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Ride-hailing app inDrive says revenue up 31% in 2025, eyes delivery expansion

By Thomson Reuters Mar 15, 2026 | 11:49 PM

ALMATY, March 16 (Reuters) – Ride-hailing application inDrive saw net revenue grow by nearly a third last year, founder and CEO Arsen ​Tomsky said, as profitability per ride improved ‌following several years of rapid expansion.

The privately held, U.S.-headquartered company is now looking to expand its delivery offerings in developing countries with fresh acquisitions, after buying online ‌grocery ​delivery services in Pakistan and ⁠Kazakhstan in the last ⁠two years, Tomsky said in an interview on Friday.

“Gradually, through these purchases, we are entering this new sphere,” he said.

InDrive sets itself apart ​from rivals such as Uber and Grab by allowing drivers and riders to negotiate ⁠fares, appealing to price-conscious consumers ⁠in emerging markets.

Revenue grew 31% to $601.6 ​million in 2025 compared to the prior year, ​Tomsky said.

“Our primary region is Latin America. Slightly ‌more than half of our entire business is located there,” he said.

“We are a better fit for people who want to keep everything ⁠under control. People for whom it is very important to save money, who value every cent. And for ⁠this reason, ‌we started in developing countries.”

InDrive has ⁠one of its largest employee hubs ​in ‌Kazakhstan, and Tomsky – who was born ​in Russia ⁠but renounced citizenship in 2024 – has taken up Kazakh citizenship.

The company says its ride-hailing app has been downloaded more than 400 million times since its launch in 2013.

(Reporting by Felix Light; Editing by ​Kevin Buckland)