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How Much Do Amazon Flex Drivers Make? (2025 Data from 500k+ Drivers)
How much do Amazon Flex drivers actually make? If you have been searching for a straight answer, you have probably found vague ranges and outdated guesses. We analyzed earnings from 11,633 Amazon Flex drivers tracked through Gridwise in 2025 to give you the most accurate picture of Amazon Flex pay available anywhere. But before the numbers make sense, you need to understand one thing: Amazon Flex works completely differently from DoorDash, Uber Eats, or any other per-delivery gig app. Instead of accepting individual orders, you claim a delivery block -- a 3-to-5-hour window where you pick up and deliver a full route of packages from a warehouse. You get paid a flat rate for the entire block, not per delivery. That model changes everything about how earnings work, and this guide breaks down exactly what to expect: hourly pay, per-block earnings, tips (or lack thereof), route types, and how Amazon Flex stacks up against every other gig platform.
Quick Answer -- How Much Do Amazon Flex Drivers Make Per Hour?
Amazon Flex drivers earn a median of $20.89 per hour in total trip pay, based on data from 11,633 drivers tracked through Gridwise in 2025. When you include all earnings sources, the median gross pay rises to $21.35 per hour.
That puts Amazon Flex as the third highest-paying gig platform tracked by Gridwise, behind only Spark Driver earnings ($21.74/hr median) and Uber driver earnings ($21.18/hr median). The top 25% of Flex drivers earn $23.08 or more per hour, and the top 10% clear $25.96 per hour.
These are gross earnings before expenses like gas, vehicle maintenance, and insurance. But the big advantage of Flex is predictability -- you know exactly what a block pays before you accept it, which is not something you can say about most per-delivery or per-ride platforms.
Amazon Flex Earnings Breakdown (2025 Data from 11,633 Drivers)
Here is the full picture of what Amazon Flex drivers earn, broken down by every metric that matters. All figures are based on 2025 data from Gridwise's network of tracked drivers. One important note before you dive in: in our data, a "task" equals one delivery block -- the entire 3-to-5-hour route, not a single package delivery. Keep that in mind when you see the per-task numbers.
Hourly Earnings
Total trip pay per work hour (base block pay + tips combined):
- Average: $21.42/hr
- Median: $20.89/hr
- Top 25% (p75): $23.08/hr
- Top 10% (p90): $25.96/hr
Gross pay per work hour (all earnings including any additional compensation):
- Average: $22.02/hr
- Median: $21.35/hr
- Top 25% (p75): $23.75/hr
- Top 10% (p90): $26.80/hr
The gap between the median ($20.89) and the top 10% ($25.96) is tighter than on most gig platforms. That is a direct result of the block model -- everyone doing the same 4-hour block earns roughly the same base pay. The variation comes from which blocks you claim and whether those blocks have surged above base rate.
Per-Block Earnings
This is where Amazon Flex looks dramatically different from other gig apps. Remember: each "task" in our data represents one entire delivery block, which is typically 3 to 5 hours of picking up and delivering packages along a set route. This is NOT the pay for delivering a single package -- it is the pay for the whole shift.
Total trip pay per block:
- Average: $83.92 per block
- Median: $83.14 per block
- Top 25% (p75): $93.73 per block
- Top 10% (p90): $103.65 per block
Gross pay per block (including tips and any adjustments):
- Average: $86.23 per block
- Median: $85.00 per block
- Top 25% (p75): $96.22 per block
- Top 10% (p90): $107.03 per block
A median of $85 per block for roughly 4 hours of work is solid. That works out to just over $21 per hour -- and you know the payout before you even start driving. Compare that to DoorDash or Uber Eats, where you might accept 15 to 20 individual deliveries in that same time and not know your total until the shift is over.
Blocks Per Hour
- Average: 0.26 blocks per hour
- Median: 0.25 blocks per hour
- Top 25% (p75): 0.27 blocks per hour
- Top 10% (p90): 0.31 blocks per hour
These numbers confirm what the block model implies: one block takes about 4 hours on average (1 divided by 0.25 = 4 hours per block). Drivers who finish faster -- the top 10% completing blocks at a 0.31 rate -- are effectively earning a higher hourly rate because they are done sooner while still collecting the full block payment.
