A recent study from the University of Sydney has shed light on the hidden dangers lurking behind the convenience of food delivery apps. Researchers found that platform designs inadvertently push riders into risky behaviors, contributing to a surge in injuries and fatalities among gig economy workers in Australia. This investigation, led by Minjun Song from the School of Civil Engineering, reveals how operational rules like multiple order assignments and gamified incentives create intense time pressures, making unsafe riding economically rational for riders trying to make ends meet.
The study, published in Transportation Research Interdisciplinary Perspectives in May 2026, is based on in-depth interviews with 10 Uber Eats riders in Sydney. It identifies six key platform mechanisms fostering hazards: simultaneous multiple orders with opaque sequences, unpredictable restaurant preparation times, fierce rider competition, incentive systems rewarding high volumes, customer rating pressures, and pre-order structures. These factors lead to frequent phone checks while riding, rushing through traffic, running red lights, and riding on footpaths.
🚨 The Alarming Rise in Injuries and Deaths
Serious injuries to food-delivery riders in New South Wales skyrocketed from just 2 in 2017 to 75 in 2020, according to SafeWork NSW data. By 2024, the Transport Workers Union reported at least 18 rider deaths nationwide, with numbers continuing to climb into 2025 and 2026 amid growing demand for quick deliveries. In Victoria, one in 20 hospitalizations from e-bike accidents over the past five years involved workers on the job. SafeWork NSW report highlights road incidents as the primary risk, exacerbated by rushing and distractions.
Real-world cases underscore the crisis. Riders like those in Sydney's busy CBD have died in collisions while hurrying to meet tight ETAs (Estimated Time of Arrival). The study's riders described the constant ping of notifications as a 'digital leash', compelling them to accept orders mid-ride, even at personal peril.

Unpacking the Platform's 'Invisible Hand'
The University of Sydney research dives deep into how apps' algorithms prioritize speed over safety. For instance, riders often juggle multiple orders without knowing pickup sequences, leading to inefficient routes and frantic pedaling. Restaurant delays, beyond riders' control, eat into pay-per-delivery earnings, pushing them to shave seconds off road time.
Competition is fierce: riders must tap 'accept' instantly or lose gigs to others. Gamification adds urgency with bonuses for 20 deliveries in an hour—unrealistic without risks. Low star ratings from impatient customers for delays further compound anxiety. Pre-orders promise faster turnaround but deliver the same uncertainties, blaming riders for systemic flaws. Full study DOI
Riders' Voices: Stories from Sydney Streets
'It's like a race you can't win,' one interviewed rider told researchers. Another recounted checking the app mid-intersection, nearly causing a crash. These anecdotes illustrate how platforms normalize danger: what seems like individual choice is structurally coerced by economics.
Many riders are international students or migrants on visas, relying on flexible hours but facing language barriers and unfamiliar roads. Multi-apping—using several platforms simultaneously—increases notification overload, multiplying distractions.
Photo by Soheb Zaidi on Unsplash
Australia's Gig Economy Boom and Its Dark Side
Food delivery apps exploded post-COVID, with millions of orders weekly. Yet, riders lack workers' comp in many cases, classified as independent contractors. SafeWork NSW's 2020 survey of 167 riders found 67% check phones while riding, 35% often rush, and 80% brave bad weather.
Broader impacts include verbal abuse (frequent per survey) and robbery risks in isolated drops. Fatigue from 40+ hour weeks compounds hazards.
Regulatory Shifts: Minimum Pay and Safety Nets
In late 2025, Uber Eats and DoorDash agreed to a landmark deal with the Transport Workers Union: minimum earnings of A$31.30/hour from July 2026, plus insurance for accidents. This 'world-first' sets a safety net, potentially raising customer prices but prioritizing lives. Guardian coverage
NSW mandates hi-vis gear since 2023, but enforcement lags. Calls grow for national standards on platform design.
Sydney Uni's Pioneering Research Role
The University of Sydney's work positions it as a leader in transport safety and gig economy studies. Minjun Song's team bridges engineering and policy, influencing debates. USYD's Business School also researches gig protections, advocating balanced reforms.
This study exemplifies how Australian universities drive real-world change, from data to advocacy.
Expert Recommendations for Safer Deliveries
Song proposes: ban new orders to moving riders (opt-in auto-assign); customer transparency on multi-orders/delays; revamp incentives/ratings to decouple from uncontrollable factors; hotspot-based speed limits withholding orders until safe return.
Photo by Eriksson Luo on Unsplash
- Prohibit road notifications to cut distractions.
- Transparent ETAs including prep buffers.
- Rewards for safe, sustainable volumes.
- Police focus on driver blocking bike lanes.
Future Outlook: Balancing Convenience and Care
As apps evolve with AI routing, safety must lead. Universities like USYD urge collaboration: platforms, regulators, unions. With minimum pay incoming, expect fewer desperate risks, but design flaws persist without reform.
For riders, better gear/insurance; for unis, more grants in urban mobility. Actionable: support TWU campaigns, demand safe apps.

The Sydney Uni study calls for systemic change, reminding us convenience costs lives. By redesigning apps, Australia can protect vulnerable workers while sustaining the gig boom.


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