Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. My name is Brent, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Uber Q4 2021 Earnings Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, simply press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, again, press star one. Thank you. I would now like to turn the call over to Mr. Balaji Krishnamurthy, Head of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Thank you, operator. Thank you for joining us today and welcome to Uber Technologies Fourth Quarter 2021 Earnings Presentation. On the call today we have Uber CEO, Dara Khosrowshahi, and CFO, Nelson Chai. During today's call, we will present both GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures. Additional disclosures regarding these non-GAAP measures, including a reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP measures, are included in the press release, supplemental slides, and our filings with the SEC, each of which is posted to investor.uber.com. As a reminder, these numbers are unaudited and may be subject to change. Certain statements in this presentation and on this call are forward-looking statements. Such statements can be identified by terms such as believe, expect, intend, and may. You should not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements.
Actual results may differ materially from these forward-looking statements, and we do not undertake any obligation to update any forward-looking statements we make today, except as required by law. For more information about factors that may cause actual results to differ materially from forward-looking statements, please refer to the press release we issued today, as well as risks and uncertainties described in our most recent quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 2021 and in other filings made with the SEC when available. Following prepared remarks today, we will publish the prepared remarks on our investor relations website, and we will open the call to questions. For the remainder of this discussion, all fourth quarter growth rates reflect year-over-year growth and are on a constant currency basis unless otherwise noted.
Lastly, we ask you to review our earnings press release for a detailed Q4 financial review and our Q4 supplemental slide deck for additional disclosures that provide context on recent business performance. With that, let me hand it over to Dara.
Thanks, Balaji. We had a strong quarter to close out 2021 on a high note. Our results continued to demonstrate both how eager people are to move around their cities as restrictions ease up and how Delivery has become an important part of their daily lives. Gross bookings of $25.9 billion came in at the high end of our guidance range, with MAPCs of 118 million reaching an all-time high. Continued strong execution by our team delivered $86 million of adjusted EBITDA nicely above our guidance range. In Q4, we continued to see strong recovery in our Mobility business. December gross bookings nearly recovered to 2019 levels and approached a $50 billion annual run rate in the first few weeks of the month. Meanwhile, delivery volume stayed strong as we continued to improve the profitability profile of that business.
Delivery reported its first adjusted EBITDA profit, including for the first time in the U.S., even as Uber Eats became the fastest growing delivery player in America. Uber Freight closed the transformative acquisition with Transplace during the quarter. It's never been clearer that our supply chains are in dire need of technical innovation. Along with Transplace, Uber Freight, now at a billion-dollar quarterly run rate, is well positioned to bring digital native change to the enormous logistics ecosystem. Looking back at 2021, we had a great year. I can't say it went exactly as I predicted, but our teams have shown an incredible ability to remain agile and manage through change effectively. Despite COVID and all of its unpredictability, we now have reported our second adjusted EBITDA profitable quarter, and we expect to generate significant improvement profitability in 2022. Of course, COVID remains a part of our lives.
We started to see some impacts of the Omicron wave late in December. The silver lining is that the impacts are becoming more muted as we learn to live with the virus. Lockdowns are less strict, and vaccines are available across the world. Omicron also arrived at a time of year when we usually see seasonal declines. While Mobility gross bookings decreased 21% from December to January, that's only about 10 points worse than what we typically see at this time of year. On a trips basis, the decline was even more muted, down just 15% month-on-month, with pricing coming down meaningfully as marketplace balance improved. It appears that the Omicron impact on our Mobility business has come and gone relatively quickly, even faster than the global case counts.
We're beginning to see several major economies in Europe relaxing COVID restrictions, including the U.K., the Netherlands, Denmark, and Norway, with more countries expected to take similar action soon. In the last two weeks, the mobility recovery has rapidly resumed, with both trips and gross bookings recovering and Mobility gross bookings last week up 25% month-on-month. I'll quickly touch on driver supply, which continues to improve. We made steady progress through product innovation, more targeted marketing, and on-the-ground operational refinements to onboard more drivers and couriers faster. Nearly 325,000 people started to work on Uber in the quarter, bringing our total global active earner base to 4.4 million people, the largest it's been since the second quarter of 2020.
