Homebase expands online payments

Homebase has partnered with Checkout.com to expand its range of digital payment methods.

The retailer now offers online customers the option to pay via PayPal, Apple Pay, and Google Pay.

The Homebase website currently lists more than 35,000 home and garden products.

The company offers a range of delivery options and one-hour click and collection across its 150 stores based in the UK and Ireland.

Homebase will now have access to comprehensive data and a reporting suite that can help improve acceptance rates and reduce declined transactions.

“Our new website offers customers more ideas and inspiration to help them turn their ideas into reality, and partnering with Checkout.com makes shopping even easier for our customers with a wide range of payment options,” said David Elliot, commercial & marketing director at Homebase.

Moshe Winegarten, senior vice president at Checkout.com said: “Homebase has transformed its website to offer a seamless shopping experience for their customers. We’re proud to unify that experience with a frictionless checkout process, offering a comprehensive suite of payment methods and the tools to enable an optimisation of acceptance rate to unlock more value from every transaction.”

    Share Story:

Recent Stories


Poundland significantly reduces antisocial behaviour, aggression and shoplifting with Motorola Solutions VT100 body cameras
Retail should not be a high-risk occupation. As a company, we are focused on listening to our colleagues and customers to help them with the issues they are facing in-store and so far, the feedback on our body cameras has been excellent. They act as a great visual deterrent, help to de-escalate situations and overall, this project has significantly aided our goal to make the retail environment safer.

For further information on Motorola Solutions’ retail security products, including body cameras, click here.

Supplying demand: how fashion retailers can meet the needs of customers and still be sustainable
The fashion industry is no stranger to breaking the mould and setting trends, but the pursuit of style can come at a huge cost to the environment.

New legislation, such as the European Union's Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation, will set mandatory minimums for the inclusion of recycled fibres in textiles, making them longer-lasting and easier to repair.

Advertisement