Uber is one of the most-reviewed apps in the history of the App Store, with over 16.1 million iOS ratings and a near-perfect 4.9-star score. At that scale, the data stops being a vanity metric and starts being a signal worth dissecting. When millions of people are telling you something, you'd better listen — including the part they're not saying out loud.
Our analysis of 16.1 million reviews reveals a striking tension: an app riding a wave of overwhelmingly positive sentiment — 98% positive — yet carrying a concentrated, vocal complaint that exposes a structural weakness in the business. Android data is absent from this picture entirely, making iOS the sole lens into what users actually experience at scale.
Uber's users aren't rating the app — they're rating their driver, and that's a liability.
— AppRoast AI Analysis, 2026-06-12ios vs android — a tale of two user bases
ai-classified · based on review sample
16.1M app store ratings · what users are saying
0 google play ratings · a different story
what this means for uber — and its competitors
The numbers confirm what Uber's valuation already suggests: the core product works. Riders are getting from A to B, drivers named Pedro and James are earning five-star loyalty, and the booking experience is smooth enough that 94% of users feel compelled to leave a top rating. That is genuine product-market fit, not manufactured goodwill.
For competitors and PMs, the lesson is surgical: Uber has handed you a roadmap by leaving its support layer exposed. Any challenger that invests in responsive, human customer service for edge cases — overcharges, late arrivals, safety incidents — can weaponize Uber's single biggest weakness without touching the core ride experience. One company's 'good luck' is another's acquisition strategy.
See what your users are really saying — before your competitors do.
AI analysis of App Store & Google Play reviews in 30 seconds.