How does money work on uDooz?
The person posting pays the listing fee through Stripe to put the job on the board. After that, the people involved work out the labor directly. uDooz does not take a cut of the worker's pay.
Frequently asked questions
Short answers about the flat-fee model, direct payment, shared records, reports, ratings, and why uDooz is built as an alternative to commission-heavy platforms.
The person posting pays the listing fee through Stripe to put the job on the board. After that, the people involved work out the labor directly. uDooz does not take a cut of the worker's pay.
That is the planned payment lane: after work is marked complete, a Doozer can prepare a Stripe invoice or payment-link request, the Seeker can review final details, and payment still happens between the people doing the deal. uDooz keeps the record; it does not escrow, release, or mediate the worker payment.
Use the shared record, ratings, and report tools. If someone flakes, that history matters for the next person deciding whether to trust them.
uDooz keeps the post, replies, ratings, and reports together. Final contact details should only be shared when you are ready, and you should use normal safety judgment with anyone new.
Use the report and block tools and keep communication tied to the listing record when you can. If someone is in immediate danger, call 911. uDooz is not for emergencies, childcare, eldercare, or medical care.
uDooz requires third-party identity verification before people post or reply. Ratings, badges, and account history are useful signals, not promises of work quality. Meet in public first when possible and trust your instincts.
uDooz is a direct-work market built to undercut bloated commission platforms. It charges for the post and record, not a share of the labor.
The listing fee pays for the post and the record. It is not a cut of the labor money.
People who post jobs pay a small flat listing fee. People doing the work pay nothing to browse or reply.
No. uDooz charges for the post. The labor money stays between the people doing the deal.
uDooz was built by people with 50,000+ rides and deliveries behind them, earlier Cleveland taxi years under a real hack license, daily-pay staffing experience, and years building direct-sale businesses. The model comes from lived work experience: keep the useful board and record, remove the labor commission, and let people deal directly.
Both sides: jobs from people who need help, and offers from people who want to do the work.
Yes. uDooz is meant to support ordinary local jobs, repeat route work, service offers, urgent oddball requests, local delivery help, business overflow, and other legitimate work that does not fit neatly into one narrow app category.
Yes. Doozers can build public storefront-style profiles that show services, service areas, ratings, trust signals, and work history so they can win repeat work and better-fit replies.
That is part of the planned growth lane. The goal is to let serious providers stand out with stronger storefront tools and partner badges without turning the platform into a commission gatekeeper.
Not as a separate formal program yet, but early providers who build real profiles, keep strong records, and handle repeat work well are exactly the kind of people uDooz is being built around.
It is a paid post for a local job or service.
A dooz is the short uDooz word for a job posted on the board.