Why people leave Waymo or want a backup app installed
- Service area is the headline limit. Waymo operates fully autonomous rides in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Metro Phoenix, and Austin. The moment you step outside those four metros, the app shows a polite waitlist screen and you need another way home.
- Airport coverage is uneven. Some service zones in Phoenix and Los Angeles still exclude direct airport pickups or drop-offs, which sends travelers back to Uber or Lyft for one leg of the trip.
- Wait times stretch on busy nights. The autonomous fleet is finite. A Saturday-night request from a packed neighbourhood in San Francisco can quote ten or fifteen minutes when a human-driven rideshare is two minutes out.
- Single vehicle type. The Jaguar I-Pace seats four adults comfortably. Group rides of five or six need a bigger SUV or van and Waymo cannot serve them yet.
- No human driver means no human help. Riders with mobility needs, parents loading a child seat, or anyone who wants to ask a driver to stop at a side entrance sometimes prefer a person in the front seat.
If any of those push you to install a backup, here are 7 Waymo alternatives worth keeping on the home screen.
Which app should you choose?
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Uber if you want the broadest US fallback the moment Waymo’s service area or wait time fails you. Uber also routes Waymo bookings inside Phoenix.
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Lyft if you live in a market where Lyft has stronger driver supply than Uber or in Atlanta where Lyft surfaces May Mobility autonomous shuttles.
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Tesla if you live in Austin and want the only other consumer-facing autonomous robotaxi pilot in the same city.
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Curb if you prefer a licensed taxi with regulated metered fares over private hire, in New York, Boston, Chicago, DC, Las Vegas, or another supported metro.
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Bolt if you travel to Europe or Africa and want a predictable upfront-pricing rideshare in cities where Waymo will not operate any time soon.
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inDrive if you hate surge multipliers and want to propose your own fare, the closest thing to Waymo’s flat-fare predictability outside its service area.
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DiDi if you travel to Mexico, Brazil, Colombia, Chile, Australia, or Japan, where DiDi’s local supply runs deeper than any global rideshare.
Stay on Waymo if you live inside one of the four service areas and the trade-off between a slightly longer wait and a driverless, tip-free, predictable cabin is worth it for most of your rides.
Comparison table
| App | Best for | Autonomous option | Coverage | Standout feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Uber | Broadest US fallback | Books Waymo in Phoenix | 70+ countries | Largest driver pool plus Comfort and Premier tiers |
| Lyft | US backup with May Mobility partner | Autonomous shuttles in Atlanta | US and Canada | Second-largest US supply with Lyft Lux |
| Tesla | Austin-only robotaxi pilot | Yes, Austin | Austin | Consumer-facing autonomous from the second-largest robotaxi operator |
| Curb | Predictable taxi fares | No | 65+ US cities | Regulated meter fares with no surge |
| Bolt | International travel | No | 50+ countries | Upfront fares that typically beat Uber in Europe and Africa |
| inDrive | Negotiated fares | No | 700+ cities worldwide | Rider names the price, no surge multipliers |
| DiDi | Latin America, Australia, Japan | Robotaxi pilots in select Chinese cities | 14+ countries | Strongest local supply outside the US |
The Waymo alternatives, tested
Uber
The broadest US fallback the moment Waymo runs out of cars or service area. Uber’s driver pool is larger in nearly every market, vehicle tiers stretch from UberX through Comfort, Black, and Premier, and the multi-stop and group-ride features that Waymo cannot serve are core to the Uber app. Inside Phoenix, Uber also surfaces Waymo cars directly as a vehicle option, so a single Uber tap can return a driverless ride alongside the regular options.
Where it falls short: Surge pricing kicks in on the same Friday nights and rainy commutes that make Waymo’s flat fare attractive. Uber One pushes the membership upsell at the top of the booking flow. Driver quality varies in a way Waymo’s fleet does not.
Pricing:
- Free to download, pay per ride.
- UberX runs at the standard rideshare price. Comfort sits about a third higher, Black and Premier higher still.
- Uber One membership trims a small percentage from ride totals and waives delivery fees.
Switching from Waymo: No data migration. Install Uber, link a payment method, and re-enter Home and Work. Uber Cash, if you have any, can offset the first few fares.
Bottom line: Install Uber if you live in or travel through the US and want the lowest-friction backup when Waymo’s wait quote is too long or you have a group of five.
