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Best Restaurant Delivery Memberships of 2026

Updated · 3 picks · live pricing · affiliate disclosure

Uber One bundles Uber Eats free delivery with five percent off rides and groceries plus priority pickup at restaurants.

BEST OVERALL4.2/10Save $0.12/yr

Uber One

Uber One bundles Uber Eats free delivery with five percent off rides and groceries plus priority pickup at restaurants.

Four-week free trial for new members

How it stacks up

  • ~30M members

    vs DashPass restaurant network

  • Rides plus food

    vs Grubhub+ Prime bundle

  • 5% off rides

    vs Instacart+ grocery focus

#2
Grubhub+3.9/10

From $9.99/mo

View
#3
DoorDash DashPass3.8/10

From $9.99/mo

View

All picks at a glance

#PickBest forStartingScore
1Uber OneBest with rides and groceries bundled at the same monthly tier$9.99/mo4.2/10
2Grubhub+Best for Amazon Prime households with the bundled one-year trial$9.99/mo3.9/10
3DoorDash DashPassBest overall restaurant delivery membership with broadest US network$9.99/mo3.8/10

Quick pick by use case

If you only have thirty seconds, find your situation below and skip to that pick.

Compare all 3 picks

Top spec
#1Uber One4.2/10$9.99/moSave $0.12/yr~30M members
#2Grubhub+3.9/10$9.99/moSave $0.12/yrPrime free 1yr
#3DoorDash DashPass3.8/10$9.99/moSave $0.12/yr~22M subscribers
#1

Uber One

4.2/10Save $0.12/yr

Best with rides and groceries bundled at the same monthly tier

Uber One bundles Uber Eats free delivery with five percent off rides and groceries plus priority pickup at restaurants.

PlanMonthlyWhat you get
Uber One$9.99/moBundles Uber Eats free delivery with 5% off rides and groceries plus priority pickup

Uber One is the right pick for households that already use Uber for rides and want food delivery in the same membership. Launched November 2021 as Uber's unified membership program, Uber One now covers about 30 million members globally with the broadest cross-category bundled value in this lineup.

The single tier bundles free delivery on Uber Eats with five percent off rides, five percent off Uber groceries, priority pickup at restaurants, and rewards across the Uber app. The load-bearing differentiator is the ride-share bundle. For households taking four to five Uber rides a month at typical metropolitan fares, the ride discount alone covers the membership and the food-delivery wedge becomes a bonus rather than the primary value.

The trade-off is restaurant network coverage. Uber Eats has strong urban and suburban coverage but trails DoorDash in rural and exurban markets. For households outside major metros, the network gap erodes the value even when the ride-share bundle pays off. Cancel-test: track Uber spending across rides for thirty days. If five percent exceeds the monthly cost, the membership pays for itself.

Pros

  • Bundles Uber Eats free delivery with five percent off rides and groceries
  • Priority pickup at restaurants reduces wait times during peak hours
  • About 30 million members globally as of late 2024
  • Single membership covers transportation, food, and groceries at one tier
  • The ride-share discount alone covers the membership at typical Uber spending

Cons

  • Uber Eats restaurant network trails DoorDash in rural and exurban markets
  • No annual discount; monthly billing only
~30M membersRides plus food5% off ridesFour-week free trial for new members

Best for: Households that take Uber rides four or more times a month and order Uber Eats. The ride discount alone covers the membership at typical spending.

Coverage
8
Delivery
9
App UX
9
Value
9
Support
7
#2

Grubhub+

3.9/10Save $0.12/yr

Best for Amazon Prime households with the bundled one-year trial

Grubhub+ ships free delivery plus pickup cashback and a free year for Amazon Prime members.

PlanMonthlyWhat you get
Grubhub+$9.99/moRestaurant delivery membership with 5% pickup cashback and member rewards

Grubhub+ is the right pick for Amazon Prime households that want a restaurant-delivery membership functionally free for the first year. Grubhub launched the membership in 2020 and was sold to Wonder in 2024. The platform runs the smallest active subscriber base in this lineup but the cleanest Amazon Prime integration of any restaurant-delivery membership.

