Service
Restaurants or delivery drivers may file a complaint if a third-party platform (Uber Eats, DoorDash, Grubhub, etc.) charges a higher fee than the allowed amount on an order.
8 to 12 minutes
1) Determine if a violation occurred
A restaurant or delivery driver may have a complaint if any of the following incidents occurred:
- Charging a fee for delivery or takeout services exceeding the caps of 15% and 4% respectively.
- Charging a fee for telephone orders that don’t result in an actual transaction.
- Imposing restrictions on what a restaurant may charge for food and/or beverages.
- Charging a fee that a restaurant has not agreed to pay.
- Passing on a third-party payment transaction charge exceeding what the third-party food platform is charged.
- Passing on a third-party payment transaction charge if the amount of the transaction fee is not included in the contract with the restaurant.
- Reducing compensation or garnishing gratuities of delivery drivers to comply with the code.
- Advertising, promoting, selling of products, or arranging delivery of products for a restaurant without a written agreement.
- Refusal to provide delivery or takeout orders to restaurants choosing only to utilize capped services.
- Not terminating a service contract within 3 business days of receipt of notice from a restaurant.