Loading Page...

What happens when you rate a Bolt driver?

Ratings help us keep the best drivers and provide you with a safe, high-quality service. At the end of each completed trip, you have the option to rate your experience. One star refers to poor service while a five star is excellent service. Detailed feedback about your experience will be very helpful!



People Also Ask

Some Bolt Drive vehicles are equipped with an in-car dashboard camera. All vehicles with a camera installed are clearly marked with a sticker. The in-car cameras help us ensure safety on the road by detecting harsh movement, such as collisions, hard braking, hard cornering and aggressive driving.

MORE DETAILS

If a driver fails the selfie verification, their account is permanently blocked and they can never use the Bolt app again, warns the company.

MORE DETAILS

During your ride you have the opportunity to leave a tip for the driver. You can select the tip amount and change it or remove it during the ride and 15 minutes after. The tip amount will be added to the total ride price.

MORE DETAILS

We use the information on your driving licence data and the selfies you provide to us to verify and authenticate your identity on an ongoing basis for safety and security purposes.

MORE DETAILS

Bolt is an Estonian mobility company that offers ride-hailing, micromobility rental, food and grocery delivery (via the Bolt Food app), and carsharing services. The company is headquartered in Tallinn and operates in over 500 cities in more than 45 countries in Europe, Africa, Western Asia and Latin America.

MORE DETAILS

The basics of ratings After each trip, riders and drivers have the opportunity to rate each other from 1 to 5 stars, based on their trip experience. Ratings are anonymous.

MORE DETAILS

In the privacy centre, click “would you like to see a summary of how you use Uber”. From there, scroll down to “browse your data” and then tap on “view my ratings” and your breakdown will be revealed.

MORE DETAILS

HIs longer leg length leads to longer step length and therefore greater speed (Debaere, 2013). With Usain Bolt towering at 1.96m and weighing 96 kg , he has a stride advantage over his smaller competitors. Joint Angles are another biomechanical variable to consider.

MORE DETAILS