One important call-out is that while the Omicron wave acted as a temporary deterrent to demand, supply has been much more stable. As a result, surge and wait times have improved to their lowest level in a year. Recent internal research has shown that Uber is by far the preferred choice amongst drivers, and we're confident that our marketplace will be more, not less, balanced going forward. Turning now to Delivery, which exceeded our expectations and performed better than we typically see in January, likely in part to Omicron. This relative overperformance has moderated just as the mobility trends have improved. Overall trends continue to be very healthy, and there's no question now that Delivery is here to stay, both in food and other verticals. Delivery reached an important milestone in Q4, generating $25 million in segment-adjusted EBITDA and marking the first profitable quarter of many to come.
As I said on our last call with you, we view the turn to EBITDA profitability as a big moment, but ultimately just a step along the way to creating a self-sustaining and incredibly valuable business. With this milestone accomplished, Delivery is well-positioned to self-fund growth in grocery, retail, and local commerce. Let me underscore, we expect significant EBITDA profit generation even after those investments. Finally, it's worth spending a few minutes on a couple of our growth initiatives across the company. Our advertising business ended the year with around $225 million in run rate revenue, well above the $100 million target we laid out earlier this year. While much of the attention has been focused on sponsored listing for Uber Eats, we have a roadmap to build a much broader business, including in Mobility.
We also closed the acquisition of Drizly during the quarter, which will be a nice addition to our advertising efforts. Our new verticals businesses, which includes grocery, alcohol, convenience, and other non-restaurant efforts, grew nearly 10% quarter-over-quarter in Q4 on an organic basis, reaching a best month ever in December. We continue to make progress in improving non-restaurant merchant selection in the U.S., and as a result, the U.S. grew at three times the rate of our global new verticals business during the quarter. Internationally, we continue to have a strong lead in grocery and other verticals. We're working to build on that lead with new quick commerce offerings, and we're intentionally taking a partner-led approach here with encouraging signs of adoption.
For example, in France, Carrefour Sprint stores have represented nearly 20% of new verticals orders in Paris and with significantly higher per-store productivity than other new verticals merchants in market. Uber for Business also reached a milestone during the quarter with managed U for B gross bookings surpassing its previous high from 2019 with well over $1 billion in annual run rate GBs. Over the next few years, U for B's enterprise offerings, which importantly spans both Mobility and Delivery, will significantly outpace our consumer business and become a meaningful contributor to growth and profitability. Before I hand it over to Nelson, plug for everyone to tune in to our Investor Day tomorrow morning, which you can live stream on our website.
Over the past few quarters, we've talked a lot about the power of the platform and the potential for Uber's complementary services to contribute to lower cost of acquisition and higher lifetime value. We're looking forward to discussing our strategy, our plans for each of our business, and the growing advantage of our platform in a lot more detail tomorrow. Uber's emerging from the pandemic stronger than ever. As long as we execute on the opportunities in front of us, we're exceptionally well-positioned to deliver strong, profitable growth with significant expansion and profitability and cash flow generation over the coming quarters and years. Now, over to Nelson.
Thanks, Dara. Q4 was a strong quarter on all dimensions, with solid gross bookings, adjusted EBITDA, and margin performance for all of our businesses. Mobility gross bookings grew 67%, and the segment generated a healthy adjusted EBITDA margin of 5.1% of gross bookings, up 80 basis points year-over-year, even as take rates declined 160 basis points year-over-year, primarily due to our driver supply investments. Excluding those investments, Mobility incremental margins would have approached 10% on a year-over-year basis. With Marketplace balance in a much better spot than at any point in 2021, we are confident that Mobility's incremental margins will improve meaningfully in 2022.
Delivery gross bookings grew 33% and reached its first adjusted EBITDA profitable quarter with a $25 million EBITDA profit in Q4 as core food delivery profitability expanded to more than cover our investments into grocery and other new initiatives. Importantly, we recorded our first adjusted EBITDA profit for Delivery in the U.S. and Canada, expanding margins 180 basis points of gross bookings year-over-year while gaining category share in the U.S. Freight closed the previously announced transaction of Transplace during Q4, significantly expanding Freight's scale and the scope of our offering by combining Freight's digital freight brokerage technology with Transplace's managed transportation platform. Both Freight and Transplace are ending 2022 with strong momentum, healthy onboarding of new logos, and we are excited to demonstrate the potential of the combined asset.
