Chowdeck has officially rolled out live order tracking across its platform, giving customers real-time visibility into their orders from the moment a rider picks up at the restaurant to the moment food arrives at the door. The feature, announced on the company’s official social media channels, was framed as a direct response to user demand.
What the Feature Actually Does
Until now, Chowdeck users have placed orders and largely waited in the dark, refreshing the app and hoping for updates. Live tracking changes that. Customers can now follow their order through each stage of the delivery journey in real time. The announcement put it simply: from pick-up to delivery, every single order is now visible.
It is a feature that rivals Glovo have offered for some time, and its absence on Chowdeck has been a recurring complaint among users. The company appears to have taken that feedback seriously.
Why This Matters in the Nigerian Context
Food delivery in Nigeria comes with a unique set of friction points, traffic congestion, address imprecision, and inconsistent rider communication, which have all made the wait feel longer and less certain than it needs to be. Live tracking doesn’t fix traffic, but it removes the anxiety of not knowing. When a customer can see their rider moving toward them, the experience of waiting changes significantly, even if the actual delivery time stays the same.
This is particularly relevant for Chowdeck, which has built its reputation on speed and reliability in a market where both are hard to guarantee consistently. Transparency becomes a trust signal when operational guarantees are difficult to make.
A Response, Not Just a Rollout
The language in Chowdeck’s announcement is worth noting. “You asked. Of course, we listened.” That framing positions the feature less as a product roadmap milestone and more as a conversation with its user base. For a startup still building loyalty in a competitive market, that posture matters. It tells users their feedback has a direct line to product decisions.
Chowdeck has grown steadily since launching in Nigeria, carving out space against better-funded competitors by focusing on the quality of its restaurant partnerships and delivery experience. Adding live tracking brings it closer to feature parity with the broader market and removes one of the more visible gaps users pointed to.
What Was Not Said
The announcement made no mention of changes to delivery fees, so there is no basis to conclude that this feature comes at an added cost to users. It also did not make any efficiency claims on the operational side and made no promises about faster delivery times or improved rider routing. This is purely a customer-facing transparency upgrade for now. Whether the infrastructure behind it eventually powers smarter logistics remains to be seen.










