Emily Sortor  |  February 11, 2019

Category: Labor & Employment

Top Class Actions’s website and social media posts use affiliate links. If you make a purchase using such links, we may receive a commission, but it will not result in any additional charges to you. Please review our Affiliate Link Disclosure for more information.

doordash pizza delivery driver handing pizza over to customerDoorDash drivers have filed a class action lawsuit saying that they don’t receive a base pay plus 100 percent of customer tips, contrary to the food delivery service’s advertisements to drivers.

Plaintiffs Jamie Webb and Aaron Hodge are Georgia residents who say that they worked for DoorDash as drivers, delivering food to people who order it via the company’s app.

The two drivers say they agreed to work for DoorDash in part based on the advertisement made by the company that they would receive a base pay rate plus all of the tips given by the customer.

According to the DoorDash class action, this is not the case, and drivers end up receiving far less compensation than advertised.

Webb and Hodge say DoorDash gives customers the option to tip their delivery person. Allegedly, the app asks a customer “how much would you like to tip your driver?” giving the customer the option to leave a default 10 percent tip or to leave a custom tip amount.

The DoorDash class action states that drivers are promised a certain sum of money if they accept to be the driver for a delivery.

Allegedly, drivers like Web and Hodge were promised a base rate of pay plus 100 percent of customer tips, but in 2017 DoorDash changed its payment policy by using a customer’s tip to pay the driver’s base rate, so the driver receives less compensation.

The DoorDash class action lawsuit says that this policy change “contradicts DoorDash’s explicit representations, including statements on its website and [to drivers] that ‘if the base pay + tip is less than the guaranteed minimum offered, Dashers will receive the guaranteed minimum amount. If the base pay + tip is greater than the guaranteed minimum amount, Dashers will receive the base pay + tip.’”

The DoorDash pay rate class action lawsuit provides the example based on the advertised pay structure, if a driver was guaranteed a base pay of $5 for delivery, and the customer tipped $3, the driver should receive $8 dollars — $5 from DoorDash and $3 from the customer.

However, in the actual payment structure in which DoorDash uses customer tips to pay the base rate, if a driver is promised a base pay of $5 and a customer tips $3, the driver only receives $5 — $1 from DoorDash and $4 from the customer.

Allegedly, the actual payment policy is deceptive to both customers and drivers “because tips are meant to go to the drivers on top of whatever base pay the driver gets for the delivery — it it meant to be in addition to wages, not a substitution for them.”

Webb and Hodge claim that they and other DoorDash drivers are financially harmed by DoorDash’s wage policy because they made less money than they would have if they had received the advertised payment of a base pay plus 100 percent of customer tips.

The DoorDashers are represented by James F. McDonough III, Travis E. Lynch,  and W. Lewis Garrison, and Chris B. Hood of Heninger Garrison Davis LLC.

The DoorDash Driver Tip Class Action Lawsuit is Jamie Webb, et al. v. DoorDash Inc., Case No. 1:19-cv-00665-CC, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia, Atlanta Division.

We tell you about cash you can claim EVERY WEEK! Sign up for our free newsletter.


503 thoughts onDoorDash Class Action Says Drivers Don’t Receive 100% of Tips

  1. Derrick Meredith says:

    Dasher here

    1. Carmen says:

      add me please

    2. Patrice Oneal says:

      Add me

  2. Brenda Lyn McGovern says:

    I was a driver for door dash, have all my records printed.
    Please add me

  3. william gaither says:

    i’m a dasher please add me

  4. heather wells says:

    add me please. I’m a dasher

  5. Olayinka Akindele says:

    Add me pls

  6. Maria says:

    Add me pls

    1. Wilfredo Matias says:

      Dasher here ??

  7. Mayra Figueroa says:

    Add me

  8. Tañia says:

    I just started yesterday. How do i keep track if it doesn’t say?

  9. Jeff Kuhenbeaker says:

    Today, November 9th 2019, Doordash presented a new digital contract that needed to be signed before I could make deliveries. I took screenshots of the agreement, and from what I could infer, it looked as if part of the agreement included agreeing that one would not participate in a class action suit.

  10. Terri L Covington says:

    How do we file a claim? I suspected this was happening and decided not to work for the company. In addition, the company’s app was allowing drivers to be sent to pickup and deliveries more than 20 miles from the requested zone. Not enough earning for the gas you use to pick up and deliver. I have two additional friends who would like to file as well.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. By submitting your comment and contact information, you agree to receive marketing emails from Top Class Actions regarding this and/or similar lawsuits or settlements, and/or to be contacted by an attorney or law firm to discuss the details of your potential case at no charge to you if you qualify. Required fields are marked *

Please note: Top Class Actions is not a settlement administrator or law firm. Top Class Actions is a legal news source that reports on class action lawsuits, class action settlements, drug injury lawsuits and product liability lawsuits. Top Class Actions does not process claims and we cannot advise you on the status of any class action settlement claim. You must contact the settlement administrator or your attorney for any updates regarding your claim status, claim form or questions about when payments are expected to be mailed out.