Short distances stay the default
OmNom uses compact delivery coverage so drivers are not signing up for sprawling cross-town orders. Shorter delivery loops should make a flat payout workable and predictable.
Built for short-haul food delivery
OmNom is building a driver network around quick restaurant runs, practical five-mile coverage, and fewer drivers fighting over the same order stream. When a zone opens near your address, you will get a first-come activation email.
The goal is fewer wasted miles, fewer drivers stacked on top of each other, and cleaner expectations on every offer.
OmNom uses compact delivery coverage so drivers are not signing up for sprawling cross-town orders. Shorter delivery loops should make a flat payout workable and predictable.
Zone limits matter. OmNom can cap active and backup driver participation so you are not joining an unlimited pool where too many drivers are chasing the same volume.
Every completed OmNom delivery pays the same flat amount. The system is meant to make bad-offer roulette less common because the route length and pay band should already be constrained.
OmNom drivers are free to reject an offer. If you do, you can be pushed out of the current active spot so a backup driver can step in. Because the system is built around short distances and a flat $10 payout, the goal is to make declines less necessary in the first place.
You are not forced to take every order. OmNom does not assume acceptance.
If you decline, OmNom can rotate another available driver into the active pool.
You are not an employee of OmNom and must carry your own insurance.
Completed deliveries pay a flat $10 from OmNom. Insurance, taxes, and contractor obligations are your responsibility.
Most signups will stay pending until a zone is active in that area. Once OmNom enables a matching zone, the first applicants to claim their email link get the first available spots.