The single tier waives delivery fees on Grubhub orders, lowers service fees, and ships five percent cashback on pickup orders plus member rewards. The load-bearing wedge is the Amazon Prime bundle: Prime members can activate Grubhub+ free for one year through the Prime benefits portal. The membership pays nothing during the trial year before auto-billing at standard rate kicks in.

The trade-off is restaurant network coverage relative to DoorDash and Uber Eats. Grubhub network depth has eroded over the past five years as DoorDash expanded. For households in major metros where Grubhub still maintains strong restaurant lineups, the membership covers the use case at functional zero cost during the Prime year. Outside major metros, the network gap erodes the value even during the trial.

Pros

  • Amazon Prime members get Grubhub+ free for one year via Prime benefits portal
  • Five percent cashback on pickup orders alongside free delivery on Grubhub orders
  • Functional zero cost during Prime trial year for households already paying for Prime
  • Member rewards and exclusive offers layer on top of free delivery
  • Owned by Wonder since 2024 with stable platform support

Cons

  • Smaller active subscriber base than DashPass and Uber One
  • Restaurant network depth has eroded versus DoorDash and Uber Eats since 2020
Prime free 1yr5% pickup cashbackWonder-ownedFree for one year via Amazon Prime; standard trial otherwise

Best for: Amazon Prime households in major metros that want a free-for-one-year restaurant trial through the Prime benefit before auto-billing.

Coverage
8
Delivery
8
App UX
9
Value
9
Support
7
#3

DoorDash DashPass

3.8/10Save $0.12/yr

Best overall restaurant delivery membership with broadest US network

DashPass is the largest US restaurant-delivery membership with the broadest network coverage.

PlanMonthlyWhat you get
DashPass$9.99/moFree delivery on $12+ orders plus reduced service fees and grocery coverage

DashPass is the right pick for most US households that order restaurant delivery regularly. DoorDash launched DashPass in 2018 and has grown to about 22 million subscribers as of late 2024, the largest US restaurant-delivery membership by paid count.

The single tier waives delivery fees on qualifying orders and reduces service fees on every order, with member-only offers and grocery delivery from partner stores layered on top. The load-bearing wedge is network coverage. DashPass works at far more restaurants than Uber Eats or Grubhub in suburban and rural markets. Average order saves about five dollars in delivery fees, which means three orders a month covers the membership.

The trade-off is the absence of bundled value outside the restaurant lens. Uber One bundles ride-share discounts in the same membership; DashPass focuses on restaurants without ride-share. Bundled-sub disclosure: Chase Sapphire Reserve cardholders get DashPass free for the first year of cardholder, then auto-bill at standard rate.

Pros

  • About 22 million subscribers (largest US restaurant-delivery membership by paid count)
  • Covers about 70 percent of US restaurants on at least one major delivery app
  • Suburban and rural network coverage that Uber Eats and Grubhub trail
  • Free for one year with Chase Sapphire Reserve cardholders
  • Average order saves about five dollars in delivery fees

Cons

  • No bundled value outside restaurant and grocery partner stores
  • No annual discount; monthly billing only
~22M subscribersLargest US networkChase bundle 1yrThirty-day free trial; bundled with Chase Sapphire Reserve

Best for: US households that order restaurant delivery three or more times a month, especially in suburban or rural markets where DoorDash dominates the local network.

Coverage
8
Delivery
9
App UX
9
Value
8
Support
7

How we picked

Each pick gets a transparent composite score from price, features, free-tier availability, and editor fit. Pricing flows from our live database, so when a vendor changes prices the score updates here too.

Restaurant-membership framework: network coverage as the primary axis, bundled value across rides or grocery or Prime as a secondary lens, monthly cost discipline against actual order frequency, and bundled-sub disclosure for trials that auto-bill at standard rates after the trial. See parent /best/food-delivery for the broader cross-shape framework including meal-kits and grocery delivery.

We don't claim "30,000 hours of testing." Our methodology is the formula above plus the editor's published verdict for each pick. Verifiable, auditable, and updated when the underlying data changes.

Why trust Subrupt

We're a subscription tracker first, a buying guide second. Every claim on this page is something you can check.

