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We in SF really do take for granted that we get all of these services at launch.



Agreed. I'm moving to NYC and I'm realizing this fact just now knowing Instacart isn't in NYC yet.


Instacart isn't but Fresh Direct is and is honestly usually cheaper, even with delivery fees, than it would be buying from the local grocery store. And since the city doesn't have many regular grocery stores -- in Brooklyn you have some of the various NSA (National Supermarket Association) stores, but frankly most of them suck. If you ARE lucky enough to live near a Trader Joe's (and keep in mind, you'll need to be in walking distance or be willing to take the subway with your bags), prepare for lines from hell.

I wouldn't go to Costco without a car -- and since you've really only got Long Island City, the one in Brooklyn Heights and the one on 117th Street, traffic is going to SUCK.

To that end, I'm not even sure if a thing like Instacart would work with NYC because most of our grocery stores -- aside from Walgreens/Duane Reade and CVS are local bodegas that you're lucky if they take credit cards, let alone have a consistent inventory system. In the suburbs like Long Island or maybe parts of Staten Island, but not in Brooklyn or in Manhattan (can't speak for the other 2 boroughs but I assume Queens and the Bronx would be hard too).

Anyway, long comment short -- Fresh Direct. Oh, and ZocDoc for finding a doctor. Those are the two startups (aside from Seamless and GrubHub) that totally made my first two years in NYC.


Thanks! That was super helpful! I'll be sure to check them out.


freshdirect is in nyc, i hear its fantastic.


yah it totally is. It's cheaper than most of the supermarkets too and stuff is fresh (per the name). Plus they'll carry your groceries up the stairs for you, which is great if you're on a third-floor walk-up during the summer.




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