Needs Improvement - Independent Contractor DoorDash Employee Review

4.0
Mar 13, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Sometimes u can dash by the hour an it has its perks here an there. Also in peak periods u get extra bonuses an pay onto top of your base pay either hourly or by the offers.

Cons

Sometimes u have long leriods just sitting there twiddling your thumbs waiting on an order to pop up. Another is u go 5 or more miles to a so called Hotspot that's reading busy on Dasher map. An then when u get to the spot it's not hot anymore. An then u have to fuel up constantly becuz it sometimes takes u very far places an stuff. An lastly u could be out dashing all day foe bout 10 to 12 hours. An depending on where the locations are if they are far or not. The base pay an tips of the trip or dash per offers. U can easily get deterred away from dashing. If u been out all night an day dashing an for 12 hours of work ur bring home pay is $25 to $30 for the day. Then ur either not trying hard enuff to get the best or drive to the best Hotspots an take the best offers. Don't take every delivery the comes on your screen. Be contentious an mindful of your time, the mileage an also fuel costs an how long doordash allots the time it takes to pick up an deliver within the allot time doing it effectively, efficiently, safely an politely an quickly.

Explore other reviews about DoorDash

5.0
Jul 14, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Able to improve while learning, thereby earning more as time goes

Cons

To have complete freedom you must be a platinum level driver. This really helps. 100 deliveries per month keeps the level.

2.0
Jul 14, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

- The company offers comprehensive benefits and is very well-established and professionally run. - The entire process is very standardized. Whenever there are questions or approvals needed, the response time is very fast. - The office environment is great.

Cons

- Extremely toxic culture on certain teams. Working late is basically expected, and if you are not constantly online or putting in extra hours, you may be labeled as “not committed” or “not proactive enough.” There is a lot of pressure to perform being busy rather than actually being effective. - Reorgs happen constantly, and every manager change feels like a warning sign. If you get moved onto a new manager’s team through a reorg and you are not one of “their people,” good luck. They may never fully trust you and can make your life miserable until you eventually leave or get pushed out. - Leadership is incredibly political. There is a lot of sucking up, favoritism, and clique behavior. Being good at your job is not always enough. I have seen capable people get pushed out very suddenly because they did not have the right relationship with leadership, while people with weak skills but strong political instincts and good “talking skills” continue to get rewarded. - Terrible environment for early-career employees. There is basically no real training, and very little patience for junior employees who are still learning. You are expected to figure everything out on your own, but at the same time, you may still be criticized for not already knowing things nobody ever taught you.

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