Skip to main content

GM ends its Maven car-share business

Maven car-share brand, launched in 2016, was struggling before the pandemic
By David Arminas May 6, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
US auto maker GM walks away from its Maven car-sharing service (© Bulat Silvia | Dreamstime)

US car giant GM will close by the summer its Maven car-sharing service, which launched in 2016 but has been idle during the Covid crisis.

The closure marks the end of the service that had been struggling long before the pandemic forced it to cease operations, as many similar shared services have done.

Last year Maven scaled back and stopped service in nearly half of the 17 North American cities in which it operated.

Maven continued in Detroit, Los Angeles, Washington, DC and in Toronto, Canada.

GM said that Maven's "assets and resources will be transferred to GM's Global Innovation organisation, as well as the larger enterprise”.

The company said that it has no plans to re-enter the car-sharing business.

GM told TechCrunch that it “will take the great insights we’ve gained from Maven and leverage its car-sharing technology to provide new GM fleet services, and explore other new service offerings”.

Maven started as a pilot programme at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor and in August 2017 was chosen as the exclusive car-sharing partner for the University of Southern California in Los Angeles.

Maven also launched Maven Gig, a rental service for people who work in the gig economy such as drivers of Uber, Lyft and Uber Eats.

By 2018 Maven had 190,000 members and also had entered the Australian market where it provided gig-economy rentals before adding personal car-sharing services.

Related Content

  • February 14, 2018
    Maven simplifies car sharing for Toronto members via app
    Maven has launched its car sharing service in Toronto and is offering members an app to locate and reserve a vehicle as part of a strategy to help reduce congestion and remove the need for car ownership. The service comes without signup or membership fees, enabling users to only pay when they’re in the car with rates starting at $9 (£5) per hour, including gas and insurance (minus a deductible). Maven selected parking locations in Bloor West Village, Liberty Village, King West, the Entertainment District
  • August 1, 2019
    Uber trials $24.99 monthly subscription including food
    Uber is trialling a monthly subscription pass in the US that combines its transportation and food delivery services. A report by TechCrunch says the service is being launched in San Francisco and Chicago. For $24.99 per month, users receive a fixed discount on every Uber trip, free rides on its Jump bikes and scooters as well as free delivery on Uber Eats. Additionally, Uber is testing lower-priced passes in other cities that provide discounted journeys and free delivery on Uber Eats orders above a
  • April 30, 2021
    Sandra Phillips of Movmi: ‘We’re all trying to get people moving without a car’
    Movmi founder Sandra Phillips talks to Adam Hill about why transport integration is sometimes a matter of trust – and how to empower women in transportation
  • May 15, 2020
    No return to ‘business as usual’, say world’s city mayors
    Clean, green and sustainable need to be urban watchwords from now, says C40