Gig work in Nigeria rarely comes with health insurance, so inDrive is trying to bolt one on. The ride-hailing company has partnered with Nigerian healthtech startup Heala to let its top-tier Platinum drivers buy health plans directly inside the inDrive app, starting from about ₦1,300 ($1) a month.
On paper, it is a tidy fix for a real problem. Drivers are treated as independent contractors, so they spend long hours in traffic with no employer benefits and little time to queue at hospitals, meaning access often gets delayed until things are serious. With this integration, eligible drivers can talk to licenced doctors via chat, voice, or video, get prescriptions, pick up drugs at partner pharmacies, and arrange tests or specialist visits; annual plans come with in-person hospital visits baked in, and dependents can be added so spouses and children are covered too.
The move fits a broader pattern. Bolt has worked with platforms like Flance to get drivers discounted care, and Chowdeck recently rolled out accident insurance for over 20,000 riders through MyCoverGenius. Everyone is converging on the same insight: if your business runs on fleets of informal workers, you cannot ignore their health and income shocks forever.Â
The open question is whether a ₦1,300 ($1) entry plan meaningfully shifts outcomes for drivers at scale, or whether this ends up as a niche perk for the most active cohort while the bulk of gig workers remain one medical emergency away from dropping out of the platform entirely.
