As package deliveries surge during the year-end holidays, social media videos show forced lockers, raising concerns about their security. Consumers report picking up empty packages, while delivery companies downplay these as isolated incidents. These cases are fueling insecurity around these increasingly popular pickup points in France.
Year-end holidays bring a surge in package shipments, making lockers – these automated pickup cabinets – essential for flexible delivery. However, social media images of damaged and emptied lockers are circulating, questioning their reliability.
Users have reported direct thefts. One X user states: «J’ai récupéré un colis vide dans votre locker : carton entaillé, re-scotché, console DS XL + jeux volés». Another complains: «Je laisse un colis dans un casier que le livreur dit trouver vide ! Zéro dédommagement pour moi». These accounts highlight potential inaction by carriers in addressing such frauds.
Although individual facts are hard to verify, their buildup erodes trust in these facilities, now a key link in the logistics chain. Delivery firms like Amazon and La Poste insist such events remain rare and isolated, with no indication of a general rise in thefts. This tension underscores the security challenges of expanding lockers, favored by French consumers for their convenience, as package volumes hit seasonal peaks.