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Should you earn by time or earn per order? Advice for Dashers

By Doug H, Updated August 6, 2025 30 Comments

DoorDash has two earnings options: Earn by Time and Earn per Order.

  • Earn by Time pays a guaranteed hourly rate while you’re actively on delivery
  • Earn per Order pays you for each completed delivery. This is the original earnings system on DoorDash

Which option is better? That depends on whether you value reliability or flexibility. Earn by Time is more reliable—You’ll always know how much you’ll earn for your time.

But Earn per Order is more flexible. You can skip deliveries that don’t meet your criteria (too far, low pay, at a slow restaurant) and target the highest-paying orders.

option in the doordash app to earn per order or earn by time

Which will you choose?

A guaranteed hourly rate might seem like a great deal if it’s more than what you typically make, but there is fine print to consider.

The hourly rate only counts toward your active time on a delivery. You won’t get paid when waiting for orders or after an order is complete.

And the other catch is that your dash will end if you decline too many orders. When you Earn per Order, you can decline as many orders as you want without losing your scheduled hours.

Which mode is best for you? Let’s take a look at how they work. And click here to see recent updates to the earnings modes!

What you need to know

  • Earn by Time: Earn a guaranteed hourly rate while actively on deliveries, plus tips. You have to accept nearly every delivery
  • Earn per Order: Get paid for each completed delivery. You can accept or decline any order, but your hourly pay isn’t guaranteed. You might earn much more—or much less—than the hourly guarantee
  • Earn by Time gives you more predictability and Earn per Offer gives you more flexibility

Here’s what an offer looks like when you Earn by Time:

“Earn at least $15.75/hr in DoorDash pay, from when you accept an order to when you drop it off. Customer tips are additional.”

Earn by Time: Guaranteed hourly pay while on a delivery

In some markets, Earn by time is an option you can choose before starting your dash. When you earn by time, you will get a guaranteed hourly rate for active time on delivery. Your earnings are based on the total active delivery time, from accepting to completing the order.

Here’s what an Earn by Time offer looks like: “Earn at least $15.75/hr in DoorDash pay, from when you accept an order to when you drop it off. Customer tips are additional.”

Dasher app screen with two options: earn per order, and earn by time

Choose Earn by Time and get the guaranteed minimum while on active delivery

If your hourly rate is $15 per hour and a delivery takes 30 minutes from start to finish, you will receive $7.50 from DoorDash. In addition, you keep 100% of any tips.

Only your ‘active’ time on delivery counts toward the hourly minimum. Active time starts when you accept an order and ends when you drop it off.

Restrictions: You can only decline one or two orders per hour

One restriction with Earn by Time is that you can only decline one or two orders per hour or your ‘Earn by Time’ dash will end. You can restart your dash, but only if Dash Now is available.

Another potential drawback is that you don’t get upfront earnings info when you earn by time. That means that you can’t filter out the lowest-paying orders.

How Peak Pay works while you Earn by Time

Peak Pay is a bonus that is added to every order during busy times. Peak Pay also applies to Earn by Time, but it works differently: Instead of a bonus added to every order, it’s a bonus that gets added to your hourly rate.

The Earn by Time Peak Pay bonus is twice the amount of the per-order Peak Pay bonus, added to your hourly guarantee. For example, if Peak Pay is $3 per order, the Earn by Time Peak Pay bonus would be an extra $6 per hour.

a doordash map showing peak pay pricing for an Earn by Time order

Peak Pay can apply to Earn by Time. The normal rate of $14.50 was increased to $24.50 during Peak Pay

Examples pay for Earn by Time deliveries

An earnings statement for a door dash earn by time order that show's a total payout of $5.33

2 orders, no tips. But the $5.33 base pay for 30 active minutes meets the $10/hour minimum

In the delivery above, a dasher was in Earn by Time mode for $10 per hour. They did a stacked order with 2 deliveries that took 31 minutes from acceptance until drop-off.

Base pay from DoorDash was $5.33 for 31 active minutes of delivery, which matches the $10/hour guarantee. Neither order had a tip.

