Users of ridesharing services in Dhaka have expressed their discontent over the differences in fares across the different platforms over the same distance and duration of travel.
“The only benefit I see after the ridesharing services have been introduced is that one can get a car ride instantly and nothing else,” said Khilgaon resident Manik.
The ridesharing services became popular among people in the city due to Dhaka’s consistent troubles in the public transport sector. The government drafted a ‘ridesharing policy’ last year to bring the service under law.
The policy does not fix the fares for private cars used in ridesharing, but asks ridesharing companies to follow the policy on taxicabs to determine the fares. The policy also says that fares for ridesharing services should not exceed taxi cab fares.
There is no mention of motorcycle fares in the policy. This has led to ridesharing companies charging fares for motorcycles however they wish.
According to the taxi cab policy for air-conditioned cabs, Tk 85 will be charged for the first two kilometres, Tk 34 for every additional kilometre travelled and Tk 8.5 for every two minutes of waiting time.
In the case of economy taxicabs, Tk 50 will be charged for the first two kilometres, Tk 12 for every kilometre after that and Tk 3 for every two minutes of waiting time.
The fare for CNG run autorickshaws has been fixed at Tk 40 for the first two kilometres and Tk 12 for every kilometre travelled, with a waiting charge of Tk 2 for every two minutes.
But, for ridesharing services, the passenger is charged for every minute of riding time.
Every ridesharing company charges different rates for their services. Ubermoto has its initial fare set at Tk 30 and charges Tk 12 for every kilometre travelled with a waiting charge of Tk 1 per minute. Pathao charges an initial fare of Tk 25 and for every kilometre travelled, the rate has been set at Tk 12 with a waiting charge of Tk 0.50 per minute. The initial fare for Pickme is Tk 24 and it charges Tk 12 for every kilometre travelled with a charge of Tk 0.50 per minute for waiting time. It adds Tk 25 as a request charge.
Obhai on the other hand charges a minimum fare of Tk 100 by taking into calculation the distance covered over the first six kilometres. It means that a passenger has to pay Tk 100 even if they travel a distance of only a kilometre. The service charges Tk 20 for every kilometre travelled but it has no waiting charge.
Uber Premier has its initial fare set at Tk 80 and charges Tk 22 for every kilometre travelled with a waiting charge of Tk 3 for every minute. For UberX the initial fare is Tk 40 with Tk 18 being charged for every kilometre travelled while retaining the same waiting charge as Uber Premier.
Pathao car ride sharing charges Tk 50 as initial fare, Tk 20 for every kilometre travelled and Tk 2.50 for every minute of waiting while Pickme, another ride-sharing company, charges Tk 50 for user requests, Tk 40 as initial fare, Tk 20 for every kilometre travelled and Tk 6 waiting charge for every 2 minutes.
bdnews24.com found differing fares in four different ride sharing apps when it requested rides for the same destination at the same time.
For a bike ride from National Press Club to Gabtoli bus stand, Shohoz Rides showed an estimated fare of Tk 172, Pathao Tk 177, Ubermoto Tk 180, Obhai Tk 205 and Pickme Tk 175.
For car rides, Pathao Car Plus showed Tk 397, UberX 359, Uber Premier Tk 450 and Shohoz Car Tk 360 in estimated fares over the same distance.
At times, the actual fare is much higher than the estimated fare, complained Aklima Chowdhury, an ICDDR,B official.
“Uber showed an estimated fare of Tk 536 from Mohakhali to Mirpur-1 but it turned into Tk 825 by the time I reached my destination. I made the payment and took a snapshot of the receipt but later I found out that the fare changed to Tk 536 again in the trip history section of the app,” she told bdnews24.com.
“A new problem has arisen in ride sharing, which is the CNG-run auto-rickshaw. They charge different amounts for the same distance at different times. They increase the fare according to the demand,” said Manik Muntasir, a user of ride-sharing services.
“The fares have increased recently. I used to travel to Uttara from Khilgaon paying around Tk 400 without any discounts. I cannot go to Uttara now without paying less than Tk 500 even after getting a discount,” he said.