Looking ahead to full year 2022, we continue to expect to deliver incremental EBITDA margins as a percentage of gross bookings of around 10% for Mobility and over 5% for Delivery.
In addition, we expect Freight to generate positive adjusted EBITDA in 2022. While we continue to invest in platform R&D to ensure our products continue to be the best out there, we expect to deliver healthy leverage on that line as well. Taken together, those commitments translate to a meaningful path to profitability expansion for Uber 2022. Turning to our balance sheet and liquidity position. We continue to maintain a strong liquidity position, ending the quarter with $4.3 billion of cash and cash equivalents, and our equity stakes were marked at $12.5 billion. We benefited from the change in value of Grab and Aurora as these companies reached liquidity milestones, as well as gains from selling some of our interest in Yandex.
These benefits were partially offset by the significant movement in Didi stock from September 30 to December 31 as we marked down the value of our Didi stake by $1.3 billion. The net effect of these moves was a $1.4 billion tailwind to our GAAP net income. As I have previously noted, our GAAP net income may continue to see swings from quarter- to- quarter from the large equity stakes on our balance sheet. While we intend to monetize some of our financial stakes at an appropriate time, we have sufficient liquidity to give us the flexibility to maintain these positions with the aim of maximizing value for Uber and our shareholders. I'll conclude my remarks with an update on recent business trends and Q1 outlook.
It's important to note that typical seasonality during Q1 is for Mobility and Delivery trips and gross bookings to be flat quarter- over- quarter. Given Omicron-related demand impacts, we expect Mobility gross bookings to decline quarter- over- quarter, while Delivery is likely to be flat to up modestly. In aggregate, we estimate these demand impacts to be $1 billion-$1.2 billion of drag in Q1 gross bookings. Additionally, Q1 will represent the first full quarter of Transplace contributions, which is expected to add an incremental $600 million in quarter one to freight gross bookings relative to Q4. Despite the meaningful gross bookings impact, we are confident that the rest of our business will allow us to expand profitability.
With that context for Q1, we expect total company gross bookings to be between $25 billion and $26 billion, representing year-over-year growth 28%-33% . We expect a total company adjusted EBITDA profit between $100 million and $130 million for the quarter. With that, let's open it up to questions. Thank you.
At this time, I would like to remind everyone, in order to ask a question, press star followed by the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, again, press star one. Your first question comes from the line of Doug Anmuth with J.P. Morgan. Your line is open.
Thanks for taking the questions. Just wanted to ask you about drivers and couriers. I think you talked about 4.4 million, and I believe that's relative to 5 million pre-COVID. Just curious kind of what the factors are, maybe if you were at a similar level in terms of overall bookings, just, you know, what kind of efficiencies you might see, you know, relative to, you know, to pre-COVID, and whether you would need a similar kind of number of drivers and couriers at that point. Then also, if you could just talk a little bit about Uber One, and what you're seeing early on here, given, you know, a very compelling value proposition versus previous subscription offerings. Thanks.
Yeah, absolutely, Doug. As it relates to drivers and couriers, first factor that we're seeing that's really encouraging is that the onboarding rates and onboarding conversion rates are happening much more successfully. This is because we essentially onboard earners, and then we give them work opportunities rather than onboarding them either as a driver or as a courier. As a result, earners can start earning much faster on our platform. We're seeing a lot of positive input into the platform. It's also great because earners can earn during a period when everyone's trying to get back on their feet, you know, without as much government help as we had previously. It works out for everyone, and it definitely helps out for our marketplace.
While we haven't done the specific analysis of, like, how many earners do we need on a GB basis, it's my strong instinct that our marketplace has gotten more efficient. This is because we are now cross-dispatching between driving people and driving things. That creates higher utilization for earners and makes for a more efficient marketplace. We're also seeing on the Delivery side, as the marketplace grows and essentially densifies, we got more restaurants on the marketplace, we have more consumers ordering, and as a result, the average length of a delivery is coming down so that essentially delivering is becoming more efficient from a network perspective. Network efficiency is up. The efficiency results in earners being busy a higher percentage of the time when they're looking for opportunities.
