Business & Real Estate

Walmart moves beyond retail to maintenance services

Walmart, a name synonymous with value pricing, large stores, and wide product selection, is now preparing to offer another service that pushes the company beyond its traditional retail business.

The retail giant has built one of the largest retail businesses in the world by selling groceries, household essentials, electronics, apparel, and nearly everything else a shopper might need.

Now it wants to help businesses keep their own buildings running.

The retail giant has introduced Upstream Facility Services, a new business that brings Walmart's in-house maintenance operation to commercial clients.

The service is built on the systems Walmart already uses to support thousands of Walmart and Sam's Club locations across the country.

"We've spent years building one of the largest in-house facility service operations in the country. Upstream takes that capability beyond our walls," said R.J. Zanes, VP of Walmart Facility Services, in the official announcement.

Zanes added that the new service will bring "skilled technicians, and real-time visibility to help businesses run with fewer disruptions."

This marks an unusual but logical expansion step for Walmart, given that the company already has training systems, technicians, and technology in place to maintain its own physical footprint.

And now the company is ready to turn these internal capabilities into a nationwide service and sell to other businesses.

Walmart is turning maintenance into business

The move comes as Walmart is remodeling more than 650 stores into Supercenters and neighborhood markets, with 20 grand openings scheduled for 2026 and early 2027.

Walmart's goal is to make shopping "feel easy, intuitive, and connected," while maintaining the everyday low prices promise.

More Walmart

As remodeling and openings continue on a large scale, Walmart has now launched Upstream Facility Service, designed for other commercial businesses and companies that also operate across multiple locations.

Walmart understands that maintenance delays can quickly hurt revenue and customer experience, both pivotal in the service industry.

This new service will focus on HVAC, refrigeration, general maintenance, electrical, and plumbing trades.

Its model combines urgent repairs, preventive maintenance, and predictive maintenance to help customers reduce downtime, avoid recurring issues, and extend equipment life.

Through Upstream, Walmart is set to provide "end-to-end solutions with an approach that addresses facility repairs at their root cause."

Upstream starts in limited states

For now, Walmart is licensed to provide service only in a few states, while continuously expanding its footprint.

Currently, Upstream is actively serving commercial facilities, quick-service restaurants, retail locations, and financial institutions in Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, and Texas.

Walmart is using its existing field network and gradually expanding the service as licensing allows.

The company believes its physical footprint is a major advantage, noting that most of its technicians are located near Walmart facilities, which puts them close to many commercial businesses and enables faster response times.

Related: Walmart makes a change to be more like Costco

This can be encouraging for companies located across such locations and struggling to coordinate local repair vendors on time.

This new service also solves a common business problem for companies with multiple locations.

Walmart promises that in Upstream, they get a single vendor to handle multiple facility-maintenance needs, especially useful for places that need fast repairs, like convenience stores or restaurants, as delayed repairs can spoil inventory.

Upstream is also being pitched as a data-backed service, offering customers reporting and ticket insights, on-demand reports, ticket prioritization, root-cause and repeat-issue analysis, and cost and lifecycle optimization.

Walmart pushes beyond retail

In the past year, Walmart has reached a $1 trillion valuation and expanded into advertising, marketplace services, and fulfillment, essentially positioning it as a leading technology company in retail.

It is continuously diversifying revenue sources to gain an advantage in this highly competitive market. While groceries and goods are high-volume categories, they can also be lower-margin categories, given changing tariffs and inflation.

As such, this new service, Upstream, can help Walmart diversify its revenue through business-to-business relationships.

In its recent Q4 earnings, Walmart reported $713.2 billion in full-year revenue, up 4.7%, with a global advertising business of around $6.4 billion, up 46%.

The company noted that about 280 million customers and members visit over 10,900 stores and the e-commerce site in 19 countries each week. The company also currently employs about 2.1 million associates worldwide.

So, while a new revenue stream will add to Walmart's current success, it is also different from maintaining its own stores. Walmart will have to consistently deliver top service to clients and ensure it prioritizes customer needs over its own remodels.

Walmart promises that its model is designed to scale without compromising service quality or responsiveness, and that it comes with trained and licensed technicians who ensure that "work is performed safely, correctly, and in accordance with applicable requirements on every service call."

Related: Amazon and Walmart can't stop a $12 billion theft problem

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This story was originally published April 28, 2026 at 1:03 PM.

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