For years, Uganda’s boda boda industry, a vital driver of daily commerce has battled volatile fuel prices. What should be a reliable income source for thousands of riders has turned into a precarious gamble, with profits swinging wildly based on pump prices.
This pressure is mounting. A proposed UGX 200 per litre fuel tax hike piles onto recent increases of UGX 300–500, pushing petrol prices to UGX 5,300–6,000 per litre nationwide. Seemingly small, this change hits hard: for riders whose earnings hinge on fuel costs, it slashes thin margins and jeopardizes livelihoods.
Fuel ranks as a top daily expense, often leaving riders with barely enough after bike rentals or loan payments. The hike forces tough choices e.g raise fares and risk losing customers to walking, ride-sharing, or haggling, which means fewer trips and fiercer competition.
The fallout extends further. Elevated transport costs ripple through agriculture, manufacturing, and trade, inflating prices for food, rent, and essentials amid Uganda’s high cost of living.

Riders face immediate hardships: longer hours for the same pay heighten fatigue and accident risks; some shorten trips to save fuel or slash personal spending. For those on leased bikes or loans, defaulting means losing their lifeline.
But what if riders could sidestep fuel woes entirely?
