an extended period, and police must be called straight away and police take over on arrival.

I can’t see how AI driven “automatic” gates or gates controlled by a staff member who is not paying attention or in another part of the store can constitute any “reasonable suspicion”.

I think Coles would lose any class action.

Hayley Nicholls10:31 am 06 Mar 25

They must be hemorrhaging $ due to shoplifting for them to make the decision to install something so obviously hostile. Of course, a nicer solution would be to ditch self-service and bring back customer service – but that’s another rant entirely!

As someone who has shopped at a coles group store, and been accused of stealing because “how i was dressed” and the ‘item looked expensive’ from the store person. These are constant attacks on civil rights and any push to accept will result in them taking further and further steps.

While you might be ok with a gate, what about a pat down and your bags searched.

My experience with the store in question showed their lack of training and understanding of basic laws. They openly break the law and enforce their own ‘standards’ by humiliating their customers.

I refuse to stop at stores with the gates, or the above mentioned store.

Don’t ever try to fly anywhere if you’re “triggered” by gates – you won’t survive airport security or immigration. Come to think of it, how did you even get into Coles if you’re “triggered” by a little gate?!

Its not the gate, its the distain for their customers!

Capital Retro3:02 pm 05 Mar 25

A lot of the commenters here would be contributors to large superannuation funds who have probably got lots of your money invested in Coles shares.
Coles are doing their best to maximise your returns for retirement and this is probably the only effective deterrent to shoplifting there is so, what’s the problem?

It’s not effective, it’s not the only deterrent, Coles are posting massive profits and can afford to treat their customers with respect.

Facts are as ever not your friend.

Priscilla Sheppard1:57 pm 05 Mar 25

If there is so much theft at the self service checkouts, then just go back to employing people to man registers again. They are presuming I’m guilty of shoplifting before I even scan my first item, this is demonstrated with the overhead cameras at the entrance, overhead and face cameras on the checkout, and the electronic gate that has a security guard standing behind it.

Because I shop around (might go to Reject shop to buy cleaning Items) it happens to me all the time. I don’t wait to be let out i either jump over or force them open. I will also not empty my bags for them if they want to check them they can unpack and repack it for me.

I think there could be an argument that it is false imprisonment if these gates detain someone who is not stealing.

Why would I shop somewhere that believes all their customers are shoplifters?

I haven’t been locked in, maybe that’s just luck. Am older, have disabilities. “If you walk up to a self-serve checkout and pay for your items, the gates, in theory, determine the next customer to walk out.” I can’t carry items. Takes me ages to take off my backpack, pack items into it, put backpack on, pick up walking stick. No way would I be ‘the next customer” to walk out; several would have walked out before me.

I dread facing those gates. They do give me a low level of anxiety. I particularly dislike Coles now as a result.

I went through the checkout at Woden last week with a large family shop, every item in my cart was scanned by one of their staff members but when I get to the auto gate and it’s locked.

I look around for a staff member and there’s no one to be seen. Eventually after two minutes I spot the bloke across the other side of the supermarket near the fruit & veg chatting.

Two minutes I’m stood there essentially being held against my will. So lucky I’m a big guy and could give this clown a booming “Oi” across the supermarket and he presses the button as who knows how long I have to stand there whilst this he chats. I could image a lot of other people would have just been stuck there waiting.

Pensioners, people with disabilities and small children are already dealing with enough, they don’t need Coles making their lives harder on the off chance someone has shoved a can of soup down their trackies.

“A store employee can only detain you if they have a strong belief that you are shoplifting, not just a hunch. “, as far as I’m concerned Coles are breaking the law every time that gate is locked without a reasonable suspicion of a crime.

A few typos in there, but long story short corporates have no right to treat customers like potential criminals. These companies are posting massive profits they can afford to employ less intrusive security that doesn’t assume a customer is a potential thief.

Agreed Seano. Sadly these organisations have unrestrained power to do whatever they want and show no concern for the negative impact on customers. Older, more frail and vulnerable people are abused as a result. They are less likely to demand attention, despite their often worse experience due to their personal situation.

It is time our politicians and governments made more of an effort to protect people from such bullies. Of course, that would assume that 1) they cared; & 2) they were not under the control of these organisations.

A few weeks ago I was in Coles, Woden. A guy was filling up a trolley while shouting obscenities at other customers. He then pushed the trolley through the checkout, up to the gate, screamed at the young staff member that he was homeless and demanded to be let through. The intimidated staff member opened the gate and he went through with his trolley full of unpaid for stuff. No security or manger tried to stop or follow him.

Gee, the American 0-dollar shopping has landed here!

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