As you can see, kind of the marketplace metrics are coming down in terms of surge, in terms of ETAs, and delivery times are first rate. The efficiency trends that we're seeing are quite encouraging. As far as Uber One goes, it's very early. Last quarter, we talked about having over six million members around the world. The early signal that we're seeing for Uber One is very encouraging. It's a consumer value proposition that's quite compelling because pricing is equal to the pricing of our competition, but our content is better, right? It's just content in terms of free delivery and discounts on rides. The discounts on rides in a world that is increasingly opening, thank God, is going to become more and more valuable.
We believe we have a content advantage over our competition that is going to show up over time and is going to compound upon itself.
Thank you.
Next question, please.
Sure.
Your next question comes from the line of Eric Sheridan with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.
Thanks so much for taking the question. I know we're gonna talk more longer term tomorrow, but just maybe taking a step back on some of the shorter term dynamics. In terms of the Mobility business, we talked with one of your competitors last night about the dynamic of product mix and geo mix in the U.S. Can you give us a little bit of color on what you're seeing globally from geo mix and open versus closed environments or product mix like airport rides versus business rides or elements of that in terms of how that might be driving elements of December or into January, and how should we think about that as the quarter evolves? Thanks so much.
Yeah, absolutely. I think generally the trends that Lyft talked about during their call are fairly consistent with our trips. For example, we saw airport GBs up about 200% year-over-year, about 175% in the U.S. In December, rides tend to get longer, holiday rides, et c. We saw similar trends in terms of length of trip, et c., which certainly is encouraging. I'd say nothing significant there one way or the other.
Thank you.
Next question.
You're welcome.
Your next question comes from the line of Justin Post with Bank of America. Your line is open.
Great, thanks. I wonder if you could talk a little bit more about the driver incentives in the quarter and how you see kind of the take rates evolving. Is there some big upside there as you look forward the next couple of years, and how that flows through the margins? Thanks a lot.
First of all, I think if you remember, Justin, when we did the Q3 call, we actually highlighted that was gonna be the case, and a lot of it just had to do with marketplaces opening and closing because of the pandemic. We knew when we talked to you that places like Australia were gonna open, and then we were gonna lean in. I think you heard in my prepared remarks, if you actually backed out for some of that, we would have seen the improvement on the margins that we've talked about, and there is a little bit of seasonality.
Again, what I would say is that, you know, our goal is to make sure that we continue to overachieve both on the top line, but as well as on the bottom line on the profitability and expanding the margins. We did that, and we knew we did that. Because of that, you know, we will take opportunities at some point to continue to build supply. We are entering this year as you heard in our comments, in probably our best supply situation we've had since the pandemic started, and certainly in 2021. Again, we think that'll be beneficial as we go into 2022.
You'll hear us talk a little bit more about it, but yes, I think that you should we believe that we will see good margin expansion as we think about 2022. Justin, I'd also remind you that we manage to EBITDA dollars and margins and free cash flow dollars and margins as a percentage of GB, and revenue margin is an input as part of it. There are algos that are constantly balancing between pricing in order to maximize getting the next ride and/or pricing driver's side pricing that is optimal as well. The revenue margin that you see, it's more of an output, like at the end of the month or at the end of the quarter, we like look at our revenue margins, but we're managing to the business.
We're trying to maximize gross bookings. We're trying to maximize trips. Frankly, we're trying to maximize throughput, so our marketplace delivers maximum earnings to the earners on our marketplace because it means it becomes a much more attractive marketplace for earners to participate in. One area of upside I would tell you that you have seen in our Delivery margins, which is like Delivery growth was great. We're able to gain share and margins increased, is because we're optimizing around cost per trip, around, as the network is densifying, cost per trip is coming down pretty substantially, especially in the U.S., and we think there's more to come. That's just pure goodness because couriers are busy. You're getting your food quick, quickly. It's revenue margin upside, and we can reinvest that revenue margin essentially in gaining share.
