022716 UPS deliveries HS04
icon to expand image

UPS Access Point sign is displayed at Vintage the Barber Shop in downtown Atlanta. HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM

If you’ve ever missed the UPS delivery guy while you’re at work and didn’t get your package, UPS might have another option for you.

The company is now partnering with local shops to act as "Access Point" locations where customers can pick up their packages or drop them off. In recent months, UPS has launched Access Points in metro Atlanta.

Jason Syptak, who lives in New York and has used Access Points a few times, calls the system “really, really helpful.”

“With the Access Points, they allow you to go [pick up packages] when you want to,” Syptak said. “It’s essentially giving the consumer the control, and I absolutely love that.”

But not everyone is happy about it.

“I don’t think I should have to leave my house to go somewhere else that I didn’t want my package delivered to at all,” said Boston resident Andrew Mannone.

Some customers have taken to Twitter to express surprise at discovering that their UPS package has been left at an unexpected location.

“UPS sent me to the sketchiest convenience store to pick up a package,” wrote one Twitter user.

But for UPS and other shipping companies, the development of alternate forms of delivery is driven by the astronomical rise in online shopping. As consumers order more and more products online, the phenomenon has driven huge spikes in deliveries to doorsteps and taxed traditional shipping systems.

For more on where some Access Points in metro Atlanta are located, how they work and how they fit into UPS's strategy amid the growth of e-commerce, read the full story on myajc.com.

About the Author

Keep Reading

Hyundai says it plans to hire 3,000 more workers in Georgia and increase production to 500,000 units annually at the 16 million-square-foot factory it calls the Metaplant by 2028. (Courtesy of Hyundai Motor Group)

Credit: Hyundai Motor Group

Featured

Julian Conley listens during opening statements in his trial at Fulton County Superior Court in Atlanta on Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2025. The 25-year-old is accused of fatally shooting 8-year-old Secoriea Turner in July 2020. (Abbey Cutrer/AJC)

Credit: abbey.cutrer@ajc.com