ZB ZB
Opinion
Live now
Start time
Playing for
End time
Listen live
Listen to NAME OF STATION
Up next
Listen live on
ZB

Kmart Rotorua shoppers now paying bond for trolleys

Author
Kelly Makiha,
Publish Date
Thu, 30 Oct 2025, 2:17pm
Shopping trolleys at Rotorua's Kmart now cost a refundable bond of 50c to use. Photo / Kelly Makiha
Shopping trolleys at Rotorua's Kmart now cost a refundable bond of 50c to use. Photo / Kelly Makiha

Kmart Rotorua shoppers now paying bond for trolleys

Author
Kelly Makiha,
Publish Date
Thu, 30 Oct 2025, 2:17pm

Shoppers at Rotorua’s Kmart are among the first in the country to be charged a 50c bond to use trolleys.

The move, which mirrors Australian Kmart outlets, is designed to ensure people do not steal trolleys.

A sign at the store indicated the 50c would be returned when shoppers left the store.

A staff member, who would not be named, said Rotorua was one of the first to get the deposit system.

The staff member said the issue of shopping trolleys going missing was a major one in Rotorua, and was evident last Christmas Eve when the store ran out of trolleys and had to have more sent down from Auckland.

They said lost trolleys and having the Rotorua Lakes Council return their trolleys was costing thousands of dollars.

Shopping trolleys at Rotorua's Kmart will now cost you a bond of 50c to use. Photo / Kelly Makiha

Shopping trolleys at Rotorua's Kmart will now cost you a bond of 50c to use. Photo / Kelly Makiha

Shoppers who did not have 50c coins on them were able to buy them at the checkouts.

Smaller wheeled baskets are still available without paying a bond.

The Rotorua Daily Post visited Kmart and spoke to shoppers about how they felt about the new initiative.

Most said they did not mind, some saying they had travelled overseas, where it was a common practice.

Kmart Rotorua. Photo / Andrew Warner.

Kmart Rotorua. Photo / Andrew Warner.

Rotorua shopper Vikki Wharerau said it was a sad state of affairs that people were stealing trolleys.

She said the new practice at Kmart did not bother her too much and she had seen it in Australia.

“I didn’t mind, but just having the 50 cents is a bit hit and miss.”

Kmart’s new trolley system was the subject of a post on a Rotorua social media page for mothers.

Most of the commenters said it was about time and was a good way to stop people from leaving trolleys all over the central city.

“Kmart has to pay a considerable amount of money when trolleys are found dumped. So let’s all stop moaning about paying 50 cents to use them. Unfortunately, many have ruined it for others,” one wrote.

Another was less impressed, saying: “I’m keen to protest this lol. I only use a trolley for my kids ... What has this world come to where u [sic] have to pay to use a trolley to fill it up to BUY their stuff?”

Discarded trolleys in Rotorua. Photos / Laura Smith

Discarded trolleys in Rotorua. Photos / Laura Smith

The new system comes after the Rotorua Lakes Council adopted new bylaws in August aimed at improving tidiness and safety in the city centre.

Under the new waste bylaw, the council will collect abandoned trollies, with retailers given 24 hours to recover their property or face storage and delivery fees.

Rotorua ratepayers have shouldered bills as high as $5000 to remove as many as 260 abandoned shopping trolleys a month from inner-city streets.

The annual cost to enforce the new bylaw was estimated at $51,500. Some of this could be recovered through the fees.

Kmart’s head office in Australia declined to comment.

Kelly Makiha is a senior journalist who has reported for the Rotorua Daily Post for more than 25 years, covering mainly police, court, human interest and social issues.

Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you