Most dashers would agree that 30 minutes of delivering for only $5.33 is not great. By earning per order, you could wait for better orders and skip a low-paying, non-tipping order like this one.

a doordash order with a payout of $21. base pay from doordash is $9

$9.33 in base pay is higher than base pay on most Earn per Offer orders

The order above is a great Earn by Time order. The Dasher was on a $17/hour guarantee and did one order that took 31 minutes. Base pay from DoorDash was $9.33 and the customer tipped $12.

$21.33 in total pay for a 31 minutes is an excellent delivery. A $12 tip is higher than normal and the base pay of $9.33 is significantly higher than base pay on many Earn per Offer orders.

You may not be able to rely on a big tip for every order, but a high hourly guarantee can at least reassure you that you’ll be compensated fairly for your time.

an auto parts store order on doordash that says it is ineligible for tips

No possibility of a tip on this order and there was no way to know before it was accepted

Above is an example of a frustrating order that you are forced to accept if you want to continue doing Earn By Time mode.

It’s an order from an auto parts store that is ineligible for tips. You’re stuck with the base pay rate with no hope of a tip, and the order acceptance screen does not let you know that the order was ineligible for tips.

How DoorDash counts active hours while you Earn by Time

When you select Earn by Time, you will earn the hourly rate only on ‘active’ hours. Active hours begin when you accept an order and end when you drop it off. 

You don’t get paid after the order is complete, and you don’t get paid while you wait for the next order. That can also mean unpaid ‘deadhead’ miles back into your delivery zone.

Example: How active time is calculated 

Let’s say an Earn by Time offer is $15 per active hour. If a delivery takes 30 minutes from acceptance to drop-off, you will earn at least $7.50 in base pay.

But if you don’t get another order in the next 30 minutes, your pay will only be $7.50 (not including tips) because you were only actively on delivery for 30 minutes.

Can you ‘run up the meter’ and delay deliveries while you Earn by Time?

If you start getting paid as soon as you accept an order, can’t you increase your earnings and do less work by intentionally taking longer to finish deliveries?

It may sound like a clever way to beat the system, but DoorDash has policies to prevent you from delaying deliveries and running the clock.

Every order has estimated arrival times, and you will get a contract violation if you are excessively late to arrive at the restaurant or excessively late to arrive at the customer. Multiple contract violations can lead to deactivation.

Here’s an example of a dasher who was deactivated for purposely taking too much time on orders.

a deactivation email from doordash that says the dasher was deactivated for purposely delaying deliveries

You can get deactivated for purposely taking too much time to deliver

  • Deactivated by DoorDash? What you can do

Locked out of Earn by Time?

You may be unable to select Earn by Time mode if too many other Dashers choose the Earn by Time option.

When you are locked out of Earn by Time, a lock icon will be next to the option and a message that the mode isn’t currently available.

screen in the doordash app with two options: earn per offer or earn by time. Earn by time is locked

You can be locked out of Earn by Time if too many other Dashers choose the option

When you’re locked out of Earn by Time, your only choice is to Earn Per Offer. Earn by Time may become available again later in the day.

Updates and tweaks to Earn by Time

DoorDash is still in the process of launching and tweaking Earn by Time.

Base pay may be lowered for Earn per Offer mode

June 2023: In some markets, DoorDash announced that base pay for Earn per Offer was lowered to only $2, even for batched orders with multiple deliveries.

That means pay could be as low as $2 for a stacked order if customers don’t tip and if no promotions are active.

Earn by Time becomes a more attractive option when base pay is so low for individual orders.

email from doordash explaining that base pay is reduced to $2 for earn by offer

$2 base pay for Earn per Offer pushes dashers to choose Earn by Time

Earn Per Order

When you choose Earn Per Order mode—sometimes called Earn Per Offer in the app)—you are paid for each completed delivery and you have the flexibility to accept or reject any offer you get.

Order requests show an estimated payout amount that includes some or all of any tip that the customer left during checkout. With that information, you can be more selective about the orders that you accept.

You don’t see any upfront tip information in Earn by Time mode. And many Dashers say that no-tip orders are common when you are in Earn by Time mode.