By use case

Best overall restaurant delivery membership

Uber One

Read the full review →

Best with rides and groceries bundled

Grubhub+

Read the full review →

Best Amazon Prime bundled trial

DoorDash DashPass

Read the full review →

Didn't make the list

Cut because Instacart+ is grocery-focused rather than restaurant-focused. But it covers 1500+ retailers and pairs well as a secondary subscription; see parent /best/food-delivery.

How to choose your Restaurant Delivery Membership

Network coverage is the load-bearing axis for most US households

The restaurant-delivery membership search lands most readers on three picks where network coverage decides which membership actually pays off. DoorDash DashPass covers about seventy percent of US restaurants on at least one major delivery app and dominates suburban and rural markets where Uber Eats and Grubhub run thinner restaurant lineups. Uber One ships strong urban and suburban coverage tied to Uber Eats but trails DashPass outside major metros. Grubhub+ has eroded against DoorDash and Uber Eats since 2020 and now runs the smallest active network of the three. For households outside major metros, DashPass is almost always the right pick. For households in major metros, the choice depends on bundled value rather than network depth. See parent /best/food-delivery for the broader cross-shape framework.

Bundled-sub disclosure: free trials that auto-bill after the year

Two major US credit-and-loyalty programs bundle restaurant-delivery memberships free for one year, both auto-billing at standard rates after the trial. Chase Sapphire Reserve cardholders get DashPass free for the first year of cardholder; the trial activates automatically when the credit card is added to DoorDash and auto-bills at standard rate after twelve months. Amazon Prime members get Grubhub+ free for one year through the Prime benefits portal; the trial activates similarly and auto-bills after the year. Two practical implications. First, verify the bundle is actually active before subscribing standalone; many Chase or Prime customers pay for the membership twice without realizing. Second, mark the renewal date on your calendar; the standard rate kicks in silently and most subscribers do not notice until the bank statement. Wells Fargo Active Cash also bundled DashPass at one point; check the credit-card benefits portal before subscribing.

When a single membership stops paying off

Restaurant memberships bill monthly with no usage requirement, which means subscribers who stop ordering for months keep paying. The math: DashPass covers three or more orders a month at average savings around five dollars per order. Uber One covers four to five Uber rides a month at typical metropolitan fares plus food orders to clear the threshold. Grubhub+ covers about three Grubhub orders a month outside the Prime trial year. Below those thresholds, the membership wastes money and the cancel-test fails. The multi-app strategy that no buying-guide structures: keep DoorDash, Uber Eats, and Grubhub apps installed without paid memberships and compare total prices for every order; the same restaurant frequently has different total costs across apps because of service-fee differences. Active price-comparison shoppers save twenty to fifty dollars a month versus single-app loyalty.

Cancel friction and how each membership handles deactivation

Cancellation friction is low across all three picks compared to meal-kit subscriptions. DashPass, Uber One, and Grubhub+ all support one-click cancel inside the app under Account or Subscription settings. The retention flows include modest discount offers but do not run multi-screen retention loops like meal-kit cancellations. For households cancelling the bundled-sub trial year, the cancellation completes against the underlying membership, but the bundled credit-card or Prime benefit remains tied to the underlying card or account. Save screenshots of the cancellation confirmation; restaurant-membership auto-billing disputes are less common than meal-kit disputes but do happen, especially around the bundled-sub trial transitions where the standard rate kicks in silently. See parent /best/food-delivery for the broader cancellation friction framework across food-delivery shapes.

Frequently asked questions

Are these prices guaranteed not to change?

Vendor pricing changes regularly. DashPass has held the standard monthly rate since 2018. Uber One has held the standard monthly rate since the November 2021 launch. Grubhub+ has held the standard monthly rate since 2020. The bundled-sub trial structures (Chase Sapphire Reserve for DashPass; Amazon Prime for Grubhub+) have been stable through 2024 and 2025 but are subject to change at the partner's discretion. Verify the current rate on the vendor site before subscribing.

Why is DashPass ranked first when Uber One has more bundled value?

DashPass leads on the load-bearing axis for most US households: restaurant network coverage. Uber One bundles transportation alongside food delivery, which matters for urban households that take Uber regularly. For households outside major metros where DoorDash dominates, DashPass is almost always the right pick. For urban households taking Uber rides four or more times a month, Uber One can pay off on the ride bundle alone.

