Atlanta is one of the strongest rideshare markets in the country. Hartsfield-Jackson is the busiest airport on the planet. The metro spreads across 28 counties, which means deadhead miles are a real thing â and so is surge during ATL morning departures. If you want to drive Uber or Lyft here without sinking $30K into a car first, renting through RideshareRenter is the path most full-timers take.
Georgia requires Uber and Lyft drivers to be 21+ with at least one year of US driving history. Vehicle has to be 2010 or newer for UberX, 2017+ for Comfort, 2018+ for Premier and Comfort Electric. Inspection is a one-page Georgia-specific form that any RideshareRenter listing already has on file.
The City of Atlanta charges a $0.50 ground transportation fee on every airport rideshare trip â it's already built into the fare. Cobb, DeKalb, Fulton, and Gwinnett counties don't add extra. So as a driver, you don't pay anything out of pocket for permits beyond what Uber and Lyft handle on their end.
Atlanta also has solid Comfort Electric demand. Tech professionals around Buckhead and Midtown filter for EV trips at higher rates than national average. If you can swing a Tesla rental here (around $389-$439/week on RideshareRenter), the tier upgrade is real money.
Hartsfield-Jackson (ATL) is the obvious one. The TNC staging lot is on Sullivan Road â get there 25-40 minutes before you're hoping to get a queue assignment. Friday evenings and Sunday afternoons are the highest-paying ATL inbound rushes. Mornings get you a long airport-to-Buckhead trip in surge if you time it right.
Buckhead and Midtown for evening passenger rideshare. Bars on Peachtree close at 2am, surge spikes from 12am-2:30am.
Sandy Springs and Alpharetta for morning commuters into Midtown â long $35-$55 trips.
Downtown for State Farm Arena and Mercedes-Benz Stadium events. Hawks games, Falcons games, concerts. Surge is reliable but parking around event traffic is a war.
Decatur and East Atlanta for nightlife, lower competition than Buckhead.
Numbers from drivers I know who run full-time on RideshareRenter rentals in Atlanta:
| Driving style | Hours/wk | Gross | Net (after rental + fuel) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Part-time, evenings only | 22-28 | $680-$820 | $320-$430 |
| Full-time UberX/Comfort | 45-55 | $1,350-$1,580 | $910-$1,120 |
| Full-time + airport queue strategy | 50-60 | $1,600-$1,920 | $1,140-$1,420 |
| Tesla on Comfort Electric (full-time) | 50 | $1,720 | $1,250 (with home charging) |
Atlanta gas runs $3.05-$3.39 a gallon as of the last few weeks, which is below national average and helps the math.
Atlanta's high-mileage spread (long suburban runs) makes hybrids the easy winner for most drivers. Atlanta listings on RideshareRenter:
2020-2023 Toyota Camry Hybrid â $279-$329/week. 47 mpg. Comfort + UberX eligible. The default pick.
2021-2024 Honda Accord Hybrid â $299-$349/week. Slightly roomier rear seat, riders tip better.
Tesla Model 3 Long Range â $389-$439/week. Comfort Electric + Comfort. Worth it if you have home or apartment charging.
2020-2022 Toyota Highlander â $379-$429/week. UberXL + Comfort. Airport runs with families pay airport surge plus XL multiplier.
Traffic on I-285 and I-75 north of midtown is hostile. Avoid northbound rush 4-7pm unless surge is paying for it.
The airport TNC lot fills up during peak hours. If you arrive at 5pm Friday, expect a 35-minute queue. Bring water, bring a snack, don't be the driver who burns 90 minutes there for a $14 short trip.
Pollen season (March-May) destroys windshields and grills with yellow dust. Wash your rental's windshield daily during this stretch or your wipers will smear.
Can I rent a car in Atlanta and drive for both Uber and Lyft?
Yes. Multi-app driving is standard in Atlanta and almost every RideshareRenter listing supports it.
How fast can I be on the road after I rent?
Same day if your Uber and Lyft accounts are already approved. The vehicle swap on Uber takes 24-48 hours after document upload, but you can drive Lyft right away.
Does Atlanta have an EV charging network that supports rideshare?
Yes. Tesla Superchargers in Buckhead, Atlantic Station, Cumberland, and Lenox are reliable. Plus EVgo and ChargePoint stations across the metro. Public charging is plentiful enough that you can run a Tesla rental even without home charging â though it cuts into margins.
Are airport pickups worth the wait?
At Hartsfield-Jackson, yes â but only during peak hours. Friday 4-9pm and Sunday 1-7pm are the best windows. Outside those, the queue often wastes more time than it earns.
What's the cheapest weekly rideshare rental in Atlanta?
Older Toyota Corolla and Honda Civic listings start around $239/week. UberX-only eligible (no Comfort), but plenty for a starter.
Do I need a Georgia chauffeur permit to drive Uber here?
No. Georgia handles TNC drivers under a state-level rideshare framework. No special chauffeur license is required.
Driver CTA: Ready to start driving in Atlanta this week? Browse Atlanta rideshare rentals on RideshareRenter.
Owner CTA: Live in metro Atlanta and have a vehicle that's underused? Atlanta vehicle owners on RideshareRenter typically earn $850-$1,400 per month in passive rental income. List your car for Atlanta rideshare drivers.


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