The earnings formula that determines the payout for an Earn Per Offer order is: Base pay + promotions + Tips.

Base pay is a variable amount that typically ranges from $2 to $10, depending on factors like estimated time, distance, and local order volume.

Dashers who prefer Earn Per Offer like the flexibility and control it gives you over your deliveries.

You don’t have the freedom to accept or decline any order when you Earn by Time, where you can only reject 1–2 orders per hour if you want to keep your scheduled time slot.

The downside of Earn per Offer is that it’s possible to only get low-paying offers that pay less than the guaranteed hourly rate offered by Earn by Time mode.

Earn Per Order strategies

When you’re getting paid by the order, your goal is to select the highest-paying orders with the shortest distance. The best strategy is to reject orders with low pay, high miles, or orders from slow restaurants.

You can hunt for orders with high tips and high base pay by being selective about the orders you accept. The downside is that you might have long stretches of unpaid downtime if you reject too many offers.

Earn By Time: Lower tips, higher pay from DoorDash. Earn Per Order: Higher tips, lower pay from DoorDash

Below is a great example of a common experience with Earn By Time and Earn Per Offer. The Dasher did two 2-hour shifts, one in Earn By Time mode and one in Earn Per Offer mode.

For Earn By Time, they got most of their pay from DoorDash and almost no tips. For Earn Per Offer, they waited for orders with high tips, but didn’t get much base pay from DoorDash.

two earnings statement in doordash. one for earn by time, one for earn per offer

Expect lower tips when you earn by time. But overall pay between the two modes can be similar

In the end, this Dasher earned about the same on both shifts.

Below, this Dasher did 3 orders and got no tips at all. They still earned $22 because of the Earn By Time guarantee, but many Dashers would prefer to wait for orders with tips.

3 doordash orders in earn by time mode. none have any tips

Several no-tip orders is common when you earn by time

Which is better: Earn by Time or Earn per Order?

Ultimately, you will have to experiment to see if you prefer Earn by Time or Earn per Offer. Earn by Time is better for dashers who prefer more reliable earnings, and Earn by Offer is better for dashers who prefer the flexibility to reject orders and only target higher-paying offers.

Earn by Time is not the best option if you regularly earn more than the guaranteed hourly offer. But Earn by Time is worth it if the guaranteed hourly rate is as much or more than you usually get.

In small or medium-sized cities with unpredictable order volumes, Earn by Time can help ensure you don’t go home empty-handed for the day.

Ask yourself: Do you want the reliability of guaranteed minimum earnings, or do you want to take a chance on getting higher pay by waiting for orders with stronger tips?

With Earn by Time, it’s possible to do an hour of no-tip orders and only get the minimum hourly pay. You can earn more than the guaranteed minimum after adding tips, but you will be forced to take those no-tip orders.

You’re incentivized to wait longer when you Earn By Time

Another result of Earn by Time is that it incentivizes you to wait longer at restaurants because you are paid to wait.

When you Earn per Offer, wait time is unpaid and it’s better to skip offers from slow restaurants, or unassign an order if the wait time is longer than 5–10 minutes

Dashers react to Earn by Time vs Earn per Order

“I find it typically pays well, as you still get the tip on top”

“I can earn way more than the minimum with Earn per Order”

“Earn by Time orders DON’T tip!”

“If you sit in your car for 30 minutes before getting an order on Earn by Time, you’re not getting paid”

“This is to trick people who don’t pay attention to the fine print”

“The only way this would be worth it is if they paid you for the time in-between orders on top of drive time”

Source: Reddit

More reading

  • DoorDash requirements: How to get started
  • Is it worth it to be Top Dasher?
  • DashLink offers: High pay for long delivery routes
16 shares

Originally Published May 4, 2022
Filed Under: Delivery Apps, DoorDash

About Doug H

Gig economy driver, writer, and expert since 2013. I created Ridesharing Driver to help drivers navigate all of the challenges we face in the on-demand world! Read more about my story!

