New Year's Eve: How to Avoid Surge Pricing on Uber's Busiest Night - East Idaho News
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New Year’s Eve: How to Avoid Surge Pricing on Uber’s Busiest Night

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HT uber surge 1 sk 141230 4x3 1600?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1419971477912Uber(NEW YORK) — Car service company Uber says it expects to deliver more than two million rides in 24 hours this New Year’s Eve, its “busiest night ever.” That means Uber app users should be on the alert for surge pricing that can cause prices for rides to multiply by as much as seven times.

While the demand for cars will exceed available drivers, Uber may make as much as $100 million in revenue on New Year’s Eve, estimates Business Insider, though a company spokeswoman declined to comment to ABC News.

To avoid previous snafus, when many users fumed at higher prices, Uber offers tips for when to request a car and how to navigate pricing.

Uber, which doesn’t cap prices, reminds users that you’ll be notified in advance and asked to confirm increased rates. You also can estimate your fare before requesting a car.

Uber defends surge pricing as an incentive for drivers to pick up customers during busy times, such as when people were trying to clear out of downtown Sydney during a hostage situation two weeks ago. But after a public backlash in that case, Uber said it would refund customers who were subject to surge pricing and offered free rides that day.

As for the best time to request an Uber car on New Year’s Eve, Uber expects the highest demand — and fares — between 12:30 and 2:30 a.m. local time.

“For the most affordable rides, request right when the ball drops at midnight or wait until later for prices to return to normal,” Uber says, adding that users can be notified when prices drop.

Competitor Lyft’s “Prime Time” New Year’s Eve maximum will be double the normal 200 percent cap.

Alternative options include Flywheel, an app that hails taxis in San Francisco, Sacramento, Seattle and San Diego that will offer flat $10 rides from 8 p.m. Wednesday until 3 a.m. Thursday. Another app, SurgeProector, aims to show Uber users the nearest “no-surge zone,” which at times can be just blocks away.

If you can’t afford a ride, you could consider spending the night in ,with hotel apps like Hotel Tonight which immediately finds the cheapest hotel deals around you.


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