These figures don't really mean much, for two reasons. They're for 2022, so the comparative year of 2021 would have been compromised by lockdown. So comparisons not really that meaningful.
And because of the VAT stuff, turnover has rocketed, because they now record £100 (say) in fares as turnover, while previously it would have just been the commission element - £20 or whatever.
But the bottom line (literally, in this case) is that profits have increased six-fold, so that looks like a considerable advance for Uber UK
Uber lifts the lid on UK revenues for first timehttps://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/uber ... -whkmb8bwmUber has lifted the lid on the size of its business in the UK for the first time, revealing £3.4 billion of revenue last year.The American app operator made £2.6 billion of sales from its ride-hailing business, with a further £700 million from its food delivery business Uber Eats, which ferries takeaways from restaurants and groceries from supermarkets.
The numbers, revealed in accounts for the year to December 2022 filed at Companies House, show the total amount that Uber takes in orders, before the money is split with drivers and restaurants. It is the first time Uber has given a clear picture of its UK business since it implemented changes to its structure in March.
Uber was forced to alter its business model last year after a Supreme Court ruling in 2021 on a case brought by drivers, who had demanded recognition as full-time workers. The court found in their favour, ruling that the company was a transport provider and not merely a “middle man” between users and drivers. As a consequence of that, Uber now books all the revenue from its fares, rather than just a portion.
In addition, the company has stopped routing UK revenue via its Netherlands business.
Uber’s UK holding company made a pre-tax profit of £32 million last year — a significant jump on the £5 million it reported the year before. Revenue of £3.4 billion represented a 2,992 per cent jump on the £108 million it recorded the year before. The company paid £4.3 million in tax, at a rate of about 13 per cent. It is thought that Uber’s tax rate was lower than the standard 19 per cent during the period due to advance payments it had made to HM Revenue & Customs prior to the pandemic, when taxi rides plummeted.
The change in the annual accounts makes it hard to gauge the trend of Uber’s progress in the UK. However, the company conceded it was operating in a “highly competitive” environment, with drivers routinely jumping ship to rival platforms where they can earn more. Uber drivers often work for rival apps such as Bolt and Free Now. As a result, Uber raised pay for drivers last year.
Uber, which has long been criticised over its workers’ pay and conditions, admitted it had “previously received significant media coverage and negative publicity” but said it had taken “significant steps to rehabilitate our brand”.
The company also warned that the small businesses in its delivery network could be hit by “any decline in consumer spending” amid poor economic conditions. Its food delivery arm competes closely with Just Eat, which had turnover of £1.2 billion in its UK and Ireland business in its last reported year, and Deliveroo, which had revenues of £1.1 billion.
As the changes to Uber’s model took effect at the end of March, its accounts provide only a snapshot of the business for three-quarters of the year. It means turnover is likely to jump again in 2023, the first full year of the changes.
The company has more than 90,000 drivers nationwide. Uber said: “Uber launched in the UK more than ten years ago and has created hundreds of thousands of earnings opportunities. We regularly move over five million Brits around towns and cities, making the UK one of Uber’s most important global markets.”