Great. Thank you.
Next question, please.
Thank you.
You're welcome.
Your next question comes from the line of Brian Nowak with Morgan Stanley. Your line is open.
Hi, Brian.
Two, just the first one wanted to ask about the category share gains in the U.S. food delivery. Any specific sort of adjustments you've made or strategic developments that you've done that have really sort of driven that? And how do you think about still existing low-hanging fruit areas to further improve the food delivery market share? And then secondly, Dara, I'm just curious here kind of qualitatively how you think about some of the key drivers of the multi-year consumer rideshare side of the business. You're thinking through one and other pricing mechanisms, et c.
Sure. Absolutely. As far as the first question in the U.S. goes, I'd say it's just, it's core execution. None of this is wizardry. Our selection in the U.S. is improving. Our selection in suburbs is getting much better. Still not where it needs to be, but it's getting much better. I talked about cost per trip coming down, which allows us to reinvest in the top line, whether it's in marketing or it's incentives. Membership as a percentage of our gross bookings is increasing, so we're getting more frequency coming through the system. Something that we'll talk more about tomorrow is that the cross-platform activity across both Mobility and Delivery continues to increase. That is chiefly, at this point, benefiting the Delivery business. It's an attribute that is completely unique to Uber, and it is becoming more of a factor.
There's, like, these free kind of eaters that are coming through the system that aren't available to our competitors. New eaters as a percentage of our total gross bookings every quarter is actually pretty small because we have a really big base of eaters who are loyal to us, who keep coming back. When you have new eaters quarter after quarter after quarter after quarter, it starts compounding. We believe that we're starting to see the effects of that compounding happen last quarter and certainly this quarter, and we hope that it will continue. If it doesn't, we're not doing our jobs. The only point I'd add is, we did make a change in terms of our leadership in the U.S. at the beginning of the year, and he and his team deserve kudos because it really was a focus.
He and the team have come in and done a terrific job. We have a lot of confidence going into next year. You're right, it wasn't for me just the fact that we continue to gain competitive positioning versus our competitors, but we did it in a way where we are now gonna be profitable doing it. You know, a lot of it goes to him and the team because we have a big team of folks here, and they really operated well. Your second point is on Mobility, I believe.
The only thing I'd say there is I think tomorrow you'll get a very, very good overview of our long-term strategy and then how it impacts our medium to long-term views, both in terms of compounding revenue as well as profitability. Just so you know, as the marketplace has come back, here's one easy stat for you. We added 20 million new riders just in Q4 in our Mobility business. If you think about the network effect and our ability to operate across our 10,000 cities in our leadership positions, you can think about that leverage that we have globally that nobody else has.
As the world's coming back, I think that, you know, we'll spend a lot of time tomorrow, and Mac will spend a lot of time tomorrow talking about how we're gonna continue to grow at scale and a lot of the untapped areas that we're driving.
Dara, thanks.
Great. Next question?
Sure.
Your next question comes from the line of Ross Sandler with Barclays. Your line is open.
Hey, guys. I wanted to talk about the new ads upgrade. You're running well ahead of plan with the $225 million annual run. Just your overall outlook on advertising, how big that could be, and maybe how Drizly coming into the fold might have jump-started or accelerated-
Hey, Ross. You're coming through very muffled. If you don't mind repeating the question, we'll try and get you a response.
Just give an overview on the ads business and how Drizly might be helping accelerate that plan. Thanks.
Hey, Ross. The ad business we talked about hitting a $225 million run rate in Q4, well above our targets. The momentum in the business is great. Keep in mind that is the vast majority of that is Delivery, and we are building out ad products that run across Mobility and Delivery and grocery. Drizly is going to be a part of our ad operations. For example, Drizly advertising as a percentage of gross bookings is about 8%, which is pretty significant. That's not in the numbers that we read you out on because Drizly's been, you know, part of our numbers partial in Q4. With the mix of higher grocery, higher alcohol, you should expect that to be essentially upside in terms of our advertising revenue and the growth ahead. Next question.
Your next question comes from the line of Lloyd Walmsley with UBS. Your line is open.
Thanks, Dara.
