fitgap

Uber Eats for Merchants

Features
Ease of use
Ease of management
Quality of support
Affordability
Market presence
Take the quiz to check if Uber Eats for Merchants and its alternatives fit your requirements.
Pricing from
Free Trial
Free version unavailable
User corporate size
Small
Medium
Large
User industry
  1. Arts, entertainment, and recreation
  2. Accommodation and food services
  3. Retail and wholesale

What is Uber Eats for Merchants

Uber Eats for Merchants is a merchant-facing platform that lets restaurants and other food businesses accept and manage delivery and pickup orders placed through the Uber Eats marketplace. It supports menu management, order throttling, promotions, and operational workflows through a tablet app and integrations with select POS systems. The product primarily serves merchants that want incremental demand from a third-party marketplace while using Uber’s courier network for last-mile delivery.

pros

Large consumer marketplace access

Merchants can list on a widely used consumer ordering app to capture demand without building their own customer acquisition channel. The marketplace model can be useful for new locations, off-peak demand, or expanding delivery radius. Compared with route-optimization-only tools, it bundles demand generation with fulfillment.

Integrated courier delivery network

The platform connects orders to Uber’s courier network for on-demand delivery, reducing the need for merchants to staff drivers. It supports delivery and pickup workflows, which helps merchants offer multiple fulfillment options. This is a differentiator versus systems that focus primarily on dispatching a merchant’s own fleet.

Merchant operations and controls

Merchants can manage menus, hours, item availability, and order pacing to align with kitchen capacity. The merchant app provides order status handling and basic performance reporting. POS integrations can reduce manual re-entry for supported systems, which helps in higher-volume operations.

cons

Marketplace fees and margins

Using a third-party marketplace typically involves commissions and service fees that can materially affect unit economics. Merchants may need to adjust pricing, packaging, or promotions to maintain margins. The cost structure can be less predictable than operating a first-party ordering channel.

Limited ownership of customer relationship

Orders originate in the marketplace, so the merchant’s ability to control branding, customer data access, and direct re-marketing is constrained compared with first-party ordering. Repeat purchasing behavior may remain tied to the marketplace experience. This can limit long-term customer lifetime value capture outside the platform.

Operational dependency on platform

Service levels depend on courier availability, app uptime, and marketplace policies that the merchant does not control. Changes to ranking, promotions, or fee programs can affect order volume. Some workflows may require additional hardware (e.g., tablets) or integration work to fit existing operations.

Plan & Pricing

Plan Price (example from official pages) Key features & notes
Lite 20% marketplace fee (US example) Lower-commission plan; includes payment processing; discoverability in app. Pickup fee noted as 7% where in-store pricing is validated.
Plus 25% marketplace fee (US example) — 0% intro rate for 30 days (where available) Increased discoverability; shown with lower delivery fee; may include promotional investment from Uber in some markets.
Premium 30% marketplace fee (US example) — 0% intro rate for 30 days (where available) Highest discoverability and promotional benefits; may include ad-credit matching, premium menu photo package, and conditional fee waivers (US promo: 0% fees for months with <20 orders during first 6 months).

Additional/usage-based products (official site lists these separately):

Self-delivery Pricing model: Tiered percentage Example (US): 15% self-delivery fee; pickup fee 7% (with validated in-store pricing). Businesses may also be able to use Uber’s network for some orders (higher % applies in that case).

Uber Direct (on-demand delivery from your own site/app) Pricing model: Per-delivery; tailored by distance Example (US): Starts at $7.99 per delivery (official page lists “starts at $7.99 per delivery”). No marketplace commission; pricing tailored to distance and usage.

Webshop (online ordering / commission-free storefront) Pricing model: Order-processing fee Example (US): 2.5% order processing fee + $0.29 per order (some other countries show different processing % or flat rates).

Notes:

  • Uber’s merchant pricing is region- and merchant-specific and the official merchant pages show different percentage values in different countries/contexts (examples above are taken from Uber Eats official merchant pricing pages for the US and other markets). Merchants often see customized offers during signup.
  • Pickup fees, Marketplace vs Self-delivery fees, and Uber One surcharge/opt-in charges are called out on the official pages and can differ by market and by whether in-store pricing parity is validated.
  • The Premium and Plus plans in several official pages show time-limited 0% introductory rates (30 days) and additional promotional protections in certain markets.

Seller details

Uber Technologies, Inc.
San Francisco, CA, USA
2009
Public
https://www.uber.com/
https://x.com/UberEats
https://www.linkedin.com/company/uber/

Tools by Uber Technologies, Inc.

Uber for Medical Transport
Uber Eats for Merchants
Uber for Business

Best Uber Eats for Merchants alternatives

Onfleet
ChowNow for Restaurants
Deliverect
Flipdish Restaurant Management System
See all alternatives

Popular categories

All categories