How Amazon Flex Pay Works
Amazon Flex operates on a fundamentally different pay model than most gig apps. Understanding this model is key to knowing whether Flex is the right fit for you -- and how to maximize your earnings if you decide to drive.
The Block-Based Model
Instead of accepting individual delivery requests like you would on DoorDash or Uber Eats, Amazon Flex drivers claim delivery blocks through the Flex app. A block is a scheduled time window -- typically 3, 3.5, 4, or 5 hours -- during which you pick up a batch of packages from an Amazon warehouse or delivery station and deliver them along a predetermined route.
Each block has a flat rate attached before you accept it. A typical 4-hour logistics block might offer $84 to $100, depending on your market and demand. You see the pay, the start time, and the station location before committing. No surprises.
Base Rates and How They Are Set
Amazon sets base rates for each block based on the time length and the market. Typical base rates in 2025 look like this:
- 3-hour block: $54\u2013$72
- 3.5-hour block: $63\u2013$84
- 4-hour block: $72\u2013$96
- 5-hour block: $90\u2013$120
These ranges vary significantly by city. Markets with higher cost of living and more driver demand (like Los Angeles, New York, and Chicago) tend to pay at the higher end. Smaller markets may sit closer to the lower end.
Surge Pricing on Blocks
Here is where the real earning strategy comes in. When a delivery block goes unclaimed as the start time approaches, Amazon increases the rate to attract drivers. These surge blocks (sometimes called "increased rate" blocks) can pay $5, $10, $15, or even $20+ above the base rate.
A 4-hour block that starts at $84 might surge to $99, $108, or higher if no one claims it. Experienced Flex drivers learn which stations and time slots consistently surge and build their schedules around claiming these higher-paying blocks. The risk is that if you wait too long, another driver grabs it first -- or the block fills at base rate and you get nothing.
Route Types
Amazon Flex has four main route types, and they differ in pay structure, workload, and tip potential:
- Logistics (most common): Deliver packages from an Amazon warehouse to residential addresses. These are the standard Flex routes -- high volume, no customer interaction, no tips. You load your car with 30 to 50 packages and follow the app's route.
- Prime Now: Deliver items from a Prime Now hub within a 1-to-2-hour delivery window. These blocks are shorter and can include tips from customers who ordered through Prime Now.
- Amazon Fresh: Deliver grocery orders from Amazon Fresh fulfillment centers. These routes involve heavier items (cases of water, full grocery orders) but carry higher tip potential since customers tip on grocery deliveries more consistently.
- Whole Foods: Pick up and deliver grocery orders from Whole Foods stores. Similar to Fresh but with shorter routes and the highest tip frequency among all Flex route types.
The route type you work determines whether tips are even possible -- which brings us to the most important earnings conversation for Amazon Flex drivers.
You Get Paid Even If You Finish Early
One of the best features of the block model: if you finish your route before the block time expires, you keep the full block payment. A 4-hour block that you complete in 3 hours means your effective hourly rate just jumped from $21/hr to $28/hr. Fast, efficient delivery is the single best way to increase your Amazon Flex earnings without working more hours.
Tips on Amazon Flex -- The Honest Truth
This is the section most Amazon Flex articles gloss over or misrepresent. Here is the reality, backed by data from 11,633 drivers:
Tip Earnings Per Block
- Average: $1.97 per block
- Median: $0.00 per block
- Top 25% (p75): $0.50 per block
- Top 10% (p90): $5.97 per block
Tip Earnings Per Hour
- Average: $0.80/hr
- Median: $0.00/hr
- Top 25% (p75): $0.12/hr
- Top 10% (p90): $1.74/hr
Read that again: the median tip on Amazon Flex is $0.00. More than half of all Flex drivers receive zero tips on their blocks. The average is pulled up to $1.97 per block by the small percentage of drivers who work tip-eligible routes like Whole Foods and Fresh.