How many memberships should I subscribe to at once?

Almost always one. Order volume splits across competing apps inflates total spend and dilutes the savings on each membership. The exception is when the household has an active bundled-sub trial year through Chase Sapphire Reserve for DashPass or Amazon Prime for Grubhub+; in that case, two memberships cost only one because the bundled trial is functionally free. After the trial year, consolidate to the single membership that pays off on the household's actual order pattern.

When does Uber One pay off versus DashPass for an urban household?

Uber One pays off when the household takes four or more Uber rides a month at typical metropolitan fares. The ride discount alone covers the membership at that frequency, and food delivery becomes a bonus. For urban households that do not use Uber for rides regularly, DashPass covers the same monthly cost without paying for ride-share value the household never uses. Track thirty days of Uber spending before deciding.

Can I get DashPass or Grubhub+ free with my credit card or Prime account?

Yes. Chase Sapphire Reserve cardholders get DashPass free for the first year of cardholder; activate by adding the card to DoorDash. Amazon Prime members get Grubhub+ free for one year via the Prime benefits portal. Both auto-bill at standard rate after the twelve-month trial. Verify the bundle is active before subscribing standalone; many customers pay twice without realizing. Wells Fargo Active Cash also bundled DashPass at one point; check the credit-card benefits portal.

Does the multi-app price-comparison strategy save more than a single membership?

For some households, yes. Active price-comparison shoppers save twenty to fifty dollars a month versus single-app loyalty because the same restaurant frequently has different total costs across DoorDash, Uber Eats, and Grubhub. The trade-off is time. Comparing every order across three apps takes three to five minutes per order. For convenience-first households, single-app loyalty wins. For households comfortable with the comparison effort, multi-app saves more.

Why is Grubhub+ ranked third when Amazon Prime makes it free?

Grubhub+ leads on bundled-trial value for Amazon Prime households but trails DashPass and Uber Eats on restaurant network depth. The free-for-one-year Prime benefit makes the membership cost zero during the trial year; after auto-billing kicks in, the network gap erodes the value relative to DashPass. The order reflects the broader audience including non-Prime households. For Prime households in major metros, Grubhub+ during the free year is a clean entry.

How hard is it to cancel a restaurant-delivery membership?

Low friction across all three picks. DashPass, Uber One, and Grubhub+ all support one-click cancel inside the app under Account or Subscription settings. Retention flows include modest discount offers but do not run multi-screen loops like meal-kit cancellations. The bundled-sub trials (Chase for DashPass; Prime for Grubhub+) require attention because the standard rate kicks in silently after the trial year; mark the renewal date on your calendar.

Should I switch memberships if I move from a major metro to suburban or rural area?

Almost always yes if the current membership is Uber One or Grubhub+. DoorDash dominates the local restaurant network in suburban and rural markets where Uber Eats and Grubhub run thinner lineups. After a relocation, the coverage advantage tips heavily toward DashPass; the Uber One ride-share value also drops because rural households take Uber less. Cancel the old membership, take the DashPass thirty-day trial, and verify the local lineup before subscribing.

When does this guide get updated?

We refresh restaurant-delivery membership spinoffs quarterly when there are no major shifts and immediately when there are. Major triggers: vendor pricing changes at DashPass, Uber One, or Grubhub+, bundled-sub trial structure changes from Chase or Amazon Prime, ownership transitions like the 2024 Wonder acquisition of Grubhub, and new bundled credit-card or loyalty partnerships. The lastReviewed date at the top reflects the most recent editorial sweep.

Subrupt Editorial

The team behind subrupt.com. We track subscriptions, surface cheaper alternatives, and publish buying guides where the score formula is on the page so you can recompute it yourself. We do not claim 30,000 hours of testing. What we claim is live pricing from our database, a transparent composite score, and honest savings math against a category baseline.

Last reviewed

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Affiliate disclosure: Subrupt earns a commission when you switch to a service through our recommendation links. This never changes the price you pay. We only recommend services where there's a real cost or feature advantage for you, and our picks are based on the data on this page, not on which programs pay the most.

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