KEY POINTS
  • Walmart beginning Saturday is resuming monitoring and counting the number of customers entering its stores, as Covid cases surge in the U.S.
  • Dating back to April, Walmart has been restricting the number of people in its big-box stores to not exceed five customers per every roughly 1,000 square feet, or about 20% of a store's capacity.
  • For a period of time, however, the biggest retailer in the United States had stopped physically counting people as they came inside and left.
  • Grocers like Kroger, Wegmans and Publix have also reinstated buying limits for items like toilet paper and hand sanitizer.
Customers shop at a Walmart store on May 19, 2020 in Chicago, Illinois. Walmart reported a 74% increase in U.S. online sales for the quarter that ended April 30, and a 10% increase in same store sales for the same period as the effects of the coronavirus helped to boost sales.

Walmart beginning Saturday is resuming monitoring and counting the number of customers entering its stores, to make sure it doesn't exceed capacity limits, as coronavirus cases surge at record rates across the country.

Dating back to April, Walmart has been restricting the number of people in its big-box stores to not exceed five customers per every roughly 1,000 square feet, or about 20% of a store's capacity. Those levels can also vary based on local mandates, the company said.