13 Easy Delivery Driver Side Hustles (Using Your Own Car)

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Earn some extra cash using your own car. In this video, I’ll be sharing 13 easy delivery driver side hustles (using your own car) that you can start immediately. These delivery side hustles will allow you to make money by using your own car.

These side hustles can boost your income by driving your car around your area. Get ready to hit the road and double your income by doing these side hustle ideas with your car. These delivery side hustles might sound tiring, but they don’t!

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These videos are for entertainment purposes only and they are just Shane's opinion based off of his own life experience and the research that he's done. Shane is not an attorney, CPA, insurance, or financial advisor and the information presented shall not be construed as tax, legal, insurance, safety or financial advice. If stocks or companies are mentioned, Shane might have an ownership interest in them. Affiliate links may be present, the offers and numbers presented may change over time so please make sure to confirm that the offer is still valid. Some offers mentioned may no longer be available or they have been changed. Please don’t make buying or selling decisions based on Shane’s videos. If you need such advice, please contact the qualified legal or financial professionals, don't just trust the opinion of a stranger on the internet and always make sure to do your own research and enjoy this family friendly content.

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ShaneHummus
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I delivered pizzas once and found out that rich people were crappy tippers. I got my biggest tips from poor people.

hobiesailor
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I'm not a teenager, I'm an adult, and I currently deliver pizza for Domino's on the east coast in Florida and make roughly $32-$35 per hour with tips. On a really good night, I'll make $300 in tips. Even on a not so great night, I'll still bring home about $100-$150 per day. Domino's is a great place to work. You get driver and insider pay per hour, mileage reimbursement, plus tips. The only con is that you must be there one year in order to get direct deposit. You have to deal with paper checks until then, unfortunately. But your tips are cash in hand at the end of every shift.

catlady
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I saw a specialized medical delivery job packaging and delivering radioactive and toxic medicines. The requirements and demands were insane, the hours began at like 4am. These were obviously critical needs for the patients and required a professional person. For all that it only paid $18 hr. Thousands to tens of thousands worth of hazardous and vital supplies and they pay some poor sucker a poverty wage to make it happen. Insane.

SLM-hfcr
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Just remember these YouTubers are real. They don't give you real life situations. If your car breaks down it's on you. Their argument would be you should keep it maintained.. obviously. But even keeping it maintained in the car does have issues. You end up putting millage on your car and that car issue can be expensive to fix. It logics these big companies want you to use your own car. It costs you money not them. Plus it save them extra money they could be paying you if you actually work for the company directly..3rd companies take a profit and they don't have to worry about it. Expect you. Be smart not stupid okay people!

bluecavemen
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Keep in mind that ALL of these jobs require you to live in or near highly populated areas -Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, etc. I live in a city with about 30k people in it. Uber eats: you get maybe 4 deliveries per day. Doordash: If you're not the top 2 drivers, you have to schedule time (and its usually 1:30-3am). Uber driver: about 4-5 rides per day. Postmates, Skedaddle, UPS, Amazon deliveries are non-existant.

brandonedmonson
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Surprised you didn't mention Amazon Flex, which is using your personal vehicle to drive an Amazon route. That's what I do in my spare time and it pays between $23 and $29 per hour from an Amazon warehouse and, with tips, $30+ per hour from a Fresh or Whole Foods store.

kennystrawnmusic
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The lost luggage ya better have a pretty big vehicle. Ya don't need a 16 foot truck, but at least a mini van or decent size SUV. Some of that luggage is heavy.

Most people do not tip you. More people are pissed off at you than tip ya. There's 2 types of customers. The ones who lost luggage upon returning home. Those people are generally ok. A bit annoyed maybe, but they've got other things to wear- so they're not as stressed.

The tough ones are the ones on vacation when their luggage is lost. If it's a business trip, it's even worse. They're in a hotel with no other clothes. You'd think they'd be the happiest to see ya, but they're often pissed. To them, you're working for the airline. Some of those people will blow up at ya. They don't view ya as the person who saved their day. They view ya as "it's about time this F-ing airline got my luggage to me!!!"

Mind ya, there are people who are thankful that ya helped out. That's not most of them though. Again, more people are going to be upset than tip. Yes there will be a few tips, but there will be a lot of upset people.

Also, it's usually a lot of miles on your vehicle. The vacationers tend to stay at hotels close to the airport. Usually within 50 miles or so. The people who have returned home? They can live anywhere. I'm in Michigan. I've had deliveries to Alpena (up north on Lake Huron) then over to Traverse City (up north on Lake Michigan). People live a long way from the airport a lot of times. Very rarely did I get a run close to the airport for people who had returned home. You'll have days where you drive 6-700 miles.

I did this years ago. Long before there was any social media. The job can pay ok, but you're mostly going to deal with unhappy, stressed out people. It's a lot better when you're delivering food, packages, or something they want. Those people are happy to see ya most of the time.

dannyd
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For Uber eats and doordash, you have to deliver in downtown New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles and you might make close to 30 an hour

davidk
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IT help desks are based outside of the USA. 😊 Tech layoff recently and those jobs have been move to low cost markets vs the high cost markets based in USA.

SoCalSurfer
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You can not make $8, 000 a month doing Uber Eats. You basically have to have no life to make $8, 000 a month doing Uber eats. And I'm an Uber eats driver

SuperBigdude
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please for the love of god do not drive uber or lyft. trust me

everydayvacaytaj
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Just so everyone knows. Pretty much every platform allows multi-aping when delivering. And it's pretty much the only way you're gonna be able to even reach a solid salary per year. Again, you sighn up for every single platform year either do them all at the same time or by cycling them day by day.

Christiansstillstruggle
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Pizza delivery on a military base is pretty good. Base pay is federal minimum wage + tips for a driver.

smashmode
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Have you try deliver with any these services? I don't think so.
Because I have. The current pays is less than $10 per hour.

phunguyen-dhog
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Definitely forgot to mention catering orders. I did one yesterday that paid me $453 for less than 2 miles

PatGigtainment
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Before clients are happy that you deliver the food to them and they received it with open door and arms and hand u a tip.😊 but nowadays people wanted u to just leave the food on the door and take a picture, like they are in confined prison, l dont know if they are cheap to give tips or they are afraid of strangers.😂

clydejuanite
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Rich people pocket more tight than their batty!!

shawnvlog
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I had a small van, and on busy days NEVER broke $200 BEFORE gas/servicing/tires/ins.etc.

deadcarz
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I came across another one. If this helps. I met a guy who makes over 60k a year driving for a car dealership when people drop their car off for service and need a ride home. Obviously not available everywhere, but worth looking for.

clairekeller