Another way to your destination
Ride- hailing company finally begins its lowest- cost service at the lucrative transit hub on Thursday.
Uber can now pick up passengers at LAX alongside its ride- hailing competitor Lyft.
After months of negotiations and political infighting, the wait is over: Drivers for Uber’s lowest- cost ride service will be allowed to pick up travelers at Los Angeles International Airport starting at 8 a. m. Thursday.
Uber is the second ridehailing company to be granted full access to one of Southern California’s most lucrative ride markets. Its main rival, Lyft, started working at LAX in December.
“We’re very excited to play a part in simplifying and modernizing the LAX experience,” said Christopher Ballard, Uber’s general manager for Southern California.
Last summer, after months of debate, Los Angeles officials agreed to allow ride- hailing companies to apply for permits to work at the airport. Uber and Lyft spent months proving to off icials that they could comply with the terms of their contracts.
For more than two years, Uber and Lyft drivers have been allowed to drop off passengers at LAX. For airport pickups, travelers could request a higher- end Uber or Lyft car service, operated by a state- licensed livery driver, but the companies’ low- cost services were banned.
“As with any airport negotiation, it’s a very extensive process,” Ballard said. “A lot of work went into this on both sides of the aisle.”
Uber and Lyft have been operating for some time at other California airports, including San Francisco International and John Wayne in Orange County. But LAX, the West Coast’s busiest airport, has been seen as a key venue for the companies to prove they can provide a viable alternative to driving, mass transit and taxis.
Both companies expect to do a brisk business at LAX. During Lyft’s f irst two weeks of full operations, drivers picked up and dropped off more than 50,000 people, airport officials said.
The typical taxi trip from LAX to downtown costs more than $ 50, not including tip. A ride with Uber or Lyft is closer to $ 30, although prices can climb during high- demand periods.
Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said a statement that travelers’ options would “expand dramatically” with the arrival of UberX. The introduction of ride- hailing at LAX is the biggest change to ground transportation options there since the introduction in the 1980s of shared vans such as SuperShuttle.
“It’s always good when we expand passenger and customer choices,” said Los Angeles City Councilman Mike Bonin, whose coastal district includes LAX. “There’s a market out there for Lyft, and there’s a market out there for Uber.”
Starting Thursday, passengers seeking an UberX or UberXL ride will be able to hail the cars using the Uber app. They then can follow signs marked “ride service” to the upper departure level, where drivers will pick up passengers at the curb.
The upper- level requirement was originally unpopular with both companies, because passengers will have to carry their luggage upstairs from baggage claim.
Passengers seeking a ride in an Uber driven by a statelicensed town car operator — the UberBlack, UberSUV and UberLux services — will catch those rides on the lower level, where taxis and limos pick up.
Drivers for both companies are required to wait in a holding area east of 96th Street until they get a request for a ride through the company apps. No more than 40 drivers per company are allowed in that area at one time.
The LAX permit requires Lyft and Uber to each pay the airport a minimum of $ 25,000 a month from $ 4 fees for each drop- off and pickup. The fees, which are passed along to passengers, will go to the airport’s general operating budget.
Taxis pay a similar fee to make pickups at LAX, but drop- offs are free.