Delivery Workers in NYC Hit Hard by DoorDash and Uber Eats Design Changes, City Says Millions Lost in Tips
A new report from the New York City Department of Consumer and Worker Protection (DCWP) has found that changes made to the DoorDash and Uber Eats apps have resulted in millions of dollars in lost tips for food delivery workers in the city. According to the agency, customers are now having a harder time tipping delivery workers after a minimum pay rate was enforced in December 2023.
The report shows that average tips on both apps plummeted from $3.66 per delivery to just $0.93 within a week of the design changes, with the current average tip sitting at a paltry $0.76 per delivery. This translates to an estimated loss of $554 million in tip income for delivery workers, or roughly $5,800 annually per worker.
Experts say that the decline is due to Uber Eats and DoorDash moving tipping prompts to after checkout, forcing customers to navigate a separate process that's easy to miss. "This approach may seem harmless," says DCWP Commissioner Samuel A.A. Levine, "but it effectively eliminates the option for customers to show their appreciation for delivery workers' hard work."
DoorDash has pushed back on the report's findings, stating that tipping prompts were moved to after checkout as a way to simplify the process and ensure 100% of tips go directly to drivers. However, critics argue that this move disproportionately hurts vulnerable workers.
This controversy comes just days before DCWP plans to begin enforcing new amendments to the city's delivery worker laws, which require food delivery apps to provide clear and user-friendly options for customers to tip delivery workers.
In related news, DoorDash has been embroiled in several high-profile disputes with regulators over issues of worker pay. In 2023, the company agreed to a $16.75 million settlement with the New York State Attorney General's office after an investigation found that it had allegedly misled customers and delivery workers about how tips were handled.
As enforcement of the new tipping laws is set to take effect on January 26, both DoorDash and Uber Eats will be under pressure to comply โ or face significant consequences.
A new report from the New York City Department of Consumer and Worker Protection (DCWP) has found that changes made to the DoorDash and Uber Eats apps have resulted in millions of dollars in lost tips for food delivery workers in the city. According to the agency, customers are now having a harder time tipping delivery workers after a minimum pay rate was enforced in December 2023.
The report shows that average tips on both apps plummeted from $3.66 per delivery to just $0.93 within a week of the design changes, with the current average tip sitting at a paltry $0.76 per delivery. This translates to an estimated loss of $554 million in tip income for delivery workers, or roughly $5,800 annually per worker.
Experts say that the decline is due to Uber Eats and DoorDash moving tipping prompts to after checkout, forcing customers to navigate a separate process that's easy to miss. "This approach may seem harmless," says DCWP Commissioner Samuel A.A. Levine, "but it effectively eliminates the option for customers to show their appreciation for delivery workers' hard work."
DoorDash has pushed back on the report's findings, stating that tipping prompts were moved to after checkout as a way to simplify the process and ensure 100% of tips go directly to drivers. However, critics argue that this move disproportionately hurts vulnerable workers.
This controversy comes just days before DCWP plans to begin enforcing new amendments to the city's delivery worker laws, which require food delivery apps to provide clear and user-friendly options for customers to tip delivery workers.
In related news, DoorDash has been embroiled in several high-profile disputes with regulators over issues of worker pay. In 2023, the company agreed to a $16.75 million settlement with the New York State Attorney General's office after an investigation found that it had allegedly misled customers and delivery workers about how tips were handled.
As enforcement of the new tipping laws is set to take effect on January 26, both DoorDash and Uber Eats will be under pressure to comply โ or face significant consequences.