You do not always need a full store to sell blind boxes. Pop Mart's Robo Shop vending machines are popping up in U.S. airports, mall corridors, and transit hubs—and they are quietly becoming one of the company's most efficient sales channels. No staff, no rent negotiations, just a glowing box that converts impulse into revenue 24/7.
Where We Found Them
Over the past month, we tracked Robo Shops at:
- LAX Terminal B (international departures — genius placement for last-minute gifts)
- JFK Terminal 4 (near the duty-free corridor)
- King of Prussia Mall (between Nordstrom and the food court)
- Westfield Valley Fair (ground floor near the Apple Store)
- Ala Moana Center, Honolulu (targeting Japanese and Korean tourists)
The Experience
Tap your card, select a series, watch the mechanical arm grab your box. The whole process takes 30 seconds. There is something deeply satisfying about the physicality of it—the arm descending, the box dropping, the thunk of arrival. It is a vending machine, but it feels like a ritual.
Inventory is limited to 4-6 series per machine, always including the current Labubu release. Prices are identical to in-store. No exclusive SKUs, but the convenience factor is the value proposition.
The Business Case
A Robo Shop costs a fraction of a full store to operate: no staff, minimal footprint (about 6 square feet), and restocking happens weekly. For Pop Mart, these machines serve three purposes: revenue (obviously), brand awareness (every machine is a billboard), and data collection (which series sell where, at what time of day).
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