How your regular drive-thru purchase is set to change without you knowing

If the trial is successful, the fast food giant hopes to roll the initiative out to more restaurants.

Hungry Jack's is trialling a new drive-through feature which the fast food giant hopes to rollout to more restaurants this year.

The St Peters outlet in Sydney's inner west is using artificial intelligence to take customer orders as a part of a test to "determine the effectiveness of the technology in delivering service improvements".

Customers will be able to ask the AI assistant to connect them to a human crew member at any time.

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Hungry Jacks is trialing a new drive-through feature which the fast food giant hopes to roll-out to more restaurants this year.

"Customer feedback will be sought during the trial period," a Hungry Jack's spokesperson said.

"It is anticipated that the trial will be rolled out to additional restaurants in the coming months."

Once a customer has placed their order, humans will prepare their food, the company said.

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If a customer requests to speak with a human, the AI assistant will connect them to a team member and delete the voice recordings for that order.

"We will not treat you or your order differently if you ask to speak with a human crew member," the fast food company said.

The move follows a similar trial at select KFC restaurants in Sydney last year.

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