Comments

  1. Bogdan says

    December 15, 2022 at 2:37 pm

    Exactly……no 15% tip….no delivery

    Reply
  2. uche says

    December 15, 2022 at 5:23 am

    How does ratings work on this new system? Does this new system of pay per hour also affect your acceptance rating when you don’t reject/ignore requests or accept order(s)?

    Reply
    • Doug H says

      December 15, 2022 at 3:56 pm

      I’m not 100% sure because the support page at DoorDash doesn’t say. But I think that ratings are the same, so rejecting an order will lower your acceptance rating and accepting orders will raise it. Note that you’ll be kicked out of earn by time mode if you reject only 1 or 2 orders, so it’s not going to have much of a negative affect on your AR

      Reply
  3. Geoff says

    December 14, 2022 at 12:51 pm

    I could see that earn by time might be preferable during high traffic times. It’s not uncommon for me to not drive or stop driving during peak traffic times. If a normal order becomes a long order because of traffic, then it’s not worth the time. Earning by time may make that more worth it.

    Reply
  4. Cory R says

    December 13, 2022 at 8:25 pm

    Can Someone explain how the “Earn by time Works” I was under the impression it means I get the minimum of 10.25.(Ohio) per order.. for example I did an order. On the “Earn By Time” so 10.25 plus the tip of 6? Is 16.25? Is that not how it works? Is it a guarantee I will get a minimum of 2 orders per hour that equals out to the 10.25hr?

    Reply
    • Doug H says

      December 14, 2022 at 9:23 am

      Earn by time guarantees that you’ll earn at least the hourly minimum while you’re on an active delivery. And you keep 100% of tips. Tips don’t count toward the hourly minimum.

      An example: Let’s say your hourly minimum is $10.25. You get an order, and it takes a full 60 minutes from the time you accept the order until the time you drop it off—your ‘active’ time. Base pay from DoorDash was $5. Because your hourly minimum is $10.25, you would get get a supplement of $5.25 so that your earning meet the hourly minimum.

      It isn’t a guarantee that you’ll get $10.25 per order, or that you’ll get 2 orders that equal to $10.25. It’s a guarantee that while you’re actively on delivery, your earnings from DoorDash will meet the minimum.

      Reply
  5. Nathan Briley says

    December 13, 2022 at 8:33 am

    In my area min wage is 17 per hour. If you aren’t making at least 20 per hour then after expenses you aren’t even making minimum wage. Doordash keeps trying all these ways to try and make people work for less than minimum wage but they are avoiding the real problem. The real problem is that getting your food delivered to you is a luxury service and many people aren’t willing to adequately pay for the service. The cost of everything is going up and so should the cost of getting your food delivered. There should be a required minimum tip on every order. Problem solved.

    Reply
    • Cody says

      December 15, 2022 at 4:28 am

      Unfortunately it is more expensive but doordash claims all of that extra profit and leaves the dashers still delivering for pennies. They charge their fee for every order that somebody places but they don’t reciprocate even half of that fee back to the driver for the same order, then it’s up to how much you get tipped and people aren’t willing to tip much if at all because of how much more expensive it is just to order through doordash. Doordash is the real problem here, not being willing to treat their drivers better.

      Reply
  6. Vivian says

    September 25, 2022 at 10:03 am

    $10.00 a hr isn’t worth it in our area..We usually make more than this..They need to start making these college students pay a tip..

    Reply
  7. Donald says

    August 22, 2022 at 2:39 pm

    I just completed 6 hrs of pay by time. I had 20 offers, I accepted 18 of them. Made $82 total in that 6 hour period. 9 of the orders had no tip attached to it. Of the 9 that did tip, none tipped over $4. Only 2 tipped $3+. I has a double to the same house. Was paid like $.04 for the second order when I closed it. The 2 orders together barely broke $4 in total pay. This run period paid less than $15/hr. Now I avg 15 to 25 bucks an hour the traditional way, and I get it in almost half the amount of runs that I just made. The by the hour isn’t worth it, unless they have mandatory tips on those orders. With the by the hour, you are getting all the runs that are being turned down. Not worth it.

    Reply
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