Why people leave BlaBlaCar
- Service fees on every booking. The total at checkout includes a per-seat platform fee that has crept up over the years and pushes the saved-vs-train calculus closer for some routes.
- Route availability outside Europe. BlaBlaCar’s carpooling marketplace is densest in France, Germany, Spain, Italy, and Poland. Cross-border European routes work well; trips elsewhere often have very few drivers listed.
- Driver cancellations. Last-minute pull-outs happen regularly enough that it is the main complaint thread on Reddit and Trustpilot. The platform’s response involves rebooking with no real compensation beyond the refunded fare.
- BlaBlaCar Bus integration. The app now bundles its bus product with carpooling, which complicates search results when you only want drivers.
- Cash app feel. The chat experience and the absence of in-app calls until shortly before departure leave room for last-minute confusion.
If any of that pushes you to compare, here are 7 BlaBlaCar alternatives worth installing.
Which app should you choose?
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FlixBus if you want a low-cost intercity bus instead of carpooling. Coverage across Europe, the US, Canada, Mexico, and parts of South America.
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Karos if you commute daily and want a carpool with similar passengers each week. Daily-commute focused with employer partnerships.
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Mobicoop if you want carpooling with no platform fee. Cooperative model that returns the saved fee to drivers and passengers.
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Busbud if you want a single search across multiple bus operators. Aggregator with 2 million plus routes globally.
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Uber if you need a guaranteed ride within minutes. Ride-hail rather than carpool, but the reliability changes the equation.
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Bolt if you want Uber-style ride-hail with lower commission. European challenger with car, scooter, and food delivery.
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Lyft if you are travelling within the US or Canada. The North American Uber alternative with shared-ride options.
Stay on BlaBlaCar if you specifically want a long intercity carpool with conversation, lower price than rail, and a verified driver. The community model and rating depth still make BlaBlaCar the best long-distance carpool app in continental Europe.
Comparison table
| App | Best for | Coverage | Fees | Mode | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FlixBus | Cheap intercity bus | Europe, US, MX, CA, BR | Ticket price | Bus | 4.6 |
| Karos | Daily commute | France | Free with employer; otherwise yes | Carpool | 4.5 |
| Mobicoop | No platform fee | France, Belgium, Switzerland | None | Carpool | 4.4 |
| Busbud | Global bus search | Worldwide | Booking fee | Bus aggregator | 4.5 |
| Uber | Reliable ride-hail | Global | Per-trip fare | Ride-hail | 4.4 |
| Bolt | Lower-fee ride-hail | Europe, Africa, parts Americas | Per-trip fare | Ride-hail | 4.7 |
| Lyft | US and Canada | US + CA | Per-trip fare | Ride-hail | 4.7 |
1. FlixBus — low-cost intercity bus
FlixBus is the closest alternative to BlaBlaCar for the same trip-planning use case at a comparable or lower price. The network covers Europe, the US, Canada, Mexico, parts of South America, and India, with most routes operating multiple times a day. The bus is more predictable than a carpool: confirmed seats, scheduled departures, and a fixed price.
The trade-off is the social side. BlaBlaCar’s pitch was always sharing the car with someone going the same way; FlixBus is a fleet operator. For solo travelers who value reliability over conversation, the swap is straightforward.
Advantages:
- Lower or comparable price to BlaBlaCar
- Fixed schedule with confirmed seats
- 30+ countries
- Wi-Fi and power outlets on most routes
Disadvantages:
- Less social than carpooling
- Buses can be delayed in cross-border routes
- Refund flow slower than ride-hail apps
Pricing: Free app, ticket prices set by route.
2. Karos — daily commute carpooling
Karos focuses on the same trip every weekday with the same crowd, rather than long intercity rides. The matching engine learns your commute pattern and suggests carpools that line up with your schedule. The platform partners with employers and territories across France: if your company is on the network, rides are free for both driver and passenger.
For BlaBlaCar users who actually use the platform for repeat commutes rather than weekend long-distance trips, Karos is the more accurate tool. For long-distance, BlaBlaCar’s marketplace remains deeper.
