The picture of a delivery driver sitting outside a restaurant on a Tuesday night, watching the minutes pass while a kitchen somewhere finishes plating an order he won’t be paid to wait for, has a certain irony to it. For years, gig work has been a quiet, unglamorous reality: work that appears flexible on paper but frequently feels like a trap in practice. In Australia, something changed in November of last year, and it’s the kind of change that usually goes unnoticed until it abruptly stops.
In a joint application to Australia’s Fair Work Commission, Uber Eats, DoorDash, and the Transport Workers’ Union proposed what is being called a world first: a minimum “safety net” pay rate of A$31.30 per hour for food delivery drivers. For many workers who are currently barely making ends meet on informal wages, it is a 25% pay increase.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Companies Involved | Uber Eats, DoorDash |
| Union Partner | Transport Workers’ Union (TWU), Australia |
| Regulatory Body | Fair Work Commission (FWC), Australia |
| Proposed Minimum Wage | A$31.30 per hour (safety net rate) |
| Wage Effective Date | 1 July 2026 (slight increase from 1 January 2027) |
| Coverage | All delivery modes — bicycle, e-bike, motorbike, car |
| Key Protections | Accident insurance, dispute resolution, representation rights |
| Gig Workers Killed Since 2017 | At least 23 (TWU data) |
| Government Context | Albanese government workplace reforms enabling gig worker standards |
| Industry Description | “World first” minimum pay agreement for on-demand delivery workers |
| Reference Website | Fair Work Commission — Australia |
The agreement would go into effect in July 2026, subject to Commission approval. It will be more than just a significant achievement for Australia if that timeline comes to pass. It might be the break in the dam that other nations have been anticipating.
For six years, Eric Ireland, a driver from Melbourne, has been delivering food on various platforms. He calculated that, before gas, he was making about A$22 per hour, sometimes more if he pursued what the platforms refer to as a “quest,” working ten jobs over the course of a weekend. The cost of living continued to rise, and the math never quite added up.
He claimed that the benefit of the new arrangement is more difficult to measure than an hourly wage: the assurance that he will be compensated while working, including for the time he spends waiting for orders to be prepared. That’s a big deal. It really isn’t for anyone who has walked around a restaurant for an hour on a chilly night.
The agreement didn’t just happen. Following years of negotiations influenced by the Albanese government’s more extensive workplace reforms, the Fair Work Commission was granted the power to establish minimum standards for gig workers by designating them as “employee-like.” That framing is more important than it may appear.
It’s a cautious legal compromise that establishes enough of a legal basis to make wage standards enforceable, without going so far as to refer to drivers as full employees, which would result in an entirely different set of obligations. That wording was approved by the union. They might have had to. Accepting something flawed is frequently necessary to achieve something meaningful.
It’s difficult to ignore how long this took as you watch it happen. According to the TWU, 23 gig workers have passed away in Australia since 2017; however, the actual figure may be higher because some deaths were never formally reported as workplace incidents. These individuals were riding motorcycles and bikes through traffic, frequently at night, and frequently under pressure from performance metrics that they couldn’t afford to disregard.
Insurance was ambiguous. Accountability was less clear. Even though the phrase “reasonable minimum level of cover” leaves plenty of room for future debate, the new agreement introduces personal accident insurance that the platforms must arrange and finance—a tangible shift in responsibility.
The practical implications of this were measured by Professor Alex Veen of the University of Sydney’s business school. Penalty rates for working late at night and idle time between jobs during slow periods are not included in the safety net rate.
That is a significant restriction. That floor will not cover employees who are using their apps at 2 p.m. on a Monday while they wait for an order that might or might not arrive. That gap is the kind of detail that tends to become more noticeable over time, but it’s still unclear if it will be reviewed as the larger gig worker standards change.
The more pressing concern for consumers is whether takeout will be more expensive. It most likely will, at least somewhat. Veen believes that the platforms will pass on the majority of the increased operating costs, but they haven’t stated how they intend to absorb them.
According to Michael Rawling, an associate professor at the University of Technology Sydney, Australian consumers are willing to tolerate a slight price increase provided they are aware of the benefits.
That’s an optimistic, but not unreasonable, read; it seems that the cultural discourse surrounding gig work has developed to the point where people aren’t totally shocked to discover that their $4 delivery fee wasn’t making much of an impact.
Professor Andrew Stewart of Queensland University of Technology was cautious not to declare the deal final because the Fair Work Commission still needs to approve it. Food delivery drivers are already employees, not just “employee-like,” according to a convincing legal argument. If the FWC rules in this manner, the entire agreement could turn into a protracted legal battle. Although it doesn’t seem as likely as approval, it is still a possibility.
The implications of this agreement that go beyond its specific provisions are more difficult to ignore. Australia recently forced two of the biggest gig marketplaces in the world to meet, engage in serious negotiations, and sign a document giving workers a voice. There is a precedent for that. Similar rules for package delivery drivers are already being considered by the commission; ride-sharing employees will probably follow.
Platform companies spent years claiming that it was impossible for flexibility and fair wages to coexist, and this is exactly how the cracks are spreading. As it happens, they aren’t. They never really were.

