Uber Eats will soon use robots to deliver your takeaway – but you can’t tip them

  • Uber Eats and Starship Technologies sign delivery partnership
  • Robotic deliveries coming to parts of the UK soon
  • Expansion could spread to Europe in 2026

Uber Eats has revealed it will soon be using robots from Starship Technologies to deliver food and other items to customers across the UK.

The delivery giant has partnered with the robotics firm to launch an initial trial in Leeds, before expanding to Sheffield and hopefully other parts of the UK in the future, with a European expansion planned in 2026, and the US market in 2027.

However customers won’t be able to tip their robotic friend, but can rate their experience in the app, much like any typical Uber Eats delivery.

Uber Eats robot deliveries

Starship robots have already become a common sight in parts of the UK, trundling along pavements to drop off items.

The company says it currently operates the world’s largest autonomous delivery network with 2,700+ robots across 270+ locations, completing 100,000+ road crossings every day, creating a generated dataset of approximately 200 million crossings, which the company uses to continuously train and improve its AI models.

The robots used for Uber Eats deliveries will be able to complete deliveries in under 30 minutes for distances of up to 2 miles

“Together, we’re building the infrastructure that will define the next generation of urban logistics,” said Ahti Heinla, co-founder and CEO of Starship Technologies.

“Uber Eats has built the world’s leading delivery platform, with the widest reach, trusted by millions across 10,000 cities. We bring scalable autonomous technology that works profitably at city scale.”

The move is the latest expansion from Uber Eats and autonomous deliveries, as the company already has programs available in 9 cities with four existing partners.

Merchants in Los Angeles, Miami, Chicago, Jersey City, Dallas, Austin, and Atlanta, already offer autonomous delivery, with pilots ongoing in Tokyo and Osaka, Japan.

“Autonomous delivery is an exciting part of how we see the future of Uber Eats,” said Sarfraz Maredia, Global Head of Autonomous at Uber. “Together with Starship, we’re bringing this future to life across multiple continents, leveraging Uber’s global scale and Starship’s proven autonomy to deliver efficient and affordable experiences for consumers and merchants everywhere.”

Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button!

And of course you can also follow TechRadar on TikTok for news, reviews, unboxings in video form, and get regular updates from us on WhatsApp too.

Read more @ TechRadar

Latest posts

ICYMI: the week’s 7 biggest tech stories from testing Android XR glasses to a revolutionary smart ring

It has been another busy week in the world of tech, which included us testing new Android XR glasses and watching the new Supergirl...

The inevitable has happened – the EU has U-turned on its plan to ban the sale of ICE cars by 2035

Ban on ICE cars could be pushed back to 2040Manufacturers have argued against the legislationMore hybrid and range extender powertrains likely to arrive A...

The next phase of AI is agentic, and it starts with data architecture

If you look at the last decade of AI progress, most of it has been measured in a single dimension: bigger models and better...

I’ve found a new favorite pair of sub-$100 cuff-style open earbuds, with some surprisingly premium features

Soundpeats Clip1: Two minute reviewThe real measure of whether earbuds are good, is if I keep wearing them after the two-week testing period is...

New US border checks could involve scanning your last five years of social media history– here’s what you need to know

The US government wants to check your social media posts at the borderThat could impact your data privacy and free speech rightsPrivacy advocates are...

The race to zero downtime is on – and AI is leading it

It’s the moment every online business dreads. Pages freeze, payments stall, and seconds later, the site goes dark. In those brief minutes, sales evaporate,...

I tested the HHKB Professional Classic Type-S — a niche option for those prepared to learn a new keyboard layout to get Topre key...

HHKB Professional Classic Type-S keyboard: 30-second reviewWhen people first get into computing, the first peripherals they develop an opinion on are the mouse and...

This is perhaps the smallest mini PC with a 5060-class GPU you can buy right now — but you will have to go all...

FEVM FAEX1 mini PC features a Ryzen AI Max+ 395 CPU with 16 coresMemory is soldered LPDDR5X-8533, available in 64 or 128GBStorage includes three...

I tested 4 of Dyson’s best stick vacuums head to head – this is the one to buy, and the one to avoid

Most of Dyson's vacuums look pretty much the same, so figuring out what the differences are – and crucially, if those differences will translate...

Virgin Media offers Meta Ray-Ban smart glasses or £125 bill credit with new broadband and TV packages

Virgin Media is offering new customers the opportunity to get a pair of Meta Ray-Ban (Gen 1) smart glasses, worth £329, or a £125...