Lyft is Russiamaking a major move to go north of the border and finally expand its ride-hailing network outside the United States.
The company announced in a blog post it has tabbed Toronto, Canada, as its first international territory. Lyft also put out an open call for drivers to make up its fleet in the city, where it will open a Driver Hub office for outreach and recruiting events.
There isn't an exact date for Lyft cars to be out on Toronto's streets, but the company said operations should begin around the holiday season, and first-time users will be treated to their first trip gratis.
SEE ALSO: UberEats is going to let you order food from 'virtual restaurants' that don't exist IRLLyft's Toronto entry is no surprise. The company's U.S. operations have grown considerably throughout 2017, boosting its availability from 54 percent of the population to 95 percent this year alone.
As industry leader Uber has spent the year floundering through a seemingly endless series of controversies, Lyft moved aggressively to capitalize. Expansion outside of the US was only a matter of time — the move was even foreshadowed in a September report that claimed Toronto would be Lyft's first international target, with Australia and New Zealand as potential next steps.
The announcement comes shortly after Lyft's biggest round of fundraising yet, a billion dollar investment led by Google parent company Alphabet's CapitalG growth equity fund. Lyft now has an $11 billion valuation, a slew of partnerships with major automakers and tech companies to develop self-driving technologies, and, according to a leaked investor document Bloombergobtained, projected domestic growth of 61 percent to take over a third of the US ride-hailing market by the end of 2017.
Lyft waited patiently to become an international operation, and now, the time looks to be just right. The company still has a long way to go to catch up to Uber, both in terms of its scale of operations and valuation — but the next leg of that journey is in Toronto.
Representatives for Lyft didn't immediately respond to a request for more details.
Topics Uber lyft
Previous:A Typical Wall Street Republican
Next:Time to Unite
Marriage equality haters made a 'dataThe Pence vs. Kaine VP debate didn't get many viewersCould Vin Diesel be the next celebrity to hop on the esports train?Chocolate covered pretzel sticks just grew up with a dash of whiskeyNicholas Hoult to play Nikola Tesla in Benedict Cumberbatch movie 'The Current War'Twitter users enlighten Pence on the true meaning of #ThatMexicanThingHow wild card walkYouTubers come together to honor the legacy of Christina Grimmie at StreamysFor millions in the Southeast, Matthew will be their first hurricaneGoogle's Pixel and Pixel XL smartphones to go on preWhy Chrissy Teigen made her Twitter account privateFor millions in the Southeast, Matthew will be their first hurricaneProposal to force UK firms to list foreign workers causes controversyThe 3 potential paths that Hurricane Matthew will followXiaomi cashes in on India's festive season, sells over 500,000 smartphones in 3 daysWatch a fiery, closeCongrats Elon Musk, for following one woman on TwitterHow Florida could get slammed twice by Hurricane Matthew in one weekAmazon Prime members finally get some real book benefitsHow wild card walk 6 White Day gifts to make up for your botched Valentine's Day Best camping tent deals: Shop tent sales at Amazon Climbers capture intense footage of yet another rockfall at Yosemite Elmo visited Southeast Asia for the first time and met a particularly curious python Sorry Apple Maps! Google Maps may soon be your default app on iOS — for some San Juan mayor fires back at Trump official's claim about Puerto Rico Wordle today: The answer and hints for March 11 NYT's The Mini crossword answers for March 10 The 5 most inappropriate things Donald Trump said at a Puerto Rico disaster briefing Hurricane Maria is the one to worry about, out of 3 Atlantic storms Meta's new AI tools will get you shopping even more on Instagram How to watch Elon Musk's Mars speech on Friday HP Spectre x360 14 deal: New 2 Best MacBook Air deal: Get the 15 How to watch 'Invincible' Season 2, Part 2: streaming date, free trials, and more Butterflies picked up on National Weather Service radar in Denver Trump lashed out at San Juan's mayor after she begged for help in Puerto Rico Google fields thousands of deepfake porn complains as victims arm themselves with copyright law Watch Da'Vine Joy Randolph win Best Supporting Actress Oscar for 'The Holdovers' What do we lose when influencers replace journalists on the red carpet?