Lyft is piloting a savings account program for drivers in Utah (exclusive)

Lyft is testing out what it’s calling a “first-of-its-kind” program for Utah drivers starting January 1 in which the rideshare giant will offer to contribute 7% of eligible drivers’ quarterly earnings into savings accounts to be used for things like benefits or cover paid time off. 

Lyft is partnering with portable benefits provider Stride for the offering, it tells Fast Company.

“We’ve been fighting against the status quo for a long time. The dichotomy between you have to be an employee or an independent contractor,” says Jeremy Bird, Lyft executive vice president of driver experience.

“If you’re an independent contractor, you can’t have benefits. If you’re an employee, you can’t have the kind of flexibility as a contractor. We think that that shouldn’t be the reality in the future. And so hopefully this helps prove that you can do both,” Bird added.

Lyft decided to attempt this savings plan in Utah after Gov. Spencer Cox signed a bill into law in March 2023 that allows companies that rely on gig workers to pay into flexible benefits packages for their workers, without having to call them employees.

At its core, SB-233 is a simple bill. It doesn’t try to cement the status of gig workers as either independent contractors or employees. Rather, it provides the ability for these gig companies to give workers more access, while the broader argument plays out at both the state and federal level.

Stride said that 36% of people in Utah have earned income, whether a lot or little, on an app-based platform.

“One of the really nice things is we’re not just making it possible to get contributions, it’s that we’re making possible to give these drivers total flexibility within a defined set of financial security driven benefits and guide them on how to set these up,” Stride CEO Noah Lang tells Fast Company.

To qualify, drivers will need to have earned the top-tier “Elite” Lyft Rewards status throughout the quarter. Drivers also have to have opened a Strive Save account.

After that, Lyft will deposit 7% of a driver’s earnings from the previous quarter, excluding tips, into that account. Funds will be deposited each quarter through the remainder of the program, which lasts one year.

Lyft has been investing in a number of driver-focused initiatives in recent months in an attempt to keep drivers’ (and riders’) on-platform hours up. It’s a sweet spot to navigate: investing in drivers and customers and hoping for strong returns.

“I’m going in with a lot of optimism and belief that if we shop up in this way then we can really see a financial benefit for the overall platform and also really benefit for the overall platform but also really benefit for drivers and riders,” Bird says.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91242553/lyft-is-piloting-a-savings-account-program-for-drivers-in-utah-exclusive?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Creado 9mo | 9 dic 2024, 11:20:04


Inicia sesión para agregar comentarios

Otros mensajes en este grupo.

Netflix is doubling down on full-season drops with season two of Meghan’s show

Meghan, Duchess of Sussex’ latest season of her reality show, With Love, Meghan, drops today on Netflix. In line with the stream

26 ago 2025, 14:40:16 | Fast company - tech
Listen to the 10 most memorable sound effects in the history of tech

For understandable reasons, most technology coverage tends to focus more on the physical or visual

26 ago 2025, 14:40:15 | Fast company - tech
Where solar investments pack the biggest climate punch

The United States’ hourly demand for electricity broke two records last month, reaching its highest-ever level—759,190 megawatts

26 ago 2025, 14:40:14 | Fast company - tech
Doctors love this AI app because it gives them hours of their lives back

A typical physician’s job is much more than just seeing patients. In fact, most doctors spend hours every week outside of clinic hours catching up on typing notes and getting visits and trea

26 ago 2025, 14:40:12 | Fast company - tech
Agentic AI has companies excited and security experts freaked out

Agentic AI is being heralded as the future of the generative AI revolu

26 ago 2025, 12:30:04 | Fast company - tech
This man keeps buying and returning 110-pound anvils on Amazon

An Illinois man keeps buying and returning 110-pound anvils on Amazon—until “someone does something about it,” he says.

The creator, who goes by Johnbo Stockwell on

26 ago 2025, 5:30:09 | Fast company - tech
3 quick and easy ways to clear up storage space in Windows 11

Digital hoarders, unite! I have a game on my PC that I haven’t played in months, and it’s taking up more than 100 GB of disk space. There, I said it.

This is a scenario most of us find o

26 ago 2025, 5:30:07 | Fast company - tech