Lyft
The second-largest US rideshare and the most natural backup for anyone whose city does not yet have Waymo. Lyft’s coverage in mid-sized US metros is comparable to Uber’s, the Lux tier handles the premium-feel rides that some readers will install Waymo to find, and in Atlanta the app surfaces May Mobility autonomous shuttles inside the same booking flow.
Where it falls short: Coverage thins faster than Uber outside the top 30 metros, surge pricing applies on predictable spikes, and Lyft Pink upsells appear across the app. Driver supply on long airport pickups can be unreliable.
Pricing:
- Free to download, pay per ride.
- Standard tier sits near Uber on the same route. Lyft Lux runs at a premium tier.
- Lyft Pink membership bundles priority pickup and bike credits.
Switching from Waymo: Install, sign in with the phone number you use for Waymo, link a payment method, and re-enter Home and Work.
Bottom line: Install Lyft if you live in the US, want a non-Uber backup, and care that one of your local providers is investing in autonomous capacity through May Mobility.
Tesla
The Tesla app houses the Robotaxi pilot in Austin, the only other consumer-facing autonomous ride service in the same city as Waymo. Riders inside the supported zone can request a fully driverless Tesla through the app, with flat upfront fares and a cabin that mirrors a regular Tesla Model Y. The same app also keeps Tesla owners in touch with their personal vehicles, so the dual-purpose is a bonus for households that already own a Tesla.
Where it falls short: Robotaxi is Austin-only at the moment, with limited service hours and a smaller zone than the Tesla map suggests. Wait times are longer than Waymo in Austin during the early rollout. Non-Tesla owners may find the account flow heavier than a pure rideshare app.
Pricing:
- Free to download.
- Robotaxi fares are flat upfront, broadly comparable to Waymo on similar routes.
- No subscription for the ride side.
Switching from Waymo: Create a Tesla account, enable Robotaxi in the supported zone, and add a payment method. The flow is more vehicle-app than rideshare-app and takes a few extra minutes to set up.
Bottom line: Install Tesla if you live in or visit Austin and want the only other public-facing robotaxi pilot in the same metro.
Curb
The taxi side of the market, modernised. Curb hails licensed yellow and green cabs in 65 plus US cities, with upfront pricing on most routes and metered fares as a fallback. It is the closest non-autonomous answer to the predictability that draws riders to Waymo because the meter does not surge and the driver is a regulated professional.
Where it falls short: Supply is concentrated in big metros. Outside New York, Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, Washington DC, Las Vegas, Miami, Los Angeles, and San Francisco, the cab pool thins quickly. There is no autonomous option and the cabin cleanliness varies driver to driver in a way Waymo’s fleet does not.
Pricing:
- Free to download, pay per ride.
- Fares match the city’s regulated taxi meter, so the bill is predictable and there is no surge multiplier.
- No membership.
Switching from Waymo: Install, add a payment method, and you can request a cab in minutes. There is no rating history to lose because every Curb driver is a licensed cab driver, not a private-hire driver.
Bottom line: Install Curb if you live in a big US taxi city and the part of Waymo you miss is the regulated, surge-free fare rather than the missing driver.
Bolt
The cleanest answer to Waymo for anyone traveling to Europe or Africa. Bolt operates in 50 plus countries with upfront pricing that typically runs below Uber on the same route. None of those rides are autonomous, but the predictable fare and lower price point hit similar notes to what makes Waymo feel reasonable on a quiet Tuesday inside its service area.
Where it falls short: No US footprint, so Bolt does not back up Waymo at home. The multi-mode panel inside the app, with scooters, food, and rental cars on the same map, can clutter the booking flow in cities where Bolt runs all of them.
Pricing:
- Free to download.
- Local fares usually undercut Uber in continental Europe and most of Sub-Saharan Africa.
- Bolt Plus subscription unlocks small ride discounts.
Switching from Waymo: Install before your trip, link a card, and the upfront-pricing flow will feel familiar.
Bottom line: Install Bolt before your next trip to Lisbon, Tallinn, Nairobi, or Cape Town. It is the predictable-fare option in markets where Waymo will not operate any time soon.
inDrive
The rideshare app built around a simple idea: the rider proposes a price, nearby drivers see the offer, and either accept or counter. There is no surge multiplier, no algorithmic mark-up, and no membership in the way. For Waymo riders who like the flat-fare predictability, inDrive delivers a similar absence of surprise pricing through a different mechanism.
