
I've rented cars from all three of these platforms. Turo back in 2022 for a couple of weeks before they cracked down on rideshare use. HyreCar for about eight months before they shut their consumer marketplace down in 2023. And RideshareRenter since late 2024.
People keep asking me which one is best. The honest answer is more complicated than the YouTube comparison videos make it sound. Here's the actual breakdown, what works, what doesn't, and which one you should pick depending on your situation.
Turo isn't really a rideshare rental platform. It's a peer-to-peer car rental service that doesn't officially allow Uber or Lyft driving in most cases. Some people get away with it. Most get caught and lose their account.
HyreCar shut down its consumer-facing marketplace in mid-2023. If you still see HyreCar branded content online, it's outdated. The brand exists in a different form now and serves fleet operators differently than it used to.
RideshareRenter is what HyreCar drivers like me ended up moving to. It's a peer-to-peer marketplace built specifically for Uber, Lyft, DoorDash, Uber Eats, and similar gig work. You won't get kicked off for driving rideshare here because that's literally what the platform exists for.
| Feature | Turo | HyreCar (2026) | RideshareRenter |
|---|---|---|---|
| Allows rideshare driving | No (with rare exceptions) | Fleet-only program | Yes, built for it |
| Daily rate (typical) | $45-$85 | N/A for individuals | $35-$65 |
| Weekly rate (typical) | $315-$595 | N/A | $245-$455 |
| Insurance for rideshare | Limited | Limited | Yes, continuous |
| Min driver age | 25 (or 21 with surcharge) | 21 | 21 |
| Credit check | Yes | Yes (fleet) | No-credit options available |
Turo's listings look amazing. You can rent a Tesla Model 3 for what looks like a great weekly rate. The problem is hidden in the fine print: Turo's standard terms prohibit commercial use, including rideshare and delivery work, on most listings.
I tried it. Rented a Mazda 3 from a Turo host for two weeks in 2022, drove Uber on it, got caught when there was a minor parking lot incident. The host filed a claim, Turo investigated, and I was on the hook for the full repair cost out of pocket because I'd violated the rental agreement. Cost me $2,400 in damage that should have been covered.
There are a handful of commercial-use-allowed listings on Turo. They exist. But they're rare, expensive, and the host requires you to sign extra paperwork. If you find one and the price works, fine. But most drivers who try Turo for rideshare are gambling, and the house wins.
HyreCar filed for bankruptcy in mid-2023 and the consumer-facing marketplace as drivers knew it shut down. The brand was acquired and exists now in a different form, mostly focused on fleet operators and B2B rideshare leasing.
For an individual driver wanting to rent a single car to do Uber or Lyft, HyreCar in 2026 isn't really an option. If you Google HyreCar alternative, and a lot of drivers do, you'll find that most former HyreCar users moved to either RideshareRenter or a few similar peer-to-peer platforms.
I'm not going to pretend RideshareRenter is perfect. There are things I wish were better. Selection in mid-size cities is still building. The app could use polish. Some owners are slow to respond on weekends.
But here's what it does right for rideshare drivers:
Built for the job. Every car listed is rideshare-eligible. No hidden no-commercial-use clause to ambush you. You can browse, book, and start driving Uber the same day without worrying you violated terms.
Continuous insurance. Coverage applies the moment you pick up the car and stays active as long as you're rented. There's no gap between rentals like some platforms had.
No-credit-check options. A bunch of owners on RideshareRenter offer rentals without a hard credit pull. They look at your driving record and rideshare platform rating instead.
Peer-to-peer pricing. Because owners list their own cars, you can find weekly rates 25-30% below what corporate rental car companies charge for the same model. I'm paying $329 a week for a 2022 Camry Hybrid right now. Enterprise wanted $589 a week for an equivalent vehicle, same market.
Use Turo if: You need a car for personal use, a trip, or a weekend, and you're 100% not driving rideshare with it.
Use HyreCar if: You're a fleet operator looking at B2B leasing options. They don't really serve individual drivers anymore.
Use RideshareRenter if: You want to drive Uber, Lyft, DoorDash, or Uber Eats and you don't own a qualifying car. This is the most direct fit for the job.
I tracked my rental costs for 2025. Here's how the math actually shook out for a year of full-time rideshare driving on a Camry Hybrid:
| Cost Category | Annual Total |
|---|---|
| Rental fees (52 weeks at $329) | $17,108 |
| Estimated Turo equivalent | $24,300 |
| Estimated Enterprise corporate rental | $30,628 |
| Gas (hybrid, 75,000 miles) | $8,470 |
| Tolls and parking | $1,200 |
That's $7,200 saved over Turo's typical pricing and $13,500 saved over Enterprise, assuming you could even legally drive rideshare on a Turo car. Which you mostly can't.
I'm not saying RideshareRenter is the only answer. Some things to consider:
Drivers: Browse the listings on RideshareRenter in your city and compare them against any rental quotes you're getting from Enterprise, Hertz, or Avis.
Vehicle owners: If you've got a 2018 or newer Toyota, Honda, Kia, Hyundai, or Tesla and you're not using it during the day, list it on RideshareRenter and pull in $1,200-$1,600 a month in rental income.
Can I drive Uber with a Turo rental in 2026?
Officially, no, unless the specific listing explicitly says commercial use is allowed. Most don't. If you violate Turo's terms by driving rideshare and something goes wrong, you can lose insurance coverage and get banned from the platform.
Did HyreCar shut down completely?
The consumer-facing marketplace as individual drivers knew it shut down in 2023. The brand has been restructured and operates differently now, mostly serving fleet operators rather than single drivers.
Is RideshareRenter cheaper than Turo for the same car?
Usually yes, especially on weekly and monthly rates. RideshareRenter owners list cars knowing they'll be used for rideshare, so the rates are calibrated for working drivers, not vacationers. Expect roughly 25-30% below comparable Turo listings.
Do I need a credit check to rent on RideshareRenter?
Not always. Many listings offer no-credit-check options, especially for drivers with strong rideshare platform ratings or a clean driving record. You may need a larger deposit on a no-credit-check rental, typically $300-$500.
What insurance does RideshareRenter provide?
Commercial rideshare insurance applies continuously while you're renting, both during Uber/Lyft trips and during personal use of the car. Coverage limits and deductible vary by listing, so check the specific policy in the rental agreement before booking.
Can I rent a Tesla on RideshareRenter?
Yes. Tesla Model 3 and Model Y listings are common in larger markets like LA, Vegas, Phoenix, and Atlanta. Expect to pay $475-$625 a week for a Model 3 depending on year and market.


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