Why Tips Are So Low
The explanation is straightforward: the vast majority of Amazon Flex blocks are logistics routes -- standard package deliveries from Amazon warehouses. Logistics deliveries have no tipping mechanism. The customer ordered from Amazon.com, not from a food or grocery app, and there is no prompt to tip the driver.
Tips only come into play on Prime Now, Fresh, and Whole Foods routes, where customers are prompted to tip during checkout. Even on those routes, tips are inconsistent and modest compared to food delivery platforms like DoorDash driver earnings where tips represent 30% or more of total pay.
This is the single biggest difference between Amazon Flex and per-delivery gig apps. On DoorDash, a bad night of tips can cut your earnings in half. On Flex, your earnings are locked in the moment you accept the block. Tips are a bonus, not a dependency.
Best Times to Drive Amazon Flex
Block availability on Amazon Flex follows different patterns than rideshare or food delivery demand. Here is what experienced Flex drivers know about timing.
When Blocks Drop
Amazon releases blocks in waves, and the timing varies by station. However, common patterns include:
- Night before (10pm-12am): Many logistics blocks for the next day drop the evening before. Night owls who check the app at 10pm often have first pick of morning blocks.
- Early morning (3am-6am): A second wave of same-day blocks frequently appears in the early hours. These often have the best surge rates because most drivers are asleep.
- Throughout the day: Blocks that go unfilled or get dropped by other drivers reappear at random times, sometimes at increased rates.
Best Times for Higher Pay
- Early morning warehouse blocks (3am-7am): These are the least popular shifts, which means they are most likely to surge. Drivers who are willing to start before dawn consistently report higher block rates.
- Weekend Whole Foods and Fresh blocks: Saturday and Sunday grocery delivery blocks have the highest tip potential. Customers ordering weekend groceries tip more frequently and at higher amounts than weekday customers.
- Holiday season (October-December): Amazon's delivery volume explodes during Prime Day, Black Friday, and the December holiday rush. Block availability increases dramatically, and surge rates can climb $15 to $25 above base. Seasonal Flex driving during Q4 is one of the best earning windows in the entire gig economy.
- Bad weather days: Rain, snow, and extreme heat reduce driver supply while demand stays constant. Blocks surge higher when fewer drivers are willing to deliver in uncomfortable conditions.
Block Strategy for Beginners
If you are new to Amazon Flex, start by claiming any available block to build your delivery history and learn the routes. Once you are comfortable with the process (usually after 10 to 15 blocks), you can start being more selective -- waiting for surge blocks, targeting specific stations, and optimizing for the route types that pay best in your market.
How to Earn More on Amazon Flex
The difference between a driver earning $20.89/hr (median) and one earning $25.96/hr (top 10%) often comes down to strategy, not luck. Here is what higher earners do differently.
Master the Surge Block Strategy
The most impactful earning tactic on Amazon Flex is claiming surge blocks instead of base-rate blocks. If a 4-hour block pays $84 at base rate and $108 at surge, that is an extra $24 for the same work -- pushing your hourly rate from $21/hr to $27/hr. The key is learning which blocks at which stations consistently surge and at what times. Keep a log for your first few weeks to identify patterns in your market.
The trade-off: surge blocks are not guaranteed. If you pass on a base-rate block hoping it will surge, another driver might grab it and you end up with nothing. Balance the risk by having a "floor rate" -- the minimum block rate you are willing to accept -- and only hold out for surge above that floor.
Finish Blocks Early
Since you are paid the full block amount regardless of how long the deliveries take, speed and efficiency directly increase your effective hourly rate. Experienced Flex drivers use these tactics to finish faster:
- Organize packages in your car by stop order before leaving the warehouse. Spend 5 extra minutes sorting at the station to save 20 minutes on the road.
- Learn your delivery area. Drivers who know the neighborhoods, apartment complexes, and gate codes in their delivery zone finish significantly faster than those relying solely on GPS.
