Minneapolis-St. Paul is a quiet rideshare market most national bloggers ignore. That's part of why it pays. Less driver saturation than Atlanta or Phoenix, real surge during Vikings and Wild games, and a downtown that empties hard on weekends so airport runs are wide open. I drove the Twin Cities for the back half of 2024 — here's what renting for Uber and Lyft in Minneapolis actually looks like in 2026.
Minneapolis is governed by city ordinance plus Minnesota state requirements for TNC drivers. The basics:
The 2024 Minneapolis driver pay floor ordinance is still in effect as of 2026 — it requires Uber and Lyft to pay drivers at least $1.40/mile and $0.51/minute within city limits. That's a meaningful difference from the unregulated rates in most US cities. It's part of why Minneapolis quietly became one of the better-paying markets per mile in the country.
Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport (MSP) runs a cell-phone lot and a TNC staging area on the south side of Terminal 1 (Lindbergh). Terminal 2 (Humphrey) is smaller — international, Sun Country, JetBlue — and pickup runs from a curbside zone.
You queue in the TNC lot, accept a request, and they release you in FIFO order based on lot entry time. Average wait at MSP in 2025 was 22-45 minutes depending on time of day. Mornings before 7am are short waits; midday flights mean 45-minute queues.
MSP charges drivers a $4.25 trip fee per airport pickup, which Uber and Lyft pass through. Departures (rider drop-offs) are free. You don't need a separate airport permit — Uber and Lyft handle that with the airport directly.
The trick at MSP: don't go in cold. Mall of America rides drop off at the airport constantly, so you can get queued and re-up without driving across town. Park nearby at the Best Buy lot on American Boulevard, wait for an MOA request, drop, then immediately queue.
Some markets, downtown is the only honey pot. Minneapolis is different. The earning zones rotate:
Downtown Minneapolis (Mon-Fri 7-9am and 4-6pm): Corporate commuters from Uptown and the western suburbs. Steady but not crazy surge.
Uptown / Lyn-Lake (Fri-Sat 9pm-2am): Bar district. Surge can hit 1.7x to 2.1x in the late shift. Be ready for rowdy passengers — it's the youngest crowd in the metro.
U of M Campus (school year, Thu-Sat nights): Dinkytown bars and East Bank dorms. Short trips but constant pings.
Target Field / Target Center / US Bank Stadium: Vikings games, Wild games, Twins games, Timberwolves games. Stadium surge is real here — expect 2x to 3x for the first 45 minutes after game-end.
Mall of America (weekends, holiday season): Consistent demand, decent airport-route potential.
St. Paul (Grand Ave, downtown, Cathedral Hill): Less driver saturation than Minneapolis side. Wild games at Xcel Energy Center create solid clusters.
You can't ignore winter in this market. From mid-November through early March, you're driving in snow, ice, or slush most days. Real considerations:
Tires matter. All-seasons technically work but you'll spend half your shifts white-knuckling icy on-ramps. If you rent on RideshareRenter, message the owner before booking to confirm what's on the car. A few owners spec winter or all-weather tires October through April — those are worth a $20/week premium.
Block heaters and AWD. AWD vehicles get more requests in deep winter because riders specifically prefer them in icy conditions. The Subaru Outback, Toyota RAV4 AWD, and Honda CR-V AWD are the workhorses on Minneapolis RideshareRenter listings.
Idling rules. Minneapolis has a 3-minute idling limit. In winter that's brutal — you want to keep the car warm while waiting in a queue. Park, kill the engine, run the heated seats off accessory mode, and wait it out.
Snow plowing days. Snow emergencies in Minneapolis ban parking on specific sides of the street. Your rental gets towed and it's your $300 tow bill. Sign up for SMS alerts.
Real rates I've seen quoted on RideshareRenter in the Twin Cities market over the last 90 days:
| Vehicle | Weekly Rate | Best Use |
|---|---|---|
| 2022 Toyota Camry | $305-$345 | UberX/Lyft, all-around |
| 2021 Toyota RAV4 (AWD) | $355-$395 | Winter rideshare champion |
| 2022 Toyota Highlander | $485-$525 | UberXL, family weekends |
| 2023 Tesla Model 3 | $435-$485 | Uber Comfort Electric |
| 2020 Lexus ES 350 | $465-$510 | Uber Black (downtown only) |
The Camry is the default starter. A full-time driver in the Twin Cities at $325/week on a Camry, grossing $1,850/week between Uber and Lyft, with $185 in gas, nets about $1,340/week. That's $5,360/month before taxes.
The AWD upgrade pays for itself in winter. I switched from a Camry to a RAV4 in late November 2024 and my weekly gross went up about $180 in December and January because of higher request acceptance during snowstorms.
RideshareRenter listings include commercial rideshare coverage during active Uber and Lyft periods. The Minneapolis pay floor ordinance also adds an insurance disclosure requirement — your rental owner needs to confirm the car carries the appropriate commercial endorsement, which RideshareRenter handles platform-wide.
Your deductible if you damage the rental ranges from $500 to $2,500 depending on the listing. Read the agreement.
Do I need a special Minneapolis or Minnesota rideshare permit? No separate city permit. Uber and Lyft handle the TNC registration with the state and city. Your driver onboarding through the apps covers it.
Is MSP airport worth queuing for in 2026? Yes, especially mornings (6-9am) and late evenings (9pm-midnight). Midday queues are long. The $4.25 trip fee is built into the rider's price.
What's the best month to drive Uber in Minneapolis? October (peak fall events), December (holiday shopping plus Vikings/Wild season), and June (festival season — Pride, Twin Cities Jazz Fest, Stone Arch Bridge events).
Can I drive Uber and Lyft from one rental in Minneapolis? Yes, RideshareRenter doesn't restrict multi-app use. Most full-time drivers in the Twin Cities run both apps and DoorDash for slow weekday afternoons.
How does the Minneapolis pay floor compare to other markets? Minneapolis is one of the higher per-mile pay markets in the country thanks to the 2024 ordinance. The downside: fewer driver-side incentives like quest bonuses, since Uber has scaled those back in regulated markets.
What's the cheapest way to start in this market? Rent a Camry or Corolla on RideshareRenter at $295-$325/week, focus on downtown evening and weekend nights for the first 30 days to learn the surge patterns, then expand to MSP airport runs once you've got the lay of the land.
Drivers: Browse RideshareRenter listings in the Minneapolis-St. Paul metro. Filter for AWD if you're starting in winter, or hybrid if you want to stretch your gas budget. Most listings can be picked up within 48 hours of booking.
Owners: The Twin Cities have a real driver shortage relative to demand thanks to the pay floor. If you've got a 2020+ AWD vehicle sitting in your driveway, list it on RideshareRenter — winter-ready cars rent at a premium November through March and turn over quickly.


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