Introduction
My first week driving Uber in February was not impressive.
I made:
👉 $213.14 total earnings
After small expenses:
👉 $211.40 paid out
At first glance, this looks like a weak start.
But this week wasn’t about maximizing Uber earnings.
It was about understanding how Uber actually works.
In this article, I break down:
- My real Uber earnings for the week
- The types of trips I took
- The mistakes I made as a new driver
- What I changed to increase my income
If you’re starting Uber or thinking about driving part-time, this is what Week 1 really looks like.
My First Week Driving Uber (Real Earnings Breakdown)
Here’s the full picture from my first week:
Total Uber earnings:
- $213.14
Final payout:
- $211.40
Earnings breakdown:
- Base fares: ~$179
- Surge earnings: ~$13.75
- Tips: ~$11.23
- Promotions & perks: small additions
This is a typical beginner week:
👉 Mostly base fares with very little optimization.
What My Uber Earnings Tell Me
1. I wasn’t driving during surge hours
Only $13.75 in surge for the entire week.
That means:
👉 I was missing peak demand times.
Uber earnings depend heavily on:
- Time of day
- Driver supply
- Rider demand
I was not aligned with those yet.
2. Low tips (expected early on)
Total tips:
👉 ~$11
This is normal for beginners.
Why?
- Not targeting high-value trips
- Not driving in higher-tip areas
- Still learning rider patterns
3. Most income came from base fares
Almost all earnings were standard UberX trips.
That means:
👉 No strategy, just activity.
This is where most new drivers stay stuck.
When I Was Driving (And Why It Matters)
Looking at my trip data, most rides happened during:
- Early morning (4:30 AM – 7:00 AM)
- Some mid-day attempts
- A few afternoon trips
Example trips:
- $27 ride around 5:40 AM
- $17 ride around 4:45 AM
- Multiple short $5–$15 rides
These times actually reveal something important:
👉 Early mornings were the most consistent earning window
The Biggest Mistake I Made (Week 1)
Driving without a strategy
Instead of driving during high-demand hours, I was:
👉 Logging in whenever I had free time
That leads to:
- Lower demand
- Lower pay
- More idle time
This is the fastest way to reduce your Uber hourly earnings.
The Second Mistake: Accepting Every Ride
In Week 1, I accepted almost everything.
That included:
- Low-paying short rides
- Poor location drop-offs
- No consideration for time or distance
At that stage, the mindset is:
“Just take rides and learn”
That’s useful early, but it’s not profitable.
What I Did Right (Even in a Low Week)
1. Driving early mornings
My best trips came from:
👉 4:30 AM – 7:30 AM
These hours have:
- Airport demand
- Early commuters
- Less driver competition
This became a key strategy later.
2. High trip volume (learning phase)
Even though earnings were low, I completed multiple trips.
This helped me:
- Understand how Uber dispatch works
- Improve reaction time
- Learn pricing patterns
3. Testing different ride types
I saw a mix of:
- UberX
- Wait & Save
- Delivery
This helped me understand:
👉 Not all ride types are equal in profitability.
The Most Important Lesson from Week 1
This was the turning point:
You don’t make money on Uber by driving more
You make money by driving smarter
That single realization changed everything.
What I Changed After Week 1
1. Time optimization
I stopped random driving.
Instead, I focused on:
- Morning rush
- Evening rush
2. Ride selection strategy
I began filtering rides based on:
- Pay per mile
- Time per trip
- Drop-off location
3. Structured driving schedule
Instead of:
👉 “Drive when I have time”
I moved to:
👉 “Drive when demand is highest”
Why Most Uber Drivers Stay Stuck
Many drivers quit after weeks like this.
They see:
- $200–300 weeks
- Low hourly rates
- Inconsistent trips
And assume:
“Uber doesn’t pay well”
That’s not the problem.
The problem is:
👉 They never move past beginner strategy.
The Real Math Behind This Week
Let’s estimate:
If I drove around 12 hours:
👉 $213 ÷ 12 hours ≈ $17/hour
That’s low.
But it’s not the final result.
It’s the baseline.
What Happened After This Week
After improving:
- Time selection
- Ride filtering
- Location strategy
My earnings increased to:
👉 $500–700 per week
Same effort.
Better decisions.
Final Thoughts
Week 1 was not a failure.
It was:
👉 A learning phase
It showed me:
- What doesn’t work
- Where the opportunities are
- How Uber actually pays
Summary
- Weekly earnings: $213.14
- Mostly base fares
- Low surge and tips
- No structured schedule
- No ride selection strategy
Key takeaway:
👉 This is the starting point, not the result


Pingback: Uber Week 2 Earnings: $824 Breakdown (How I Jumped from $213 to $824 in One Week) - Driver Maths