Hi, Lloyd.
Two on the driver side. Hey, guys. I guess the first one, you know, following up on Justin's question, you know, do you feel like you're largely done having to invest in driver supply? I guess as more drivers come back into the marketplace and pricing comes down, do you see any of them kind of turning back off? Like, is there more sensitivity from drivers to maintaining that higher prices, or is it mostly just you stimulate to get them back on, and then they stay on? The second one is, you know, it sounds like a big effort on improving the driver onboarding flow to get them on the road faster.
I guess beyond that beginning period where maybe a driver can only drive for delivery, are you seeing a big uptick in the percent of drivers that drive for both Delivery and Mobility on an ongoing basis that can help drive that efficiency or sustain that efficiency?
Yeah, absolutely. We watch driver retention trends very closely. Obviously in January, with the Omicron wave, we wanted to make sure as demand came down, we were watching the number of drivers on the platform, the number of suppliers, et c. What we've seen are pretty encouraging signs that drivers have stayed on the platform. In general, I would tell you that demand in the platform, both in terms of Mobility and Delivery, is a fast-twitch muscle. It moves much faster than supply, earner supply on a platform, it's a slow-twitch muscle. It'll respond, but it'll respond more slowly than demand, so to speak.
Now that we're seeing the Omicron bounce back, we're pretty confident that our supply situation is, you know, looking good right now, and it's going to look good for the balance of the year, but it's always something that we're watching. Generally, retention rates are quite good. We are actively looking to sign up drivers, a higher percentage of drivers, to work across platform. Whereas our algorithms previously were, I'd say, more highly tuned towards, you know, Mobility only or Delivery only, our algorithms are now being tuned to the Uber marketplace, and so are cross-dispatching in a much more fluid, elegant way, and that's only going to improve.
These are, I would say, relatively early iterations, and you should expect to see more cross-platform activity, both on the consumer side, but also on the earner side. Again, we'll have a lot more to say about that tomorrow at Investor Day.
All right. Thank you.
You're welcome. Next question.
Your next question comes from the line of Brad Erickson with RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Hi there. Nelson, I think you mentioned that you expect now over 5% of marginal delivery bookings to drop to EBITDA, so it sounds like there's maybe a bit of a discretionary component there. I guess I was just wondering sort of what the philosophy is to allow that upside or any potential upside to flow through, or will it be reinvested, and I guess, if so, how?
Again, I think as Dara mentioned earlier, the 5% is incremental margins as we continue to grow the business. We're not optimizing for that number. We're optimizing to grow our gross bookings and to grow our bottom line, our adjusted EBITDA, and that is really just an output. Obviously one we watch, and that you guys spend a lot of time watching it. I'm really just trying to give some direction. We'll address a little bit more of the mid to the medium term kind of modeling, if you will, tomorrow. But again, we do expect that we will, the incremental margin will be around 5% for our Delivery business.
And we do think that the 5% represents a balanced viewpoint.
It allows us to reinvest where we see growth ahead of us. It allows us to be quite competitive. Again, we have the platform advantage versus our competition, which is just a structural advantage, that we have. It's also responsible to our shareholders because ultimately we wanna be a growth business, but we wanna be a profitable growth business, and we wanna be improving margins going forward. Next question.
Thanks.
Your next question comes from the line of Deepak Mathivanan with Wolfe Research. Your line is open.
Great. Thanks for taking the questions. Two quick ones. First, following up on the driver incentives and incremental margins, you noted that you expect incremental margins on the rides business to be, like, 10% for 2022. How should we generally think about the sensitivity of driver incentives through the year to that? You know, is that something that you can achieve even if mobility comes back in elevated strength globally and then maybe driver shortages kind of, you know, are more widespread geographically? Sort of second question on the Eats side. It seems like MAPCs, frequency, basket size were all stable quarter to quarter. Can you talk about whether there were any geographical discrepancies, maybe, you know, in some countries where we've been reopened for a while, you know, compared to other markets? Thank you so much.
