Big Mac-hungry Kiwis caused a traffic jam in north Auckland as cars queuing for McDonald's drive-thru could be seen snaking back on to the road.
The incredible lunchtime rush at the McDonald's in Akoranga Drive in Northcote was captured by Herald photographer Brett Phibbs and showed customers being forced to wait in their cars in the middle of the road.
The feverish rush even led the store to employ a hi-vis wearing traffic controller to direct customers, while a similar queue of cars at McDonald's in Belmont led to another traffic jam.
With dinner time expected to produce another rush at fast-food outlets across the city, it provided evidence of how much Kiwis have been craving liberation from their home cooking after nearly five weeks in Covid-19 lockdown.
However, shakes, sundaes, McFlurries and frozen coke was not being served in the first tranche of deliveries.
McDonald's managing director Dave Howse said more than 10,000 staff had been retrained with new safety measures.
"Your experience at Macca's may look a little different as we roll out contactless service," Howse said.
"Staff are wearing gloves, serve from behind counter shields, encourage contactless payment and carefully handle bags.
"It's still the delicious Macca's we know and love, just delivered in the safest way possible."
McDelivery restarted at 10am with Deliver Easy available from 11am.
Early on Tuesday morning at Auckland's Grey Lynn McDonald's, cars queued out into Great North Rd to get their first taste of Maccas in almost five weeks.
And it was a similar story across town at Auckland's Greenlane, where a queue of dozens of cars snaked across the car park.
About 20 cars had queued at the McDonald's at Māngere town centre and Porirua town centre.
At Māngere, many of the customers spoken to by the Herald swung past the takeaway joint on their way to work - others had got up early just for the occasion.