Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. News

GM unveils car sharing program for the Big Apple

Add as a preferred source on Google

Car sharing services like Zipcar are viewed by some as a potential threat to the concept of individual car ownership, and consequently to the carmakers themselves. But some of those carmakers see some potential in the concept, including General Motors.

Among the myriad announcements made by the GM brass at a recent investor conference was the launch of “Let’s Drive NYC,” a car-sharing pilot program in the Big Apple. It’s one of two programs being undertaken by GM, with another in an unnamed city set to be announced at a later date.

Recommended Videos

Let’s Drive NYC is only available to residents of the Ritz Plaza, a 479-unit luxury apartment building in Times Square. Residents can use an app to reserve a vehicle and access parking at one of 200 garages in Manhattan, made available through a partnership with Icon Parking Systems.

While the location being served is certainly swanky, the cars are not. The fleet currently consists of eight Chevrolet Trax and two Chevrolet Equinox crossovers, with more vehicles to be added later. Ritz Plaza residents will get electronic credits good for three hours of rental per month. After that, they can pay “less than $10 an hour or up to $75 for a 24-hour reservation,” GM says.

GM actually began offering the program to select residents over the summer. It claims users completed more than 100 trips and drove about 20,000 miles in the New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut Tri-State Area. These encouraging early results led GM and Stonehenge Partners (owner of the Ritz Plaza) to broaden the program.

Let’s Drive NYC isn’t the first GM experiment with car sharing. Besides investing in German ride sharing firm Flinc, GM has established a car sharing “community” for its Opel brand called CarUnity, and is even testing Zagster bike sharing at its U.S. technical center. In 2014, it also partnered with Google on a ride sharing test service using Chevrolet Spark EV electric cars.

Other carmakers are also getting involved in car sharing. BMW and Daimler have their DriveNow and Car2Go services, respectively, and Audi launched a short-term rental beta program in San Francisco earlier this year.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
BYD’s latest EV costs just over $10,000, goes 250 miles, and packs a LiDAR, too
LiDAR, 250 miles, and a five-figure price tag: the 2026 Seagull is proof that the future of affordable EVs is already here, just not in the West.
BYD 2026 Seagull.

BYD has officially unveiled the 2026 Seagull, sold internationally as the Dolphin Mini or Dolphin Surf, and the numbers deserve your attention. 

The updated compact EV’s price starts from 69,900 yuan, which is around $10,300, in China, and tops out at 85,900 yuan, which is around $12,600. It debuted at the 2026 Beijing Auto Show before going on sale this week (via CarsNewsChina). 

Read more
BYD’s blazing-fast Flash charging tech for EVs got hot enough to roast a turkey
A real-world test of BYD's Megawatt Flash Charge pushed battery temps to 169.6°F.
BYD Flash charging

A real-world test of BYD's Megwatt Flash Charge technology showed the battery hitting 169.6°F during a charging session. That's hot enough to roast a turkey, and well above China's recommended safety ceiling of 149°F for lithium iron phosphate battery cells. The test, conducted by an automotive blogger who livestreamed the session (via ChinaEVHome), has raised concerns about whether the heat generated by ultra-fast charging degrades long-term battery health.

Why the heat matters

Read more
Tesla’s latest Cybertruck recall sounds almost comical
This time, it involves wheels potentially falling off.
Tesla Cybertruck Official Top View

Tesla’s Cybertruck recalls are starting to sound like parody headlines at this point. Because the company’s latest issue reportedly involves something that most drivers generally prefer their vehicles to keep attached at all times: the wheels.

Yes, Tesla is recalling Cybertrucks over concerns that the wheels could literally detach while driving.

Read more