How Much Do Uber and Lyft Drivers Actually Earn?
Calculate your real net earnings after gas, depreciation, taxes, and insurance. See your true hourly rate.
The Gap Between Gross and Net Earnings
The number on your Uber/Lyft app is not your income. After gas, car depreciation, maintenance, insurance, and taxes, the average rideshare driver keeps 50-60% of their gross earnings. A driver showing $1,200/week gross may net only $600-720 after all real costs are deducted.
The Costs Most Drivers Ignore
Depreciation: The single largest hidden cost. Driving 40,000 miles/year accelerates depreciation by $3,000-5,000 annually. Maintenance: Oil changes, tires, brakes, and wear items cost $0.05-0.08 per mile — $2,000-3,200/year at rideshare mileage. Self-employment tax: 15.3% on net earnings (Social Security + Medicare), in addition to income tax.
Is Rideshare Driving Worth It?
At the true hourly rate (typically $12-20/hour after all costs in most markets), rideshare driving is comparable to retail or food service jobs — but without benefits, paid time off, or employer contributions. It can be worthwhile for flexible supplemental income but rarely replaces a full-time job at equivalent compensation.
An MIT study found that after accounting for vehicle expenses, the median Uber/Lyft driver earns approximately $8.55-$13.85/hour in profit. However, top-performing drivers in high-demand markets earn $20-30/hour by optimizing timing, location, and vehicle efficiency.