KEY POINTS
  • Saudi Arabia lifted its ban on female driving in June, and Careem and Uber have launched expensive initiatives to recruit women as drivers.
  • Careem says it has 2,000 licensed women registered on its platform.
  • Uber reported only a "handful" of female drivers, adding that many women are still in the process of getting their license.
Careem recruits Samera Nour Hussain (L), Hadeel Abdulaziz Al Rashed (C) and Nouf Abdulkader (R)

Four months ago, Amwaj Mohammed could have been arrested for driving in Saudi Arabia. Now, she earns money driving for Careem — thanks to a royal decree that allowed Saudi women to drive.

Saudi Arabia in June became the last country to grant women driving rights, and it's the only one to do so in the age of ride-hailing apps. Uber and Careem, in the latest example of their regional rivalry, spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on initiatives to attract female Saudi drivers to their platform. Four months later, Careem says it has over 2,000 female drivers on the road, and Uber says it has "a handful."