✰PREMIUMSpotlight: How are yellow taxis doing in 2025?
After a decade of turbulence and hardship for yellow taxi drivers, the page seems to have turned on the worst of the medallion crisis and ride-share surge. The pandemic is over, and ride-hailing numbers are inching back toward their previous highs.
But a new era brings new challenges. In the coming years, cabbies will have to confront a long-unstable insurance system that threatens to collapse and shoulder the financial strain of new accessibility requirements and electric vehicle demand — all while facing an uncertain future in which driverless cars may dominate the streets.
Once again, in 2025, the resiliency of one of
Insurance
All taxi drivers in the city are required to have insurance. By far the largest provider is the
ATIC provides insurance for over 60% of for-hire vehicles in the city, which includes some 74,000 taxis and rideshare cars. They are one of the few private insurers who cover the specialty needs of for-hire vehicles and they may be on the verge of collapse.
ATIC has reported steady losses for years, leading to insolvency and over
Were ATIC to fail, thousands of taxis, Ubers and Lyfts would be forced off the road until they can acquire new insurance — a tall task given the paucity of eligible providers in the city. During that time, tens of thousands of drivers would lose their primary or sole source of income, and hundreds of millions of dollars in anticipated claims would go unpaid.
"Absent a substantial capital infusion, [ATIC] can only use current premiums to pay…past claims. If this situation is not resolved, ATIC is at significant risk of failure," wrote
American Transit has denied wrongdoing, pointing to "rampant insurance fraud and escalating costs." However, Bernard Ganely reports that "there remains no reasonable business justification" for some of ATIC's largest business moves, which were "used to benefit their affiliates and management."
State regulators are currently investigating a solution. In the meantime they've approved two premium rate increases for ATIC, minimizing losses for the cash-strapped company but antagonizing the
The governor's office has suggested legislation that would reduce the required personal injury protection coverage for drivers in the city's
Opponents of the bill argue that passing off health expenses to the victim of a crash is not a solution. "Reducing available insurance coverage, which protects injured victims, puts New Yorkers at risk and creates a dangerous precedent," said
While officials with ATIC, the governor's office and the
Rising costs
Year by year, it is becoming more expensive to operate a taxi in
In 2013, the city agreed to a settlement with accessibility advocates, stipulating that half of all taxis on the road be wheelchair accessible by 2020. The city missed the 2020 deadline, and then missed the 2023 compliance extension. In
The new mandates mean that the
Accessibility upgrades can cost as much as
But taxi drivers say it is not enough, and the brunt of the cost will end up falling on them.
"The
"I owe
An uncertain future
The "hidden costs" of taxi ownership don't stop with accessibility upgrades. Drivers must handle the costs of maintaining a rapidly aging fleet. A spike in cashless payments translates to more transaction fees from credit cards. And the possibility of electric vehicle (EV) conversion looms large.
Already, Ubers and Lyfts in NYC are required to be fully electric by 2030. While these requirements only apply to the "High-Volume For-Hire Vehicle" sector — or app-based ride-share companies — the
To drivers, this means additional costs. Financial incentives for yellow taxi drivers are limited compared to those available to rideshare companies, including insufficient subsidies for purchasing EVs and challenges with accessing charging infrastructure.
Working as a taxi driver is expensive. For decades, the costs of maintenance were offset by a steady, reliable source of income. But it's unclear what lies in store for taxi ridership in the city.
After the last technology breakthrough in the taxi industry, cabbies lost their jobs to
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