Waze to expand Carpool service across California on June 6
Google’s Waze is growing its Carpool offering, expanding the ride-sharing service to all of California after successful trials in San Francisco, Sacramento and Monterey. The service expansion also comes after Waze has been running carpooling services in Israel, where it originally debuted the offering back in 2015. Carpool will open to all California residents beginning Tuesday, June 6.
Waze still exists primarily as a mapping and navigation app that focuses on community engagement, asking users to report things like road hazards and bad weather and then pooling that data and sharing it with other users, and with parent company Google’s own Maps. But Carpool takes that community aspect of the app a bit further, letting drivers actually offer up rides to people who happen to be heading in their direction.
It works by connecting drivers using the regular Waze app with riders using the Waze Carpool app, both of which are available on either Android or iOS. Drivers can opt in to Waze Carpool easily via the bottom right tab of their navigation app, provided they’re 21 years of age. Rides are capped at two per day, since Waze Carpool isn’t aiming to replace professional ride hailing apps like Uber and Lyft, and drivers make no more than $0.54 per mile. That price is determined by the federal standard mileage rate, and is only intended to help drivers share the cost of gas with their riders, rather than enabling them to turn driving into a profession or significant money-making opportunity.