UPDATE: Aug. 26, 2019, 10:41 a.m. PDT The results from Jalopnik's driver fare investigation are in. After receiving 14,576 driver submissions, the site calculated Uber takes 29.6 percent of each ride, while Lyft takes 34.5 percent.
Other studies and fare breakdowns usually come in around 30 percent, as well.
Keep in mind, the Jalopnik study is a small fraction of the rides on each ride-hailing platform, and not a representative sample.
Uber and Lyft keep changing how their drivers get paid. Along with all the confusion, some drivers are feeling short-changed. Now a new online tool is available that collects driver receipts and crunches the numbers to find out how much the ride-hailing apps are taking from drivers.
Transportation media outlet Jalopnik is investigating what it believes are unfair pricing structures, with Uber and Lyft taking as much as half of fares in some situations. Starting this week, the site is trying to collect as much driver trip payment data as possible.
Uber's average earnings — the amount it takes after driver earnings are deducted from what a rider pays — is 22 percent of a ride, globally. Lyft calls this a "platform fee." On its website it describes it as "the difference between what the passenger paid and your driver earnings, tips, tolls, and other charges (like airport fees and taxes)." In Lyft's IPO filing, Lyft revenue from all bookings (including e-scooters and bike rentals) was 26.8 percent.
Last year, Uber changed its surge structure, and earlier this year, the company changed pay rates in the Los Angeles area. In the past few months, Lyft switched up its surge pricing system, called Prime Time, and replaced it with Personal Power Zones. It's hard to keep up.
Surge pricing is based on high demand for rides and a limited supply of drivers to give those rides — so the price goes up for riders. But there's concern that during these high-fare periods, Uber and Lyft are taking more than that roughly 20-percent amount.
That's where Jalopnik's fare receipt collection site comes in. The outlet hopes enough drivers submit info about their fares to prove "Uber and Lyft's new surge fares screw drivers and riders." The site needs a substantial number of receipts to calculate what percentage Uber and Lyft are taking — based on a representative sample. In the first 24 hours since launching Monday, Jalopnik said it received more than 1,000 submissions from drivers.
SEE ALSO: To improve Uber's driver app, he hits the road as an Uber driverThe site asks questions about where you were driving, how much the rider paid, whether it was a surge period, and if Uber or Lyft lost or earned money. You can upload a screenshot of your digital receipt -- both Uber and Lyft break down the earnings on each fare, showing drivers any surge bonuses, promos, tolls, and actual trip distance and time.
Lyft says its average hourly rate for drivers is $30.84, including tips and before expenses like gas and insurance. In the past two years, Lyft says, the average hourly earnings for drivers has gone up 7 percent. Uber has paid roughly the same hourly rate over the past five years for UberX trips, despite perceived fluctuations in pay. Uber's hourly wage is calculated as the average trip earnings, average surge, and trips per hour.
This all could easily be an exercise to show that Uber and Lyft are taking as much as they both lay out, or it could show where the driver pay system breaks down. The more receipts the better.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Hey drivers, use this to discover how much Uber and Lyft take from you-拍板定案网
sitemap
文章
64149
浏览
2
获赞
17816
The canceled SXSW Film Festival is coming to Amazon Prime Video
The South by Southwest Film Festival is back on — just not exactly in the way it was originallUK cops catch drug dealer after finding fingerprint in WhatsApp photo
Even on encrypted messaging platforms, be careful what you send. Police officers in South Wales wereReport: Apple working on AR/VR headset with 16K resolution for 2020
Here we go again. Another report, this time from CNET, claims Apple is working on a combo AR/VR headThe #M'BakuChallenge is taking off, but this 7
Actor Winston Duke may have been one of the highlights of Black Pantherbut now, it's his character wApple's latest iOS will let you disable the FaceTime asymmetric grid
Hallelujah, FaceTime sanity is coming.Apple released the beta version of iOS 13.5 to registered deveInstagram is testing a private downvote button for comments
Did you notice what looks like a dislike button next to comments on your Instagram account? You're nA dramatic total lunar eclipse is coming. You don't want to miss it.
A blood moon is coming.The entirety of the lower 48 states, the greater Americas, and some regions bHow to read Mark Zuckerberg's prepared testimony for Congress
Mark Zuckerberg has a lot to answer for. Following weeks of mounting criticism, Zuckerberg is headinWe're getting a period emoji and it's bloody brilliant news
It's happening. We're definitely getting a period emoji. Unicode has confirmed the period emoji hasThe #M'BakuChallenge is taking off, but this 7
Actor Winston Duke may have been one of the highlights of Black Pantherbut now, it's his character w2 space objects are traveling so fast, they might exit the galaxy
For a decade and a half, astronomers have been on the trail of a galactic mystery. In 2011, a projecCuriosity recorded alien rainbow
A rover got a new view of some peculiar extraterrestrial clouds, flecked in rainbow colors and movinSnapchat removes Juneteenth filter that prompted users to smile to break chains
Snapchat apologized for its insensitive Juneteenth filter that asked users to smile to break chainsReport: Apple working on AR/VR headset with 16K resolution for 2020
Here we go again. Another report, this time from CNET, claims Apple is working on a combo AR/VR headMike Pence's overture to gay Olympian Adam Rippon spectacularly bom
Mike Pence wants the gay community to know it's all just one big misunderstanding.On his way to head