- Insider spoke with current/former Trader Joe's employees about which customer habits bothered them.
- Leaving trash and carts around the store can be frustrating for staff.
- The bells near checkout are for staff members to communicate, and you shouldn't ring them.
Don't ask two different employees to look for the same item.
A former Trader Joe's employee named Joseph Sleek told Insider that employees hated when customers asked two staff members to search for the same food item.
"Customers often asked me to look in the back of the store for something, and it really bothered me when I'd come back out to find that they had asked a different employee to check in the back as well," Sleek said.
Rather than sending multiple staff members on a hunt for the same out-of-stock item, it's often more useful to ask when an employee expects that item to be restocked.
There's no reason to leave sample cups or trash around the store.
A former Trader Joe's employee named Lauren Wardini told Insider the staff hated when customers left food wrappers and sample cups around the store.
"There are plenty of garbage cans around the store, so it's annoying to find trash left on shelves or in carts," Wardini said. "This is especially true if the trash was sample cups."
Show your appreciation for the free coffee and food samples that are often offered at Trader Joe's stores by depositing your used cups, utensils, and napkins in the provided trash cans.
It can be rude to ignore employees when they greet you.
The employees at Trader Joe's are known for their friendliness, and being polite in return is always the best option.
Trader Joe's employee Valentina Morales told Insider that ignoring staff members or cutting them off during conversation was considered rude.
"When I greet a customer and ask how they are, it's frustrating when they either don't acknowledge I said anything or they cut me off and just ask a question about where to find an item in the store," Morales said. "This happens almost daily."
It's frustrating for employees when you put products back on the wrong shelves.
Trader Joe's employees are responsible for making sure all items are shelved correctly, so leaving products where they don't belong creates more work.
"It's so much easier for employees if you bring items that you don't want up to the cashiers," Wardini said. "If everyone just brought unwanted items to the register, we could avoid hours spent dealing with misplaced items."
This is especially true for frozen items that can be ruined if left out. When in doubt, simply pass the item to a staff member rather than abandoning it on a random shelf.
Try not to leave carts at the register.
Trader Joe's shopping carts aren't as large as those at some other supermarkets, but they can still obstruct the flow of traffic through the store if left unattended.
"Some people just leave their cart at the register and walk away after checking out," Wardini said. "The carts are located right outside, so please take it back instead of leaving it in the way of everybody else."
If you don't want to deal with a cart and are picking up only a few items, just grab a shopping basket instead.
Don't try to abuse the Trader Joe's return policy.
Trader Joe's has a generous return policy — you can bring almost any item back to the store for a full refund, with or without a receipt. This includes food items you've opened and even eaten as well as nonedible products that didn't meet your expectations.
The store expects customers to not ask for refunds, however, on products they have successfully used or enjoyed.
"Trader Joe's is known for its excellent return policy that you can use even without a receipt, so it was always annoying when people abused it," Wardini said. "For example, I had multiple people return plants that they'd obviously killed and then tried to blame the store for it."
If you want to sample a specific food, wait for a staff member — don't open the package yourself.
Many shoppers may not be aware that Trader Joe's often allows customers to try before they buy.
Customers can have an employee open just about any item for a sample before purchase, but that doesn't mean you're allowed to start opening packages on your own. An employee must be present if a customer is sampling an item from the shelves.
In addition, employees said shoppers weren't able to sample certain items, such as frozen vegetables or baking mixes.
There's no need to critique an employee's bagging technique, especially since they are trained to do it a certain way.
Morales said it's frustrating when customers criticized the way an employee bagged groceries.
"Staff are actually trained in the best way to bag the store's groceries, so it's annoying when a customer comes in and says that we're doing it wrong or critiques our method," Morales told Insider.
It's fine to ask an employee to put certain items in the same bag or leave an item out of one. But customers who are extremely particular about how their groceries are handled should simply bag their items themselves.
While at the register, you should avoid being on your phone.
It's disrespectful to staff members and other shoppers waiting in the checkout line to talk on the phone at the register.
"It really annoys staff when a customer is on the phone in the checkout line and then gets upset when we interrupt them to tell them the total or ask a question," Morales said. "Even worse, some people ask us to wait until they're off the phone."
Stop ringing the bells at the checkout lanes.
Those large bells hanging near each cashier aren't just for decoration. Staff members actually use them to communicate or ask for assistance.
Ringing the bell once instructs staff to open another register, and two rings means someone at the register has additional questions that need to be answered. Three bells summons a manager.
For this reason, employees don't appreciate when customers or their children ring the bells for fun.
- Read more:
- 10 of the best lunches to get at Trader Joe's for under $7
- 11 chefs share the one food they always buy at Trader Joe's
- We compared Trader Joe's stores in the city and in the suburbs — and the loser was clear
- I'm a Trader Joe's employee working during the pandemic in New York. Here's what I wish shoppers would do differently.
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