krogers.com

What krogers.com appears to be (and why it confuses people)

If you landed on krogers.com, the first thing to know is that it’s not the same as kroger.com (the main consumer site for The Kroger Co.). That one extra “s” matters, because it changes who controls the domain, what security controls exist, and what you should trust it for.

Online, krogers.com shows up in a few places as a “website” field attached to specific physical store listings. For example, MapQuest listings for a Kroger Fuel Center in the Richmond / North Chesterfield, Virginia area display www.krogers.com as the website link.

It also shows up on Trustpilot under a profile named “Krogers Marketplace”, with contact info that matches a Kroger location address (7000 Tim Price Way, Richmond/North Chesterfield, VA 23225).

So in practice, krogers.com looks like it’s used as a shorthand domain in some directories, and people sometimes type it when they mean “Kroger’s.” That doesn’t automatically make it malicious, but it does mean you should be careful about assuming it’s official.

What happens when you try to visit it today

When I attempted to access krogers.com directly, the site did not load reliably (timeouts and fetch failures). That kind of behavior can happen for a bunch of boring reasons: misconfigured hosting, expired infrastructure, DNS problems, or deliberate blocking.

From a user-safety point of view, though, the outcome is the same: it’s not a dependable way to reach Kroger services. If your goal is grocery ordering, pharmacy info, digital coupons, or account login, you’re better off using official Kroger properties.

How it relates to Kroger (official domains and properties)

Kroger’s main consumer site is kroger.com, and the corporate site is thekrogerco.com.

If you care about legitimacy, those official domains are where you want to start:

  • Shopping, pickup/delivery, coupons, store pages → kroger.com
  • Corporate info (investors, company background, official contacts) → thekrogerco.com
  • Kroger Mastercard has its own domain (krogermastercard.com) tied to that specific product experience.

Even at the domain-registration level, kroger.com is a long-established domain (registered in the early 1990s and actively maintained).

The bigger point: if you’re trying to do anything involving an account, payment, prescriptions, or personal details, stick to the known official domains. A lookalike domain that’s “close enough” is where people get burned.

If you were trying to find a specific store: the “7000 Tim Price Way” example

Trustpilot’s krogers.com profile lists an address: 7000 Tim Price Way, 23225.
That address matches a Kroger store page on kroger.com (the “Stonebridge” store in North Chesterfield, VA).

So if you typed krogers.com because you were trying to reach that location (or you clicked a directory listing), you can go straight to the official store page instead and get the correct phone number, services, and hours from kroger.com.

Reputation signals you can see without trusting the site itself

Because the domain itself isn’t reliably accessible, the best you can do is look at independent signals:

  • Directory usage: It’s being used as a “website” field in at least some store directory pages (like MapQuest).
  • Review-platform profile: Trustpilot hosts a listing for “Krogers Marketplace” pointing to the same domain and address, with a low TrustScore (shown as 1.9) and a modest number of reviews (62).

Be careful with how you interpret this. A Trustpilot profile doesn’t prove ownership of a domain, and a directory listing can be wrong or outdated. But these signals do explain why the domain is visible online.

What to do if you clicked krogers.com from a listing

If it loads and asks you to log in, pay, or enter personal information, don’t do it automatically. Take 20 seconds and verify:

  1. Re-type the address as kroger.com yourself (don’t rely on a redirect).
  2. Use Kroger’s store locator / store page for the location you want, then navigate internally.
  3. If you’re dealing with payments or accounts, confirm you’re on a kroger.com login flow (correct domain, valid TLS/lock icon, no weird extra words in the URL).

If you already entered credentials on a questionable page, treat it like a potential compromise:

  • Change your Kroger password (and any reused passwords elsewhere).
  • Turn on any available account security features.
  • Watch for unexpected orders, pharmacy changes, or saved payment method edits.

Scams that commonly imitate grocery brands (and why domains matter)

Big retail brands get impersonated constantly, and grocery is a common target because people are used to quick orders and quick payments.

One classic pattern is gift card payment pressure. Kroger’s own fraud-prevention guidance calls out gift-card scams explicitly and notes that being told to pay via gift cards is a major red flag.

This connects back to domains: scammers often use a URL that feels right at a glance. An extra letter, a different top-level domain, or a “support” subdomain that isn’t real. If you build the habit of starting from kroger.com (or the official app), you avoid a lot of that risk.

Key takeaways

  • krogers.com is not the same as kroger.com. That “s” changes everything.
  • The domain shows up in some directories and on Trustpilot as “Krogers Marketplace,” tied to 7000 Tim Price Way (VA).
  • The site itself is not reliably reachable, so it’s a poor place to depend on for real services.
  • For anything sensitive (login, payment, pharmacy), use kroger.com or thekrogerco.com directly.
  • If a “Kroger” interaction ever pushes gift cards as payment, treat it as a scam signal.

FAQ

Is krogers.com an official Kroger website?

I can’t confirm it as an official Kroger-controlled domain from what’s publicly visible in the sources I pulled. What I can say is that Kroger’s official consumer and corporate web presence is centered on kroger.com and thekrogerco.com, and that’s what you should use for anything important.

Why do some listings show krogers.com then?

A lot of business directories are messy. Someone might have entered it years ago as shorthand (“Kroger’s”), or it could have been used as a redirect at some point. MapQuest listings clearly show it as a website field for at least one Kroger-related listing.

I’m trying to reach the store at 7000 Tim Price Way—what’s the safest link?

Use the store page on kroger.com for that location (Stonebridge, North Chesterfield, VA).

What should I do if I already typed my password into a page on krogers.com?

Change your password immediately (starting with your Kroger account), and change it anywhere else you reused it. Then monitor your account for unexpected activity like orders, profile changes, or payment method updates.

Are there Kroger resources about fraud and scams?

Yes. Kroger publishes fraud-prevention guidance, including warnings about gift card scams.

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