---
title: "Philadelphia Should Not Single Out Rideshare Services for New Taxes"
summary: |-
  Philadelphia’s proposed $1 rideshare tax attempts to address school funding shortfalls. The city should reject narrowly targeted taxes on app-based services and instead pursue broader, more neutral revenue mechanisms such as property or income taxes.
date: "2026-05-11"
issues: ["Taxes and Budget", "Transportation", "State and Local"]
authors: ["Daniel Castro"]
content_type: "Blogs"
canonical_url: "https://itif.org/publications/2026/05/11/philadelphia-should-not-single-out-rideshare-services-for-new-taxes/"
---

# Philadelphia Should Not Single Out Rideshare Services for New Taxes

Philadelphia faces a legitimate challenge in funding its public schools, but the city’s [proposed $1 tax on rideshare trips](https://www.chalkbeat.org/philadelphia/2026/03/23/mayor-parker-increases-proposed-uber-lyft-rideshare-tax-for-philly-schools/) is a poorly targeted response.

Mayor Cherelle Parker’s proposal would impose a new fee on Uber and Lyft rides to help close a projected [school budget deficit](https://penncapital-star.com/education/paying-for-philadelphias-3-billion-school-closure-and-modernization-plan-could-be-a-problem/). City officials estimate the tax could raise roughly [$48 million annually](https://www.fox29.com/news/uber-calls-philly-riders-sound-off-1-rideshare-tax-city-council-meeting). The city’s need for additional education funding is understandable, particularly given the long-standing fiscal pressures facing Philadelphia’s public school system. However, imposing a targeted tax on one category of app-based transportation service creates broader problems in tax policy and economic fairness.

If Philadelphia needs additional revenue for core public services such as education, policymakers should rely on broad-based tax mechanisms rather than singling out one type of digital service. Taxes that apply narrowly to specific technologies or business models tend to distort markets and create inconsistent treatment across similar services.

Under the proposal, a person taking an Uber or Lyft would pay the tax, while someone using a traditional taxi or private car service would not. That distinction is difficult to justify because the services often serve comparable transportation needs. The proposal effectively imposes a selective tax on rideshare platforms because they operate through digital applications rather than through older transportation models.

The burden of the tax would also fall primarily on ordinary residents rather than affluent households. Wealthier individuals who rely on private transportation arrangements are unlikely to be affected in any meaningful way. By contrast, many residents use rideshare services as a practical transportation option for commuting, medical appointments, late-night travel, or trips in areas with limited transit access.

Data from the first quarter of this year shows that [three out of five ridesharing trips](https://medium.com/uber-under-the-hood/philadelphias-proposed-rideshare-tax-hurts-those-who-can-least-afford-it-ff54f12f113f) in Philadelphia either started or ended in a low-income Census tract. While trip-level data does not capture the income of every rider, it does suggest that rideshare services are deeply integrated into transportation access for many lower-income communities. Even relatively small per-trip taxes can become significant when applied repeatedly to routine travel.

Supporters of the proposal argue that the tax targets large technology companies rather than riders. In practice, however, transaction taxes on digital services are typically passed through to users. As a result, the practical effect of the policy is likely to be increased transportation costs for Philadelphia residents.

Philadelphia riders also already pay an existing rideshare fee under Pennsylvania law. The current [1.4 percent assessment](https://www.uber.com/us/en/blog/philadelphia-rider-information/) has been in place for more than a decade, and [two-thirds of the revenue](https://www.uber.com/us/en/blog/philadelphia-rider-information/) generated in Philadelphia already goes to the city’s schools. Last year, rideshare-related taxes generated approximately [$6.3 million for the school district](https://controller.phila.gov/half-of-school-district-of-philadelphias-4-6-billion-budget-relies-on-16-types-of-local-taxes-fees-contributions/), more than double the roughly $2.8 million contributed by local sports stadiums.

The comparison is particularly notable because Philadelphia’s sports stadiums continue to benefit from [substantial tax advantages](https://www.inquirer.com/politics/philadelphia/sixers-arena-property-taxes-pilot-20240520.html), including exemptions from traditional property taxes that fund schools. City officials have also continued approving additional tax preferences tied to [new stadium development proposals](https://www.chalkbeat.org/philadelphia/2024/11/22/76ers-arena-clears-first-hurdle-with-school-board-vote/). If policymakers believe additional school funding is necessary, there are stronger arguments for revisiting broader tax preferences and revenue structures than for imposing new targeted taxes on app-based transportation services.

The proposal also reflects a broader trend in which governments increasingly view app-based services as convenient targets for narrow revenue measures. Traditionally, governments have relied on selective excise taxes primarily for products associated with public health or social harms, such as [cigarettes, alcohol, or gambling](https://controller.phila.gov/half-of-school-district-of-philadelphias-4-6-billion-budget-relies-on-16-types-of-local-taxes-fees-contributions/). Ridesharing does not fit into that category. Digital platforms are highly visible and relatively easy to tax, but that convenience should not substitute for sound tax policy. Narrow taxes on individual technologies fragment the tax base and risk discouraging innovation while doing little to address underlying structural budget challenges.

Public education is a core government responsibility, and school funding should rest on stable and broadly shared revenue sources. That does not mean every alternative tax proposal would necessarily be preferable. Tax policy involves difficult tradeoffs, and Philadelphia officials face legitimate fiscal constraints. Nevertheless, broad-based mechanisms such as property or income taxes are generally more coherent and economically neutral than imposing targeted levies on a single category of technology-enabled service.

The proposal also risks creating incentives that favor certain business models over others. Cities should encourage transportation services that improve mobility and expand access for residents. Selectively taxing app-based transportation services because they are successful or digitally mediated moves policy in the opposite direction.

Philadelphia’s school funding needs are real, but sustainable public finance requires durable and neutral tax policy. A targeted rideshare tax may generate some short-term revenue at the expense of affordable transportation for many households, but it does not provide a particularly fair, efficient, or sustainable foundation for funding public education.

---
*Source: Information Technology & Innovation Foundation (ITIF)*
*URL: https://itif.org/publications/2026/05/11/philadelphia-should-not-single-out-rideshare-services-for-new-taxes/*