Advantages:
- Daily-commute matching
- Free if your employer is a partner
- Strong France coverage
- 700,000 plus carpoolers in Europe
Disadvantages:
- France-leaning coverage
- Long-distance trips not the focus
- Some features tied to employer partnerships
Pricing: Free for partner companies; standard fees otherwise.
3. Mobicoop — no platform fee
Mobicoop is structured as a cooperative rather than a for-profit platform. The headline advantage is no platform fee on rides: drivers and passengers settle the fuel-share directly. Coverage is densest in France, with growing presence in Belgium and Switzerland.
For BlaBlaCar users whose primary frustration is the cumulative fee on long-distance trips, Mobicoop is the most direct replacement. The trade-off is marketplace size: fewer drivers listed on a given route mean less flexibility on departure time.
Advantages:
- No platform fee
- Cooperative model
- Active driver community in France
- 4.4 rating
Disadvantages:
- Smaller marketplace than BlaBlaCar
- France-leaning coverage
- Fewer cross-border routes
Pricing: Free, with no platform fee on rides.
4. Busbud — global bus aggregator
Busbud aggregates bus routes from multiple operators across more than 80 countries: Greyhound and Megabus in North America, FlixBus across Europe, ETN in Mexico, and many more. For travelers who want to compare bus operators on the same route in one app, Busbud removes the need to install five different operator apps.
The trade-off is the booking fee, which Busbud adds on top of the operator price. For routes where only one operator runs, going direct can save the fee.
Advantages:
- 2 million plus routes worldwide
- 80 plus countries
- Aggregates across operators
- 4.5 user rating
Disadvantages:
- Booking fee on top of operator price
- Customer support routed through operators
- Some smaller operators not listed
Pricing: Free app, plus operator fares and booking fees.
5. Uber — guaranteed ride within minutes
Uber is not a carpooling platform, but it solves the same trip-planning problem with a different trade-off. Where BlaBlaCar matches you with someone already going your way, Uber dispatches a driver specifically for you. The result is much higher reliability and shorter wait times, at the cost of a higher fare.
For shorter intercity hops where BlaBlaCar’s marketplace is thin (e.g. small towns at non-rush hours), Uber is often the only practical option. UberX Share, where available, recreates a carpool-like shared ride at a lower fare.
Advantages:
- Reliable ride within minutes in most cities
- Available in most major countries
- UberX Share for shared rides
- In-app payment, ratings, and chat
Disadvantages:
- Per-trip fare higher than carpooling
- Surge pricing during peak demand
- Driver tipping expected in many markets
Pricing: Free app, per-trip fare set by distance and demand.
6. Bolt — lower-fee ride-hail
Bolt is the European Uber challenger, with strong coverage across Estonia (where it was founded), the rest of the EU, the UK, parts of Africa, and selected Americas markets. The service charges a lower commission to drivers than Uber on equivalent routes, and rider fares are typically a few percent below Uber.
For European users who specifically dislike Uber’s commission practices, Bolt is the comparable replacement with comparable reliability in the cities where coverage is mature.
Advantages:
- Lower commission and rider fares than Uber in many markets
- Strong Europe + Africa coverage
- Bolt Food and Bolt Drive (carshare) bundled
- 4.7 user rating
Disadvantages:
- Coverage thinner outside Europe and Africa
- Customer support response varies
- Driver supply varies in smaller cities
Pricing: Free app, per-trip fare set by distance and demand.
7. Lyft — North American ride-hail
Lyft is the long-running US and Canada ride-hail alternative to Uber. The app handles standard rides, scheduled pickups, and shared rides where available. For travelers in North America, Lyft is the cleanest second option to install alongside Uber, since fares and supply differ between the two and shopping both before requesting saves money on most trips.
For European travelers, Lyft is not present. For BlaBlaCar’s actual cross-Europe carpool use case, Lyft is not a substitute.
Advantages:
- Strong US and Canada coverage
- Comparable reliability to Uber
- Lyft Pink subscription for frequent riders
- 4.7 user rating
Disadvantages:
- US and Canada only
- Per-trip fare higher than carpooling
- Surge pricing during peak demand
Pricing: Free app, per-trip fare set by distance and demand.