First of all, in terms of your question on the driver supply, that is an annual number, and there may be some quarter-to-quarter fluctuations 'cause you're right. If COVID has actually shown us anything, you know, we expect the unexpected. We are highly confident we'll be able to manage that on an annual basis. There may be a quarter here or there. In terms of your question about our ability to do it, yes, we optimize our marketplace every single day across our 10,000 markets. You know, as you can tell from what we achieved in Q4, we've gotten pretty good at it, particularly as the Mobility business has come back post-pandemic. We feel pretty good about where we sit today.
Again, we're highly confident if you look at the past couple of quarters in terms of our ability to generate the 10% incremental margin on the Mobility side. I'd say on the MAPC side, we pretty much saw strength across the board. I mean, if there were any call-outs, U.S. mobility MAPCs on a year-over-year basis because the U.S. had closed down on a comparable basis more than other geos was super strong. Even on a quarter-over-quarter basis, audience in Q4 for our Mobility business grew versus Q3. It's been actually remarkably consistent, and the growth that you see in both Mobility and Delivery has been global.
There are lots of ups and downs, but the really great thing that we're seeing now is that the diversification within our portfolio of Mobility and Delivery and then the geographic diversification allows us, when something's weak, we can, you know, lean in to help things out. When one geo is particularly strong, we can take some of that strength and reinvest it in other areas. The diversification of our portfolio is really coming into play. We kind of saw it in January. I mean, no one wants to go through another COVID wave or the Omicron wave. The business was pretty darn resilient in January, which is why Q1, you can see our guidance, it's stronger than Q4. That speaks to the portfolio approach really coming to the fore.
Deepak, did we answer all of your questions?
Yeah.
I think there was.
Sorry, I know that was a lot. Thank you so much.
Thank you.
You're very welcome. Next question.
Your next question comes from James Lee with the Mizuho Group. Your line is open.
Great. Thanks for taking my questions. Just wanna get some regulatory update here. I think in the U.K., I think your license is up for renewal this quarter. Maybe how should we think about financial implications on the reclassification to worker class and also moving to merchant model? Also in the U.S. update from the California appeal and the development in key states like New York and Massachusetts? Thank you.
Yeah, absolutely. I think on the U.K. license, we're in constructive dialogue with TfL. I'd say our relationship with the City of London is better than it's ever been. About 10% of our kilometers now in London are EV, are clean, and we're looking to drive that up very actively in partnership with the city. You know, that relationship has really changed, and we're very hopeful that we get the license renewal, but we never take anything for granted. We'll see, although, you know, we're pretty confident of our position. You know, the worker reclassification that we underwent in the U.K. was the right thing to do. There isn't a level playing field yet. We believe there should be a level playing field.
We're paying for it financially now because our earners in the U.K., workers, are getting lots of benefits that our competition essentially doesn't have to pay. You know, sometimes the right thing to do is expensive, and in this case, in the U.K., it's expensive. We think with time, there will be a level playing field. There's no question about it. The only question is, you know, when it happens. I think like long term, short term, being a good citizen, being a good company on the ground sometimes hurts financially. Long term, you get gains. You know, we want to be in the U.K., we wanna be in London for the next 10, 15, 20 years, and that means doing the right thing, and I think we are in the U.K. It'll resolve itself.
I can't tell you when. I think as far as California goes, you know, it's running through the process. We're very confident of our position, but I don't really have anything to share one way or the other.
Thank you for the question. Next question.
Your next question comes from the line of Jason Helfstein with Oppenheimer. Your line is open.
Thanks. I'm just gonna ask one. Just when you think about Uber Pass and specifically restaurants and delivery, are there any deficits in capabilities or coverage in major markets versus your largest competitors and kind of how you think about that? Thank you.
Yeah, Jason, it's Uber One now. You know, we still have to rebrand it. As far as coverage goes, our selection in urban markets I think is excellent, and is on par or better than our competition, although it can always get better. I think it's the selection in suburbs. Our CP in suburbs still trails DoorDash. We are seeing our selection improve. We have reorganized our sales team to be much more local, to be on the ground, to understand what that neighborhood restaurant is. I'd say, you know, there may be a few exceptions, but the vast majority of restaurant partners want to work with more than one partner, and we are, you know, the second player, but by far the biggest second player in the U.S.