- Use the Amazon Flex itinerary feature to preview your route before starting. Identify any stops that might cause delays (gated communities, businesses that close early) and plan accordingly.
- Keep your phone mounted and charged. Fumbling with your phone between stops adds up across 30 to 50 deliveries per block.
Prioritize Tip-Eligible Routes
If your market has Whole Foods or Fresh stations, prioritize those blocks when they are available. The base pay is comparable to logistics blocks, but the tip upside can add $5 to $20+ per block. Even though the median tip across all Flex drivers is $0, drivers who exclusively work Fresh and Whole Foods routes report significantly higher tip income.
Drive a Fuel-Efficient Vehicle
Amazon Flex logistics routes can cover 80 to 150 miles per block depending on your market. At those distances, the difference between a vehicle getting 20 mpg and one getting 35 mpg is $8 to $15 per block in gas costs alone. A hybrid or fuel-efficient sedan is ideal for Flex. Make sure your vehicle meets all Amazon Flex requirements before signing up.
Track Everything for Tax Season
As an independent contractor, Amazon Flex drivers can deduct mileage, phone expenses, and other business costs. At the 2025 IRS standard mileage rate of $0.725 per mile, a driver covering 100 miles per block can deduct $72.50 per shift. Over a year of driving, those tax deductions for gig workers can save you thousands. Gridwise tracks your mileage automatically so you never leave money on the table.
Amazon Flex vs Other Gig Apps
How does Amazon Flex compare to the other major gig platforms? Here is a side-by-side look at median hourly earnings across all platforms tracked by Gridwise in 2025:
- Spark: $21.74/hr median -- Spark Driver earnings
- Uber: $21.18/hr median -- Uber driver earnings
- Amazon Flex: $20.89/hr median
- Uber Eats: $14.07/hr median
- DoorDash: $11.26/hr median -- DoorDash driver earnings
Amazon Flex ranks third in raw hourly pay -- just $0.85 behind the top-earning platform (Spark) and $0.29 behind Uber. But raw hourly rate does not tell the whole story. Here are the key trade-offs:
Amazon Flex vs DoorDash and Uber Eats
Flex pays nearly double the hourly rate of DoorDash and significantly more than Uber Eats. But DoorDash and Uber Eats drivers earn 30 to 40% of their total pay from tips, which Flex drivers largely do not receive. The real advantage of Flex is income predictability -- you know what a block pays before you start, while delivery drivers are at the mercy of per-order tips and variable demand.
The trade-off is flexibility. DoorDash and Uber Eats let you go online and offline whenever you want, accepting individual orders on your own schedule. Amazon Flex requires you to commit to a multi-hour block in advance.
Amazon Flex vs Uber and Spark
All three platforms pay in the $20 to $22/hr range at the median, making them the top tier of gig earnings. Uber offers the most schedule flexibility (go online anytime), while Spark and Flex both use a block or batch model. Uber drivers earn meaningful tips ($2.08/hr median), while Flex drivers essentially do not. If you have access to all three, many drivers combine Uber rideshare shifts with Flex blocks to maximize both flexibility and guaranteed income.
Is Amazon Flex Worth It?
At a median of $20.89 per hour in gross pay, Amazon Flex is one of the higher-paying gig platforms available. But gross pay is not take-home pay. Here is what you need to account for:
- Gas: Flex routes typically cover 80 to 150 miles per block. At $3.50/gallon and 28 mpg, that is $10 to $19 per block in fuel.
- Vehicle maintenance and wear: High-mileage delivery driving accelerates oil changes, tire wear, and brake replacement. Budget roughly $0.05 to $0.10 per mile.
- Insurance: Commercial or gig-specific insurance adds $50 to $150/month over personal auto policies.
- Vehicle depreciation: The IRS standard mileage rate of $0.725/mile reflects total vehicle operating costs.
After expenses, most Amazon Flex drivers net approximately $15 to $19 per hour. That is competitive with many traditional hourly jobs -- and you do not have a boss, a dress code, or a shift schedule dictated by someone else.
