

Anti-static (electrically dissipative) cart wheels are mandatory at any retailer running electronic shelf tags, self-checkout terminals, or RFID readers. A standard polyurethane wheel will accumulate static charge as the cart rolls; the dissipative compound bleeds it off through the axle to the cart frame.
Whole Foods Market and Target both spec dissipative wheels in their fleet specifications: WI3054GDWD on Whole Foods (with the matching P35C454IGDNSB caster yoke), and WI3054GDW on Target with the front swivel caster. The wheel looks identical to a standard polyurethane wheel but the compound is different — don't substitute a non-dissipative wheel and expect it to function the same.
If you can send a photo of the existing wheel and a measurement across the tread, our fitment team will confirm the exact match within minutes during business hours. There is no upcharge for fitment review.
Top questions from store-ops teams and refurbishers.
Lay a ruler across the face of the wheel from one outside edge to the other, through the center of the axle. That is the wheel diameter. Then measure the axle hole through the hub center: most US carts are 5/16 inch, but some specialty carts use 1/2 inch. Tread width is the thickness from inside face to outside face. Full measuring guide.
Polyurethane lasts longer, handles higher loads, and resists flat spots from parked carts. Rubber is quieter on hard floors and slightly cheaper. TPR (thermoplastic rubber) sits in between. For high-traffic stores, polyurethane is almost always the better long-term cost. Material comparison.
Yes. Volume tier pricing applies automatically at 50, 200, and 500+ wheels. Multi-store fleets get dedicated reps, NET-30, EDI, and custom packaging. Fleet program details.
Orders placed by 3:00 PM Central Time ship the same business day from Mansfield, TX. Most US destinations receive standard ground in 1–5 business days.