CarParts.com aims to ship 300,000 last-mile packages within the next 12 to 24 months [1].

This expansion follows a strategic shift toward profitability after the company faced a prolonged period of negative earnings. The move signals a transition from aggressive growth toward a more sustainable operational model.

Company leadership said that the first quarter of 2026 marked a significant financial turning point. The company achieved its first positive adjusted EBITDA since the first quarter of 2024 [1]. This result comes after five consecutive quarters of building toward the milestone.

"In the first quarter of 2026, we reached a milestone we have been building toward for 5 consecutive quarters, our first positive adjusted EBITDA since Q1 2024," CEO and Director David Meniane said [1].

Meniane said that the company intentionally changed its trajectory to prioritize the bottom line over raw expansion. He said, "We made a decision then to rebuild this business around profitability" [1].

The goal of 300,000 last-mile packages [1] represents a push to optimize the final stage of delivery to customers. By controlling more of the last-mile process, the company intends to improve efficiency, and customer experience while maintaining the financial discipline established over the last year.

The company continues to monitor its adjusted EBITDA as a primary metric for success. This focus on profitability is intended to stabilize the business as it scales its delivery infrastructure over the coming two years [1].

CarParts.com aims to ship 300,000 last-mile packages within the next 12 to 24 months.

The shift toward last-mile delivery suggests CarParts.com is attempting to reduce reliance on third-party logistics to capture more margin and control the customer experience. By tying this expansion to a return to positive adjusted EBITDA, the company is signaling to investors that it will no longer pursue growth at any cost, instead prioritizing operational efficiency and fiscal stability.