Amazon Flex Is Great For
- Drivers who want predictable income. You know exactly what a block pays before you claim it. No guessing, no hoping for tips.
- People who prefer package delivery to people or food. No passengers, no hot food getting cold, no restaurant wait times. Just packages and addresses.
- Side hustlers who want defined shifts. A 4-hour block has a clear start and end time, making it easy to plan around a primary job or family obligations.
- Drivers with fuel-efficient vehicles. If your car gets 30+ mpg, your expense-to-earnings ratio on Flex is very favorable.
Amazon Flex Is Not Ideal For
- Tip-dependent earners. If you rely on tips to make gig work profitable, Flex is not your platform. The median tip is $0.
- Drivers who want total schedule freedom. You cannot just "turn on the app" -- you need to claim blocks in advance, and popular time slots go fast.
- People without a qualifying vehicle. Your vehicle must meet specific size and condition requirements. Check the full Amazon Flex requirements before applying.
Amazon Flex Earnings FAQ
How much can you make doing Amazon Flex full-time?
At the median hourly rate of $20.89, a full-time Amazon Flex driver working 40 hours per week (roughly 10 blocks) would gross approximately $836 per week or $43,450 per year before expenses. Top 25% earners working full-time could gross $48,000+ per year. After expenses and taxes, full-time Flex drivers typically take home $32,000 to $40,000 per year depending on their market, vehicle efficiency, and how well they track deductions.
Do Amazon Flex drivers get tips?
Technically, yes -- but in practice, most do not. Our data shows a median tip of $0.00 per block. Tips are only possible on Prime Now, Amazon Fresh, and Whole Foods routes, where customers are prompted to tip during checkout. Standard logistics routes -- which make up the majority of Flex blocks -- have no tipping mechanism. If tips are important to your earning strategy, Flex is probably not your best option.
How much does Amazon Flex pay per block?
The median pay per block is $83.14 in total trip pay and $85.00 in gross pay. Blocks range from 3 to 5 hours, so the per-block amount varies by length. A typical 4-hour block pays $72 to $108 depending on your market and whether the block has surged above base rate. Top 10% of drivers earn $103.65+ per block.
Is Amazon Flex better than DoorDash?
It depends on your priorities. Amazon Flex pays a significantly higher hourly rate ($20.89/hr median vs DoorDash's $11.26/hr). However, DoorDash drivers earn substantial tips (30%+ of total pay), while Flex drivers largely do not. Flex offers more predictable per-shift income, while DoorDash offers more flexibility to work whenever you want. Many drivers do both -- Flex blocks during predictable hours and DoorDash during gaps.
Can you make $200 a day with Amazon Flex?
It is possible but not typical. At the median rate of $20.89/hr, making $200 in a day requires roughly 9.5 hours of block time -- so two 5-hour blocks or two 4-hour blocks plus a 3-hour block. If you consistently claim surge blocks at $25+/hr effective rates, $200 is achievable in about 8 hours. The top 10% of drivers earning $25.96/hr could reach $200 in roughly 7.5 hours of block time.
How long does it take to get approved for Amazon Flex?
The approval process typically takes 1 to 2 weeks, though it can vary. Amazon runs a background check and verifies your driver's license, insurance, and vehicle. Some markets have waitlists when driver supply exceeds demand. Read our full guide to Amazon Flex requirements for everything you need to have ready before applying.
Start Tracking Your Amazon Flex Earnings Today
The data in this article comes from 11,633 Amazon Flex drivers who track their earnings through Gridwise. The drivers who earn the most are not just claiming more blocks -- they are claiming smarter blocks. They know their real hourly rate, they know which stations and time slots surge consistently, and they track every mile for tax deductions.
Whether you are brand new to Amazon Flex or a veteran driver looking to optimize your block strategy, the first step is knowing your numbers. Are you actually earning $21/hr, or is it $18 after that long rural route last Tuesday dragged down your average? The only way to know is to track it.
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