Copyright Reuters

The company has benefited from its recent push into international markets and underserved regions in the U.S. amid saturating demand in large metropolitan areas. It has focused on positioning its European operations, Freenow, as a premium service, complementing its mass-market presence in North America. Sign up here. "Our strategic acquisition of Freenow is expected to bring more than six million annual riders to our platform in 2026," the company said. The upmarket strategy is also gaining traction at home, with high-margin premium rides growing 50% in the quarter and the launch of its Lyft Business Travel program helping capture lucrative airport and corporate travel. Lyft said it expects gross bookings between $5.01 billion and $5.13 billion for the fourth quarter, above analysts' average estimate of $4.98 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG. Lyft said revenue for the three months ended September was a record for any quarter, climbing 10.7% to $1.69 billion, largely in line with analysts' average estimate of $1.7 billion. The push into underpenetrated U.S. markets, particularly college towns, drove roughly 70% of the ride growth in the reported quarter, Lyft said. The company recorded adjusted core earnings of $138.9 million during the third quarter, marginally below the estimate of $140 million. Reporting by Akash Sriram in Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila