Detroit gets dismissed as a rideshare market. I've driven it three years and that take is wrong. The pay-per-mile is lower than Chicago or LA, but the gas is cheap, the parking is free, and the airport runs out of DTW have a quiet rhythm that nets out better than people think. Here's how to rent a car for Uber and Lyft in Detroit in 2026 and actually clear money.
RideshareRenter listings in metro Detroit run $235-$329/week for sedans and hybrids. Camry Hybrids sit around $269-$295. Older Priuses go as low as $225. Newer SUVs run $339-$389. Most listings include 1,100-1,400 miles/week and a $750-$1,000 deductible.
That's lower than Chicago by about $40-$60/week, which surprised me when I first checked.
Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County (DTW) is the rideshare engine of this market. Two terminals, McNamara (Delta) and North Terminal (everyone else). TNC pickups happen at the central waiting area outside both terminals — there's a designated lot. You queue there with the app on and wait.
Average queue time outside of peak: 25-40 minutes. Peak (Mondays 6-9 a.m., Thursdays 5-7 p.m., Sundays 5-10 p.m.): 12-25 minutes. The trip back into Detroit averages $26-$38 for an UberX with a 17-mile route to Midtown. Surge during snow days has hit 2.4x in my experience.
Key thing — DTW now charges a $4.25 TNC airport access fee per pickup, deducted from your fare automatically. Most drivers don't realize this until they look at their first weekly statement. It's a real number.
The math here isn't intuitive. Downtown Detroit has fewer rides than people expect on weeknights. The real money in Detroit is in Royal Oak, Ferndale, Birmingham, and Bloomfield on Thursday-Saturday nights — bar zones with no rail and decent ride prices. Average ride pulls $14-$22 between these towns.
Ann Arbor is its own market. If you're willing to drive 40 miles west on weekends, U-Michigan football Saturdays and the State Street bar district run 3-5 hour surge windows that pay $22-$35 per ride. Gas it up before you go.
Avoid: 8 Mile and east-side strip mall zones during the daytime. Low ride density, longer dead miles back into the productive areas.
Full-time 50-hour week driving Uber + Lyft in metro Detroit with a Camry Hybrid:
| Line | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross fares (50 hrs) | $1,260 |
| Tips | $165 |
| DTW access fees deducted | −$55 (13 trips) |
| Rental (RideshareRenter Camry Hybrid) | −$285 |
| Gas (1,050 miles @ 47 mpg) | −$82 |
| Net | $1,003 |
That's $20.06/hour net. Less than NYC. More than Tampa or Nashville for fewer hours. Detroit pays the patient driver.
Michigan changed its no-fault insurance laws in 2019 and the dust still hasn't fully settled. Rideshare drivers in Michigan need PIP coverage that's compatible with commercial rideshare use. Most personal policies have a TNC exclusion that kicks in when the Uber app is on.
RideshareRenter listings include commercial coverage during the rental for periods 2 and 3 (en route and on-trip). Period 1 (app on, no ride) is the gap. If you're full-time, get a personal policy with a rideshare endorsement. Costs about $22-$38/month extra in Michigan.
This is the part that bites Michigan drivers most. Don't skip it.
December through March, you'll have 5-9 snow days where you should not drive. You'll also have 30-40 days where surge runs 1.8x-2.6x because everyone else stays home and rideshare demand spikes. Net it out and winter pays well if you're willing.
Get all-season tires minimum. Most RideshareRenter Detroit listings already have them — ask the owner before booking. Snow tires aren't required by law but they make the surge days easier and safer.
A Camry Hybrid handles Detroit winter fine. A rear-drive Mustang does not. Pick accordingly.
| Car | Weekly rate range | Why for Detroit |
|---|---|---|
| Camry Hybrid | $269-$295 | Hybrid mpg + cold-weather reliability |
| Sonata Hybrid | $249-$285 | Cheaper, similar mpg, fewer listings |
| Prius (2019-21) | $225-$249 | Cheapest total cost; weak in deep snow |
| RAV4 Hybrid | $329-$369 | AWD + 38 mpg; worth it Dec-March |
| Model Y | $369-$409 | Comfort Electric available; cold = range hit |
My honest pick for Detroit full-time: RAV4 Hybrid Dec-March, Camry Hybrid April-November. Or just keep the Camry and accept slower snow days.
Yes. The lot is shared. Lyft fares typically run about $1-$3 lower per ride than Uber from DTW, but lower queue times sometimes offset.
No city-specific TNC permit in Detroit proper, unlike Portland or Chicago. Standard Michigan license, vehicle registration, and Uber/Lyft approval.
If you're a full-time driver, yes, on U-Michigan football Saturdays in the fall and on home basketball nights. Otherwise the gas and dead miles back to Detroit eat the bonus.
Higher airport volume than either. Lower hot-zone density than Pittsburgh. About even with Cleveland in earnings per hour, but Detroit's hourly improves more in winter because of surge.
$249 weekly Prius rental + $150 deposit + half tank = about $440 to start. First week's gross in Detroit should be $900-$1,150 working 40 hours. You'll be cash positive by Sunday.
Yes. Tuesday-Wednesday afternoons are dead for rideshare here. DoorDash and Uber Eats run steady. Most RideshareRenter Detroit listings allow delivery — confirm before booking.
Detroit isn't a top-pay market per ride, but the lower rental rates and free street parking flip the math. Patient full-time drivers clear $850-$1,050/week net. The shoulder-season hustle is the snow weeks at 2x surge. Bring a winter-appropriate car and you'll do fine.
Drivers: Browse current Detroit rentals on RideshareRenter — filter by hybrid for the best total-cost picks.
Detroit-area car owners: List your sedan, hybrid, or SUV on RideshareRenter. With Detroit weekly rates of $269-$369 and high winter demand, owners are grossing $1,200-$1,700/month here. List your car in about 10 minutes.


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