European mobility apps
Ride-hailing, scooter-share, and bike-share were supposed to be a global American duopoly — Uber and Lyft, plus Lime and Bird in micro-mobility. The actual European mobility-app market has turned out very differently. Estonia's Bolt is now active in ~50 countries with ~200M users (larger than Lyft outside the US). France's BlaBlaCar has 100M+ members across long-distance carpooling. Germany's Free Now operates the dominant taxi-aggregation network across most of Europe. Spain's Cabify, France's Heetch, Sweden's Voi, Germany's Tier, and Denmark's Donkey Republic each own meaningful slices of their respective regional or modal sub-segments.
The structural reason European mobility apps survived against the American giants is that European cities are denser, the regulatory regimes are less laissez-faire, and the unit economics work at lower fares — exactly the conditions Uber struggled with throughout its European expansion. Plus most European users prefer keeping payment, taxi, and scooter rentals routed through European-domiciled platforms rather than American ones.
Below: eight European mobility apps worth knowing as alternatives to Uber, Lyft, Lime, and Bird. Estonia anchors with Bolt, France contributes BlaBlaCar and Heetch, plus Spanish, Swedish, German, and Danish challengers.
Bolt
Known for: The under-credited European answer to Uber. Estonian-founded, founder-controlled, multi-modal in a way Uber and Lyft aren't (their scooter and food businesses are bolted-on). The closest thing Europe has to a sovereign-controlled mobility platform — ~200M users.
Alternative to: Uber, Lyft, Lime, Bird, Delivery Hero
Markets: ~50 countries across Europe, Africa, Latin America
Pricing: Ride-hailing typically 10–20% below Uber where both operate; scooter rentals from €1 unlock + €0.20/min
https://bolt.eu or get their app on your preferred app store.
BlaBlaCar
Known for: Long-distance carpooling marketplace — connects drivers with empty seats and passengers travelling the same route. Plus BlaBlaCar Bus (acquired Ouibus 2019). ~100M members across 22 markets including France, Spain, Italy, Brazil, India. The European long-distance mobility innovation American counterparts (Uber, Lyft) never replicated.
Pricing: Passengers pay drivers ~75-85% of cost of equivalent train ticket; BlaBlaCar takes ~15-20% platform fee.
https://www.blablacar.com
Donkey Republic
Known for: Copenhagen-based, bike-share platform across ~70 European cities — Denmark, Germany, Belgium, Netherlands, UK, Spain, Switzerland, Iceland. Mix of station-based and free-floating models. Less hyped than the scooter operators, but in cities where bikes work better than scooters (Copenhagen, Amsterdam, Bruges), Donkey is usually the operator behind the rentals.
Pricing: Daily rentals ~€10. Monthly plans €25-€40. Annual subscriptions ~€100.
https://www.donkey.bike
Free Now
Known for: Hamburg-headquartered. . Taxi aggregator + premium ride-hailing across ~150 European cities in Germany, UK, Ireland, Spain, Italy, Greece, Poland, Romania, Czechia. Europe's largest taxi-aggregation network — but Lyft acquired the platform in 2025, so it's no longer European-owned. Honest caveat: the consumer product is still the most-deployed taxi-aggregator in Europe; the corporate parent is now in San Francisco.
Pricing: Standard taxi rates (regulated in most markets). Premium ride-hailing tier slightly higher.
https://www.free-now.com
Heetch
Known for: Paris-based, founded 2013 by Teddy Pellerin and Mathieu Jacob. Ride-hailing — France and Belgium primarily, plus North Africa (Morocco, Algeria, Senegal, Côte d'Ivoire). Focus on price-competitive private hire (VTC in France) rather than premium tier. The credibly French answer to Uber for private-hire in France.
Pricing: Per-ride pricing typically 15-25% below Uber in French markets.
https://www.heetch.com
Cabify
Known for: Ride-hailing across Spain, Portugal, plus Latin America (Mexico, Chile, Colombia, Peru, Ecuador, Argentina, Uruguay, Dominican Republic). Strong on pre-booking, scheduled rides, business expense integration. ; major investors include Rakuten and Goldman Sachs (foreign-investor caveat). The Spanish-Latin American answer to Uber. Spanish-founded, Madrid-headquartered, but heavily Latin American by volume.
Pricing: Per-ride pricing comparable to local taxi tariffs. Cabify Business expense product widely used by Spanish-speaking enterprises.
https://cabify.com
Voi Technology
Known for: E-scooter and e-bike sharing across ~100 European cities (UK, Germany, France, Italy, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland). European answer to Lime and Bird (US) in shared micro-mobility. Stockholm-founded, deliberately European-focused (no US expansion). Strong on regulator relationships and integration with public-transport systems.
Pricing: Unlock €1 + €0.20/min typical. Voi Pass monthly subscription tiers for regular users.
https://www.voi.com
Tier Mobility (Dott Tier)
Known for: Merged with Dott (Netherlands) in March 2024 to form Europe's largest shared-micromobility operator — e-scooters and e-bikes across ~250 European cities. Combined entity backed by SoftBank, Mubadala, Goldman Sachs. Europe's largest scooter/bike-share platform after the Tier-Dott merger. by a consortium of European, Middle Eastern, and Asian investors. Cleaner alternative to Lime and Bird for European cities.
Pricing: Unlock €1 + €0.20-0.25/min typical. Subscription tiers €15-€40/month.
https://www.tier.app