If you used HyreCar between 2018 and 2023, you remember the email. The bankruptcy, the assets sold to Holdings Capital Group, the rebrand, the slow death of the original platform. A lot of drivers got displaced. A lot of owners with cars on the platform got stranded mid-rental and had to chase deposits.
I rented through HyreCar twice — once in 2020 when I was getting started, and again in late 2022 when my own car was in the shop. I watched the platform go from "kind of works" to "I'm not sure my deposit is coming back" in about 18 months. By the end of 2023 it was over.
So in 2026, where are former HyreCar drivers and owners actually going? Here's the field guide.
HyreCar pioneered peer-to-peer rideshare rentals starting around 2014. Public company, NASDAQ, raised a bunch of money, expanded to dozens of cities. Then a slow bleed of operational issues — slow deposit returns, customer service collapse, owner payouts going late, insurance disputes. Filed Chapter 11 in May 2023. Assets were sold and the platform was eventually shuttered or absorbed.
Drivers who had cars on rent at the time scrambled. Owners with cars deployed faced the question of who covered ongoing claims. Some of those claims are still being litigated.
The rideshare rental market didn't die with HyreCar — drivers still need cars. The market just redistributed.
Three real options exist for former HyreCar drivers:
Peer-to-peer, US-focused, designed specifically for rideshare and gig drivers. Same model as HyreCar — owners list, drivers rent, platform handles insurance and payments. The big differences I've seen:
Weekly rates run $250-$400 for sedans and $400-$600 for SUVs in most markets.
Turo isn't built for rideshare. They actively prohibit using most listings for commercial driving. But a small subset of Turo hosts list "rideshare-allowed" trips, and some drivers use those. Pros: large inventory. Cons: most cars on Turo aren't insured for rideshare, so you're risking your deposit and the host's car. Daily rates only — no weekly discount on most listings.
I don't recommend Turo for full-time rideshare. It's fine for a one-week emergency.
Uber has periodic partnerships with rental companies in major metros. Availability is spotty. Vehicle selection is limited. You're locked into Uber-only (no Lyft, no DoorDash). Some drivers love the simplicity; others hate the lock-in.
| Platform | Insurance bundled | Weekly rates | Deposit | Multi-app allowed | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RideshareRenter | Yes (most listings) | $250-$600 | $300-$1,500 | Yes (Uber, Lyft, delivery) | Full-time and part-time drivers |
| Turo (with permission) | No (driver carries) | $40-$90/day | Authorization hold | Varies by host | Short-term emergency |
| Uber Vehicle Solutions | Yes (Uber-only) | Variable, often higher | Varies | Uber only | Drivers who only want Uber |
| Local rental car company | Sometimes | $400-$800 | Higher | Sometimes | If you have great credit |
| Buy a used car | N/A | N/A (financing) | $1,000-$5,000 down | Yes | Drivers with 3+ year horizon |
I get this question a lot — "I had a car on HyreCar, what do I do now?" Here's the honest version of what I tell them.
If you were a driver:
Your credit didn't change. Your driving record didn't change. The platform changed. RideshareRenter has the closest workflow to what HyreCar was — list, browse, message, rent, drive. You'll be back in a car within a week. Bring a $500-$1,000 deposit budget and pick a vehicle that fits the work you're doing, not the work you wish you were doing.
If you were an owner:
Same advice from the other side. List your car on RideshareRenter. Set your weekly rate competitively (look at 5-10 similar listings in your city and price 5-10% under the average for the first month to get reviews). Once you have 3-4 positive reviews, raise your rate to market.
The mistake I see new owners making post-HyreCar is being scared of the platform fee and trying to do off-platform deals. Don't. The platform fee buys you the dispute resolution and insurance coordination — both of which you need.
The lessons from HyreCar's failure are useful even if you never used it.
Slow deposit returns are a sign of cash flow problems. If a platform takes 3+ weeks to return your deposit, something's off. Ask other drivers in city-specific Facebook groups what their deposit return timeline looked like. RideshareRenter's been steady on this.
Customer service degradation precedes bankruptcy. HyreCar's support went from same-day in 2020 to 5-7 days in 2022. If you can't get a human on chat in under 24 hours, that's a yellow flag.
Owner payout delays are the biggest tell. When owners stop getting paid on time, they pull listings. Inventory dries up. Drivers can't find cars. Death spiral. Watch the owner-side complaints, not just the driver-side.
I'm not bashing the team that ran HyreCar. They built the category. But the operational realities of running a P2P rental platform with thin margins are brutal, and the company didn't navigate it. The current crop of platforms is smaller, leaner, and better-capitalized for the volume they're doing.
I'll say this — for all the chaos of HyreCar's collapse, the rideshare rental market in 2026 is in better shape than it was in 2022. Inventory is up. Insurance is more clearly bundled. Deposits return faster. The platforms that survived learned from the carnage.
If you stopped driving when HyreCar imploded, this is a fine time to come back. The driver bonus environment is decent in most metros, gas is stable, and you can be in a car within 48 hours of signing up.
Did HyreCar refund all driver deposits when they shut down? No. Many drivers received partial refunds or none at all. The bankruptcy proceedings determined which creditors got paid first; small consumer deposits were not at the front of that line. If you're still owed money, you're a general unsecured creditor in the case.
Are former HyreCar owners liable for damage that happened on cars rented through the platform? Generally no — the rental insurance attached at the time of damage covers it. But ongoing claims have been complicated by the bankruptcy. If you're a former owner with an open claim, talk to the bankruptcy trustee or a transportation attorney.
Is HyreCar coming back? The brand was sold and the original platform was shut down. Some assets were absorbed into other brands, but the original HyreCar product as drivers knew it isn't returning. Don't wait for it.
Can I move my HyreCar-era listing photos and reviews to RideshareRenter? You'll need to start fresh on RideshareRenter for reviews. You can re-use photos you took yourself (they're your property), but the platform reviews don't transfer. Plan on 2-4 rentals to build initial review history.
Is RideshareRenter going to go the same way as HyreCar? Nobody can promise a platform will exist forever. What I can tell you is RideshareRenter is operationally healthier than late-stage HyreCar — payouts on time, customer service responsive, inventory growing. Use any platform with reasonable diligence — keep your deposit receipts, keep platform messages in writing, don't pre-pay months of rent.
Should I buy a car instead of dealing with platforms? If you're driving 50+ hours a week and plan to drive 3+ years, yes, probably. If you're flexible, part-time, or unsure how long you'll drive, renting is still the lower-risk option in 2026.
If you're a former HyreCar driver looking to start renting again, browse RideshareRenter listings in your city and message 2-3 owners with the highest review counts. You'll be driving within a week.
If you're a former HyreCar owner with a car that's been sitting since the shutdown, list it on RideshareRenter and start earning again. The driver demand is there. The infrastructure is there. The platform is just a tool — the work is the same as it always was.
The category survived. The drivers survived. Time to get back to work.


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