Wednesday, June 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Uber Apologizes After Customer Billed $18,000 For 21-minute Ride

The Canadian Press, 12 Dec, 2017 02:08 PM
  • Uber Apologizes After Customer Billed $18,000 For 21-minute Ride
TORONTO — Uber is apologizing to a customer who was charged more than $18,000 for a short ride in downtown Toronto.
 
 
Photos posted on social media over the weekend showed that an Uber rider was billed $18,518.50 for a 21-minute Uber ride.
 
 
An Uber spokesperson confirmed the incident, and says the rider had been fully refunded.
 
 
Uber staff say the massive over-charge was a result of driver error, not a technical glitch.  
 
 
Uber says the ride in question took place in a traditional taxi cab signed up to the ridehailing service — an option available to customers in Toronto — and that the driver made a mistake when entering the details of the fare into his cab's meter.
 
 
The spokesperson says the company continues to look into what happened.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Man Charged With Sexual Assault For Allegedly Not Disclosing HIV Status

B.C. Man Charged With Sexual Assault For Allegedly Not Disclosing HIV Status
ABBOTSFORD, B.C. — A Vancouver-area man has been charged with three counts of aggravated sexual assault for allegedly having unprotected sex without disclosing his HIV status.

B.C. Man Charged With Sexual Assault For Allegedly Not Disclosing HIV Status

Hot, Smoky Conditions Forecast To Persist In B.C. Ahead Of Long Weekend

Hot, Smoky Conditions Forecast To Persist In B.C. Ahead Of Long Weekend
VANCOUVER — British Columbia is in store for another day of poor air quality due to smoke from persistent wildfires.

Hot, Smoky Conditions Forecast To Persist In B.C. Ahead Of Long Weekend

Byelection for New Vancouver School Board Set for October

Byelection for New Vancouver School Board Set for October
Education Minister Rob Fleming says a byelection will be held in October to restore the Vancouver School Board.

Byelection for New Vancouver School Board Set for October

B.C. Government Brings Back Human Rights Commission After 15 Years

B.C. Government Brings Back Human Rights Commission After 15 Years
VANCOUVER — British Columbia's NDP government is bringing back the province's human rights commission, which was scuttled by the previous Liberal regime in 2002.

B.C. Government Brings Back Human Rights Commission After 15 Years

B.C. Wildfire Season Worst In Six Decades, Still Far From Over: Official

B.C. Wildfire Season Worst In Six Decades, Still Far From Over: Official
VANCOUVER — This year's wildfire season has become British Columbia's worst in six decades, and a provincial spokesman says the action is far from over.

B.C. Wildfire Season Worst In Six Decades, Still Far From Over: Official

Another FHRITP Incident In St. John's, Another Police Complaint Filed

Another FHRITP Incident In St. John's, Another Police Complaint Filed
ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Police are investigating after a female reporter was heckled with a notorious sexist slur while on camera in St. John's, N.L.

Another FHRITP Incident In St. John's, Another Police Complaint Filed