Driver app · New York

Driver app for taxi fleets in New York

Native Android, FCM push, offline-tolerant, ratings + chat built in. Configured for NYC Taxi & Limousine Commission (TLC).

Driver app in New York is the native android, fcm push, offline-tolerant, ratings + chat built in, configured against NYC Taxi & Limousine Commission (TLC) and the operating reality of a 13.5k-vehicle market. TaxiCloud's driver app is native Android with iOS variant in beta. Real-time GPS, offer/accept flows, in-app chat, ratings, settlement reports, and offline-tolerant queuing — designed by ex-PHV operators for the operating reality of a working shift. For New York specifically, the feature reads from regulator-aware booking, dispatch, and reporting surfaces — no bolt-on integration, no separate console.

Driver app in New York — the operating reality

Driver app ships against the New York operating geography as a structural object. The driver app is the single most-used surface in any dispatch operation. Drivers use it for the entire shift; if it is slow, awkward, or unreliable, drivers stop accepting jobs and operations suffer. TaxiCloud's driver app was designed by ex-PHV operators rather than mobile-first product designers, which shows in the choices: clean offer/accept flow with ETA-based job ranking, large readable text for road conditions, voice-prompt mode for hands-free job acceptance, settlement reports that match what drivers actually want at end-of-shift. In New York, the feature posts cleanly against NYC Taxi & Limousine Commission (TLC) quarterly returns, vehicle inspection cycles, and the 13,500-vehicle scale that defines the market. JFK + LGA + EWR airport flows integrate natively where applicable.

How TaxiCloud delivers driver app in New York

Operators in New York typically run driver app on TaxiCloud after a 6-10 day migration off iCabbi, Autocab, Cordic, or TaxiCaller. Real-time GPS streams to the dispatch board over WebSocket; pin position updates land in the customer-facing app simultaneously so passengers see live driver progress. Offline tolerance is first-class: when drivers lose signal, the app queues GPS pings and job-state events locally; on reconnection, the queue flushes in order to maintain a continuous trail. This matters for areas with unreliable coverage, motorway stretches between cities, and underground stations. The dispatcher impact is highest in the New York operating tempo because NYC Taxi & Limousine Commission (TLC) compliance overlays the standard PHV regulatory posture, and driver app surfaces the resulting reports through the same dispatch flow rather than as a separate finance task.

FAQ

Driver app in New York — questions answered.

How does Driver app work in New York?
Driver app in New York reads from the live dispatch board, the customer-facing booking widget, and the NYC Taxi & Limousine Commission (TLC) compliance reporting layer in a single tenant. Driver logs in at shift start; status sets available. The New York configuration is preset for the city's 13,500-vehicle market and the New York operating geography.
Is Driver app compliant with NYC Taxi & Limousine Commission (TLC)?
Yes. Driver app is calibrated for NYC Taxi & Limousine Commission (TLC) reporting, audit, and renewal cycles. Vehicle inspection deadlines, driver-licence audits, and the local quarterly return format ship pre-configured. Format updates land in-sprint when the regulator changes requirements.
What does Driver app cost for a New York fleet?
Driver app ships on every TaxiCloud plan — Starter through Pro Ultra. Transparent $59-$449/month pricing. Most New York fleets run Pro (£149/€55/$59/A$89 month) or Pro Max (£349/€395/$449/A$629 month). No setup fee on Starter or Pro; month-to-month contracts; driver app configuration in New York is included.

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