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As Amazon pushes toward "Same-Day" delivery dominance (Project IDK and regionalization), Flex will only grow. The company loves it because they don't pay for benefits, insurance, or vehicle fleets. amazonflex
If you can manage that equation, the open road—and a trunk full of Prime boxes—awaits. Try it for 10 blocks. If your car survives and you don't throw your phone into a river after the third failed apartment delivery, you have a viable side hustle. If not, stick to the day job. By [Author Name] As Amazon pushes toward "Same-Day"
It is an excellent tool for a specific person: someone who needs a guaranteed $500 in a week, lives within 20 minutes of a warehouse, and drives a reliable, fuel-efficient beater (think a 2012 Prius or Honda Fit). It is a terrible tool for someone financing a new SUV or who hates navigating confusing apartment complexes. Try it for 10 blocks
For the driver, the math is simple:
In the golden age of e-commerce, the sight of a grey Prime van rumbling down a suburban street is ubiquitous. But not every package with the iconic smile logo arrives via a corporate employee. A significant percentage—especially for same-day and early morning deliveries—arrives via a fleet of personal sedans, hatchbacks, and SUVs driven by everyday people. This is .