New York Post

No tip? Then expect a DoorDash dawdle

- By ARIEL ZILBER azilber@nypost.com

It used to be for good service — now it’s extortion.

Hungry diners may be forced to wait longer for their DoorDash orders if they choose not to tip the deliverer when the order is placed, according to the company.

“Dashers can pick and choose which orders they want to do,” the food-delivery app warned in a pop-up alert to customers this week.

“Orders that take longer to be accepted by dashers tend to result in a slower delivery.”

The new advisory is part of a pilot program launched by the company to gauge user reaction.

“As with anything we pilot, we look forward to closely analyzing the results and feedback,” a DoorDash spokespers­on told The Wall Street Journal.

DoorDash pays dashers between $2 and $10 per delivery — depending on the distance traveled to make a delivery.

They get to keep 100% of all tips. The firm said customers can tip in cash at their door, but they, too, would have to wait longer for their food.

Social media reaction was mostly negative. “Tips are based on service, not the working conditions. DoorDash needs to pay them more first and foremost,” one user posted on X.

Another user wrote: “Tipping is not a requiremen­t and I hate when people pretend it should be.”

The user added he would gladly tip “when I feel the dasher deserves it, but don’t tell me I have to tip.”

“If a dasher deserves so much, then take it up with DoorDash

to accommodat­e them appropriat­ely,” the user wrote.

Others disagreed.

“Man, DoorDash shouldn’t even let you order food at all if you ain’t tipping them f--kin’ drivers,” another X user wrote, adding that dashers are working through “rain sleet or snow bringing y’all s--t and your lame a-- can’t throw them an extra few bucks.”

DoorDash announced its third-quarter earnings Wednesday at the close of trading on Wall Street. The company’s share price closed the day at $75.90, up 1.27%.

The company’s stock price has risen by more than 20% over the past six months.

DoorDash grocery and food orders jumped in the second quarter as the company posted its highest revenue since its shares began trading publicly in late 2020.

Total orders in the second quarter rose 25% to 532 million from a year earlier. But it also posted a $172 million net loss — down from $263 million in the same period from a year prior.

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