Where it falls short: The negotiate-your-price flow takes a few extra taps and can return zero offers on a slow day or a long route. Driver supply is thinner than Uber or Lyft in most US cities, so peak-time waits stretch. There is no autonomous option.
Pricing:
- Free to download.
- Fare is whatever you and the driver agree on, with no service fee added on top in most cities.
- No membership.
Switching from Waymo: Install, set a payment method, and start proposing fares. The first ride takes a minute longer than a Waymo booking while drivers consider your offer.
Bottom line: Install inDrive if you want full control over the fare and you can afford a slightly longer pickup window in exchange.
DiDi
DiDi runs the strongest rideshare network in Latin America, parts of Asia, Australia, and Japan, and operates autonomous robotaxi pilots in selected Chinese cities through a separate vehicle pool. For US travelers heading to Mexico City, São Paulo, Bogotá, Buenos Aires, Melbourne, Sydney, or Tokyo, DiDi is the local-supply default and removes the friction of asking which app the locals use.
Where it falls short: No US ride-hail footprint, so DiDi is purely a travel tool for Americans. The consumer-facing robotaxi pilots are not available outside the supported Chinese metros.
Pricing:
- Free to download.
- Local-market fares usually undercut Uber on the same route.
- No global membership.
Switching from Waymo: Install in country, link a local or international card, and confirm phone with the country code that matches your travel.
Bottom line: Install DiDi if your travel covers Latin America, Australia, or Japan and you want the local-supply edge a Western rideshare cannot match.
How to choose
If you live in one of the four Waymo service areas and just need a safe backup for nights when the autonomous fleet is full, install Uber first. The driver pool is deepest, the multi-stop and group-ride features cover the use cases Waymo cannot serve, and inside Phoenix the same app even surfaces Waymo cars when they are available.
If you live in the US outside Waymo’s footprint and want the closest cousin until Waymo expands, install Lyft. The brand is the second-largest US rideshare and the May Mobility partnership in Atlanta shows where Lyft is investing in the autonomous side.
If you live in Austin and want the only other consumer-facing robotaxi pilot in the same city, install Tesla and enable Robotaxi inside the supported zone.
If the part of Waymo you actually miss is the regulated, surge-free fare rather than the missing driver, install Curb and ride licensed taxis in a major US city.
If you travel internationally, stack Bolt for Europe and Africa, DiDi for Latin America, Australia, and Japan, and use inDrive anywhere you want to set your own price and avoid surge entirely.
Stay on Waymo if you live inside one of the four service areas and the wait and the absent driver are both fine with you for most of your weekly rides.
FAQ
Is there another self-driving rideshare app besides Waymo? Yes. Tesla runs a Robotaxi pilot in Austin through the Tesla app, the only other consumer-facing autonomous ride service in a US metro at scale. Lyft surfaces May Mobility autonomous shuttles in Atlanta inside the regular Lyft booking flow. Outside the US, DiDi and Apollo Go operate robotaxi pilots in selected Chinese cities.
Why is Waymo not available in every city yet? Waymo expands carefully, one metro at a time, validating safety performance and regulatory approval in each new market. As of 2026, the service runs in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Metro Phoenix, and Austin. Other metros are on Waymo’s announced waitlist.
Is Waymo cheaper than Uber or Lyft? On a quiet route during off-peak hours, Waymo, Uber, and Lyft are within a dollar or two. On surge nights, Waymo’s flat fare can beat both because there is no multiplier and no tip on top. On a five-mile premium-tier ride, Waymo competes with Comfort and Lux and tends to land below them after tip.
Can Waymo be booked through Uber or Lyft? Waymo rides can be booked through Uber in Phoenix, where Uber surfaces autonomous vehicles as one of the available ride options. The Waymo app remains the primary booking surface in San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Austin.
Which Waymo alternative has the best customer support? Curb’s licensed-taxi model includes the regulated taxi commission as a backup for fare disputes in most cities. Uber and Lyft route support through automated chat first and escalate slowly. Tesla’s Robotaxi support is tied to the Tesla account and reaches a human faster for paying account holders.
Is Tesla Robotaxi the same as Waymo? Both are fully autonomous ride services. Waymo runs an all-electric Jaguar I-Pace fleet using its own sensor stack with cameras, radar, and lidar. Tesla Robotaxi uses Model Y vehicles with a camera-first approach. Coverage is different: Waymo runs in four metros, Tesla Robotaxi is Austin-only as of 2026.