We have a great sales team now, and our systems are much, much better in partnering up with those restaurants. In the suburbs today, we do have certain gaps, and we're gonna work really, really hard to make up for those gaps, certainly by the end of 2022.
Next question.
Your next question comes from the line of Edward Yruma with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Your line is open.
Hey, thanks for taking the question. Seems like a lot of private capital is pushing into ultra-fast delivery. I know you're even partnering with Gopuff, private in the space. I guess kind of how you view the space right now, and what do you do partnership versus what do you do on your own? Thank you.
Well, as you know, we are right now primarily doing partnerships. We have a wonderful partnership with Carrefour in France as well, and we have a partnership with Gopuff here in the U.S. We are doing a little bit of testing on our own, mainly 'cause there's a couple places in Taiwan and Japan where we're doing some testing. We wanna understand the whole value prop and the different parts of the value chain. I guess our view is we definitely wanna care about making sure that we have a good product delivered to our consumers. There is a lot of private capital at it. I do think over time that there'll be some normalization between the private and the public markets, if you will.
What I would say is you'll hear tomorrow, we are going after this new vertical space. We're doing it with primarily a partnership approach. I think we are leveraging both our capabilities and trying to maintain more of an asset-light model, which I think will be beneficial.
I think the only thing to add to Nelson's commentary is that, you know, we have an enormous global footprint, which is unique among a lot of other players out there. We're in 32 delivery markets, and every single market has different regulatory issues. You know, every single city is different. The partner approach allows us to essentially penetrate into the many, many geographies and the many, many cities in which we operate faster in a capital light way. Our goal is with quick commerce to get quick commerce to as many eaters in the world as possible, as quickly as possible. We think we can move faster because we have partners who are on the ground. They understand cities, the cities in which they operate in. They have a long history.
Ultimately, we think the partner led approach is a better approach. We'll see if that turns out to be true or not, but we're pretty confident in the early signals that we're seeing. Next question.
Operator, we'll take one last question.
Your final question comes from the line of John Blackledge with Cowen. Your line is open.
Great. Two questions. First, what were other Delivery verticals outside of Eats, as a percent of Delivery gross bookings in the fourth quarter? Second, with the Car Next Door acquisition, could you discuss kind of the rationale, and do you expect to enter additional markets with that type of offering? Thank you.
Yeah, absolutely. I'll start the second one first. As far as Car Next Door goes, you know, you'll hear more about this in Investor Day tomorrow. We want Uber Rides to be a complete mobility solution. That means essentially being there for you on any occasion where you need a car to ultimately replace, you know, first your second car, but ultimately car ownership. Car Next Door allows us to have relevancy for those situations where you need a car for over a weekend, etc . We have partnerships with Avis, Hertz, et c. You know, part of the magic of Uber is P2P, is managing a supply and demand kind of two-sided marketplace. Car Next Door is a two-sided rental marketplace. Great business in Australia.
Australia is a spectacular market for us in both Mobility and Delivery. It's coming into a market with a lot of strength. Yes, our ambition is absolutely to go global. We have audience here. Like, this is the playbook that we run. With new verticals, we're going global. With Eats, we went global. I think with peer-to-peer car rentals, yeah, we'll go global. We'll make sure we do it in the right way. Nelson, you want to talk about new verticals as a percentage of GBs?
Yeah, right in the fourth quarter, new verticals approached about a $4 billion run rate. If you think about it, in Q4, we were at $54 billion run rate for the total delivery marketplace. You know, it's pretty simple math.
I think one of the cool other metrics other than GBs that we measure is what percentage of our monthly active platform customers are ordering from new verticals. In Q4, about 12% of our monthly actives had a new vertical order in kind of our focus markets because we're not yet, you know, deep in every single market out there. That's another metric that we closely track. As that MAPC number goes up, gross bookings will go up as well. All right. That's it, everyone. Thank you very much for joining us on the call. And just shout out to the Uber team. It's been a long year. I think the team really turned it around in the second half.
We delivered a great Q4, and I'm more confident than ever in our prospects for 2022 because of the work that the team has done. Thanks, everyone.
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for your participation. This concludes today's conference call. You may now disconnect.