What Does It Take To Earn $90,000 As An Uber Driver?

If you want to pull down close to $90,000 a year as an Uber driver, you’ll need to spend most of your waking hours behind the wheel working.

Drivers for the car-sharing service in New York probably need to put in close to 80 hours a week to make around $90,000 a year, according to a blog post from Uber released Monday that looked at New York City drivers offering rides on UberX — the cheapest Uber option available, which lets drivers use their own non-luxury vehicles.

Uber made headlines this summer when it said that the median income for a New York City driver was $90,000 a year. But the company hadn’t provided much more detail until now.

A New York City Uber driver working a more reasonable 40 hour workweek would likely earn about $50,000 a year, or $25.17 an hour, on average, an Uber spokeswoman told The Huffington Post. That’s still about double what the average American taxi driver makes, according to Labor Department data.

For all the new information, it’s still difficult to nail down Uber’s numbers. For starters, Uber drivers in New York City likely are making more than drivers in many other places. The base fare for an UberX driver in New York is $3, with an additional charge of 40 cents per minute and $2.15 per mile — more expensive than many other cities in the U.S.

Also notable is the vast difference between hourly wages for part-time drivers and full-time drivers. The fewer hours an UberX driver works, the more range there is in the amount of money he or she makes — anywhere from less than $10 per hour to nearly $60 per hour.

As a recent Buzzfeed article explained, part-time drivers can make more per hour than full-time drivers if they focus on working during “surge pricing” hours — basically, Uber’s term for the busiest periods, when fares can more than double in response to increased demand.


This chart from Uber shows the dramatic range in potential pay for UberX drivers who work part-time hours (Uber)

There’s also the issue of Uber price cuts, which drivers have said hurt their bottom line. Noel Olken, a Los Angeles-based actor and director who has been making his living primarily as a driver for Uber and Lyft since November 2013, agrees.

“I’m making less than half of what I made [when I started],” Olken told HuffPost. “It’s as if you went to work one day and your boss said, we’re going to give you 20 percent less this week, but we’re going to give you more work to make up for it.”

Olken said that when he started, he usually had between 120 and 130 fares a week. After gas and commission paid to Uber, he made between $950 and $1,100 a week, he said. Now, Olken said it’s hard for him to make $500 per week in Los Angeles.

Uber’s representative argued that price cuts should help business overall.

“With each price cut, we’ve seen rider demand increase, which mean more trips per hour and lower pick up times — increasing the earning potential and creating better economics for drivers,” the spokeswoman said in an email.

Of course, money for drivers is just one issue Uber’s had to address in recent weeks. The company has been hit with allegations that it invaded a customer’s privacy, and also found itself at the center of a firestorm after an executive suggested the company hire a team to dig up dirt on journalists.

Protests Erupt After Decision In Eric Garner's Chokehold Death

NEW YORK (AP) — The cell phone video of the last moments of Eric Garner’s life was watched millions of times on the Internet, clearly showing a white police officer holding the unarmed black man in a chokehold, even as he repeatedly gasped, “I can’t breathe.”

But despite that visual evidence, and a medical examiner’s ruling that the chokehold contributed to the death, a Staten Island grand jury decided Wednesday not to bring any charges against the officer involved, prompting protests across the country and sending thousands onto New York’s streets, where they marched, chanted and blocked traffic into the next morning. While legal experts note it’s impossible to know how the grand jurors reached their conclusion, they say the Garner case, like Michael Brown’s death in Ferguson, Missouri, once again raised concerns about the influence local prosecutors have over the process of charging the police officers they work with on a daily basis.

“The video speaks for itself,” said Jeffrey Fagan, a professor at Columbia Law School. “It appears to show negligence. But if we learned anything from the Brown case, it’s the power of prosecutors to construct and manage a narrative in a way that can shape the outcome.”

Ekow N. Yankah, a professor at Cardozo School of Law, agreed that, “It is hard to understand how a jury doesn’t see any probable cause that a crime has been committed or is being committed when looking at that video, especially.”

Another observer, James A. Cohen, who teaches at Fordham University Law School, went further, saying, “Logic doesn’t play a role in this process.”

U.S. Attorney Eric Holder said federal prosecutors would conduct their own investigation of Garner’s July 17 death as officers were attempting to arrest him for selling untaxed cigarettes on the street. The New York Police Department also is doing an internal probe which could lead to administrative charges against Officer Daniel Pantaleo, who remains on desk duty.

The grand jury’s decision prompted emotional protests around New York and in cities from Atlanta to California.

In Manhattan, demonstrators laid down in Grand Central Terminal, walked through traffic on the West Side Highway and blocked the Brooklyn Bridge. A City Council member cried. Hundreds converged on the heavily secured area around the annual Rockefeller Center Christmas tree lighting with a combination of professional-looking signs and hand-scrawled placards reading, “Black lives matter” and “Fellow white people, wake up.” And in the Staten Island neighborhood where Garner died, people reacted with angry disbelief and chanted, “I can’t breathe!” and “Hands up — don’t choke!”

New York City police said early Thursday that more than 60 people were arrested, most for disorderly conduct.

“This fight ain’t over, it just begun,” said Garner’s widow Esaw.

But the demonstrations were largely peaceful, in contrast to the widespread arson and looting that accompanied the decision nine days earlier not to indict the officer in Brown’s death.

Staten Island District Attorney Daniel Donovan said the grand jury found “no reasonable cause” to bring charges, but unlike the chief prosecutor in the Ferguson case, he gave no details on the grand jury testimony. The district attorney said he will seek to have information on the investigation released.

In order to find Pantaleo criminally negligent, the grand jury would have had to determine he knew there was a “substantial risk” that Garner would have died. Pataleo’s lawyer and union officials argued that the grand jury got it right, saying he used an authorized takedown move — not a banned chokehold — and that Garner’s poor health was the main cause of his death.

The Rev. Al Sharpton, who has led protests over the custody death of Garner and the police shooting of Brown in the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson, said the New York decision is yet another reason he has lost confidence in state grand juries and local prosecutors to bring such cases.

“State grand juries tend to be too compromised with local politics because local prosecutors run for office and they have to depend on the police for evidence,” he said. “Don’t we have the right to question grand juries when we’re looking at a video and seeing things that don’t make sense?”

The video shot by an onlooker showed the 43-year-old Garner telling a group of police officers to leave him alone as they tried to arrest him. Pantaleo responded by wrapping his arm around Garner’s neck in what appeared to be a chokehold.

The heavyset father of six, who had asthma, was heard repeatedly gasping, “I can’t breathe!” He later died at a hospital.

The medical examiner ruled Garner’s death a homicide and found that a chokehold contributed to it. A forensic pathologist hired by Garner’s family agreed with those findings, saying there was hemorrhaging on Garner’s neck indicative of neck compressions.

Columbia’s Fagan said another factor was that the Staten Island grand jury came from the most conservative and least racially diverse of the city’s five boroughs, and home to many current and retired police officers and their families.

“Staten Island is a very different borough,” he said. “In fact, it may be closer to suburban St. Louis, and we can’t discount that.”

___

Associated Press writers Jennifer Peltz, Jake Pearson, Deepti Hajela and Bernard Vaughan contributed to this report.

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