Grab users can travel to get free S$40 Deliveroo credits per week

Grab (formerly GrabTaxi) and premium food delivery app Deliveroo are in a new partnership, and Grab users who complete rides through GrabCar or Flash booking for the next three months can get Deliveroo credits. Read on to learn how.

Image credit: Grab.

Image credit: Grab.

From today to 7th August 2016, Grab users can earn free Deliveroo credits every week whenever they use the Grab app for their trips. According to Deliveroo and Grab, this collaboration seeks to spur the overall growth of Singapore’s on-demand services market and advancement of the Singapore startup ecosystem.

How do you earn Deliveroo credits via Grab?

To qualify for the partnership, a Grab user will need to complete five or more trips per week during the reward period stated above. Trips completed must be done using either GrabCar (Economy), or the Flash feature which simultaneously pings for both Grab drivers and taxi drivers to accept your booking.

Before you begin earning food delivery credits, you will need to register yourself for this offer here. You will also need the Grab app for accumulating said trips, and the Deliveroo app to spend your credits – both apps have iOS and Android OS versions available.

Trip counts are recorded from Monday 12:00 A.M. to Sunday 11.59 P.M., and the new week for accumulating Deliveroo credits restarts on every Monday at 12:00 A.M. The Deliveroo credits will come in every Tuesday, and the credits will expire within a week – on the following Monday at 11:59 P.M. You cannot accumulate credits across a few weeks, so plan your travel and meals wisely.

Grab has the reward tiers and the respective Deliveroo credit payouts below:

Source: Grab's webpage.

Source: Grab's webpage.

'

The payout caps itself at S$40 every week, so getting more than 15 Grab rides in the same week will not get your more Deliveroo credits until the counter restarts on Monday midnight.

This joint promotion is a partnership between taxi-hailing app Grab (formerly known as GrabTaxi) and premium food delivery app Deliveroo. Grab and Deliveroo Singapore managed to beat UberEats to the punch, as The New Paper reported that the Uber offshoot was allegedly approaching local restaurants to secure food delivery services for its upcoming Singapore launch.

Our articles may contain affiliate links. If you buy through these links, we may earn a small commission.

Share this article