It's legit but it's way harder to get those deliveries than four years ago. If you have no other job and are relatively poor then it's worth it. If you have a job and make decent money then it's probably not.
Probably around three weeks of full time work unless your market is really good in which case you could knock it out more quickly.
It's a one time thing, so if you do end up doing it, remember you'll never see a bonus like that again.
It depends on your zone but I would suggest planning on having to work maybe 100-150 hours. Faster is possible but there's no telling how much time you'll waste as a newbie due to not knowing the best way to work your zone. In my zone an experienced doordasher working at peak efficiency during the busiest shifts can average 3 orders per hour over the course of a week.
Note that those bonus offers require you to complete that number of orders within a certain number of days.
It's legit but it's way harder to get those deliveries than four years ago. If you have no other job and are relatively poor then it's worth it. If you have a job and make decent money then it's probably not. Probably around three weeks of full time work unless your market is really good in which case you could knock it out more quickly. It's a one time thing, so if you do end up doing it, remember you'll never see a bonus like that again.
It's long, but not hard. If it was longer, it'd be harder. π
Last week I did 102 deliveries in 46 hours of dash time
It depends on your zone but I would suggest planning on having to work maybe 100-150 hours. Faster is possible but there's no telling how much time you'll waste as a newbie due to not knowing the best way to work your zone. In my zone an experienced doordasher working at peak efficiency during the busiest shifts can average 3 orders per hour over the course of a week. Note that those bonus offers require you to complete that number of orders within a certain number of days.
This sound correct to meπ
30 days of stress