Amazon Locker has arrived in Denver.

The online giant’s self-service package pick-up option quietly rolled out in the Mile High City in August, an Amazon spokesman confirmed this week.

Three 7-Eleven convenience stores — two in Denver and one in unincorporated Adams County — have been equipped with the secured package cabinets, designed to thwart failed home delivery attempts and package thieves when you can’t be around to accept your online bounty.

All three locations are open 24 hours a day, according to a search of the website:

3177 E. Colfax Ave., Denver

650 E. 64th Ave., Denver

7295 E. Seventh Ave., Denver

“Amazon customers love the convenience of Amazon Lockers and they are a part of an Amazon customer’s daily routine,” Amazon spokesman Jim Billimoria said.

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Of course, there are some limitations to the service. Only items sold or fulfilled by Amazon.com are eligible for Locker delivery, and you’ll still have to have that 48-inch LED TV delivered to your home or office. (To fit in the lockers, products must be smaller than 16.5 inches by 13.8 inches by 12.6 inches and weigh less than 10 pounds.)

Amazon Locker, part of the company’s growing physical presence in Colorado, joins other secure delivery options in the area.

UPS has offered its UPS Access Point service — neighborhood businesses that will accept package deliveries on behalf of nearby residents if they’re not home for the first delivery attempt — since 2015 throughout the Denver area.

Currently, there are 71 Access Points in Denver, Boulder, Aurora, Colorado Springs, Federal Heights, Glendale and Lakewood — coffee shops, hardware stores, dry cleaners and more, in addition to standard UPS stores.

A UPS spokeswoman on Tuesday said the service has been popular with customers.