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Create ResumeIf you want your Grubhub driver resume to stand out, listing tools and equipment isn’t optional—it’s a competitive advantage. Hiring managers and platform reviewers look for drivers who can deliver efficiently, safely, and professionally. That means showing you understand route optimization, order handling, and independent contractor workflows. The strongest resumes don’t just say “delivery experience”—they demonstrate operational readiness through specific tools like navigation apps, delivery equipment, mileage trackers, and customer communication systems. This guide breaks down exactly what to include, how to present it, and what actually makes a difference in getting approved or selected for high-volume delivery opportunities.
Most applicants underestimate how much your tool stack signals performance.
From a recruiter or platform perspective, tools answer three critical questions:
Can you deliver orders quickly and accurately?
Can you manage multiple orders and routes efficiently?
Are you operating like a professional independent contractor?
Drivers who list relevant tools are perceived as:
Faster and more reliable
Better at handling peak-hour demand
Less likely to cause delivery errors or delays
More experienced with real-world delivery logistics
These are the foundational tools every serious delivery driver should list.
These show you can operate within the ecosystem.
Grubhub Driver App
Customer messaging and notification systems
Proof-of-delivery photo tools
Digital scheduling and availability tools
Why it matters:
Recruiters want drivers who understand app-based workflows without training.
Navigation efficiency directly impacts earnings and ratings.
Google Maps
Tools aren’t just digital—physical equipment matters just as much.
These directly impact customer satisfaction.
Insulated delivery bags
Catering bags for large orders
Drink carriers
Spill-prevention supplies
What this signals:
You can maintain food quality and handle complex orders.
Your phone is your primary work tool.
Smartphone (iOS or Android)
This is especially important if you're:
Competing in a saturated market
Applying to multiple delivery platforms
Trying to qualify for catering or large-order deliveries
Apple Maps
Waze
Route optimization tools (when applicable)
Recruiter insight:
Drivers who rely on advanced navigation tools are more likely to:
Reduce delivery time
Avoid traffic delays
Handle stacked orders efficiently
This signals professionalism and financial awareness.
Stride
Everlance
Gridwise
MileIQ
Fuel and expense tracking apps
Why it matters:
Drivers who track mileage typically:
Understand tax deductions
Operate as serious independent contractors
Maintain better long-term earnings
These support safety and responsiveness.
Bluetooth headset (where legal)
Hands-free communication tools
In-app messaging systems
Hiring logic:
Safety-conscious drivers are less risky and more reliable.
Phone mount for navigation
Portable charger or power bank
Why it matters:
Dead phones = missed orders = lost revenue.
This shows reliability and preparedness.
Reliable personal vehicle
Dash cam (optional but valuable)
Tire inflator
Jumper cables
Flashlight
Emergency roadside kit
Recruiter insight:
Prepared drivers are less likely to cancel or abandon deliveries.
Most drivers stop at the basics. Top performers go further.
Multi-app delivery tracking systems
Advanced route optimization tools
These are used by drivers who:
Run multiple apps (Grubhub, Uber Eats, DoorDash)
Maximize earnings per hour
Strategically stack deliveries
Independent contractor tax software
Expense categorization tools
Income tracking dashboards
What this signals:
You treat delivery like a business—not a side hustle.
Maintenance reminder apps
Oil change and service logs
This shows:
Long-term reliability
Reduced risk of breakdowns during shifts
Most candidates make one critical mistake: they dump tools into a generic skills section.
That’s not how hiring decisions are made.
Use a dedicated section:
Tools & Equipment
Or integrate into:
Skills section
Experience bullet points (strongest option)
Weak Example:
“Familiar with delivery apps and navigation tools”
Why it fails:
Too vague. No proof of capability.
Good Example:
“Utilized Grubhub Driver App, Google Maps, and Waze to complete 50+ daily deliveries with optimized routing and reduced delivery times by 20%”
Why it works:
Names tools
Shows usage
Demonstrates results
Not all tools carry equal weight.
These influence hiring decisions the most:
Route optimization using navigation apps
Multi-order delivery coordination
Contactless delivery workflows
Real-time customer communication
Efficient use of insulated and catering bags
Still valuable but less differentiating:
Mileage tracking
Expense logging
Scheduling tools
Basic smartphone use
Standard app navigation
These are expected—but still should be included.
Just listing apps isn’t enough.
Fix it by:
Showing how you used them
Connecting tools to results
Don’t list:
Unrelated software (e.g., Photoshop, Excel unless relevant)
Tools you barely used
Many resumes only list apps.
That’s a mistake.
Recruiters care about:
Food safety
Order handling
Delivery professionalism
If you’ve done:
Catering deliveries
Multi-app driving
High-volume shifts
You must reflect that with tools.
Top-performing drivers position themselves like this:
Instead of:
“I deliver food using Grubhub”
They present as:
“I operate as an independent delivery professional using advanced tools, route optimization systems, and delivery equipment to maximize efficiency and customer satisfaction”
This shift changes perception from:
Gig worker → Professional operator
Basic driver → High-efficiency contractor
Even for gig roles, there is implicit screening.
They look for:
Speed indicators (navigation tools)
Reliability indicators (vehicle and emergency tools)
Professionalism indicators (tracking apps, catering equipment)
Safety indicators (hands-free tools, dash cam)
If your resume shows all four, you stand out immediately.
Here’s how a strong section should look:
Tools & Equipment
Grubhub Driver App, customer messaging systems, proof-of-delivery tools
Google Maps, Waze, Apple Maps for route optimization
Stride, Everlance, Gridwise, MileIQ for mileage and expense tracking
Smartphone with mounted navigation setup and portable charger
Insulated delivery bags, catering bags, drink carriers, spill-prevention tools
Bluetooth headset for hands-free communication (where permitted)
Vehicle emergency kit including jumper cables, tire inflator, and flashlight
Multi-app delivery tracking systems and route optimization tools
Independent contractor tax and income tracking software
To outperform other applicants:
Be specific, not generic
Show how tools improve performance
Include both digital and physical equipment
Demonstrate efficiency, safety, and professionalism
Position yourself as a serious independent contractor
Most resumes fail because they look identical.
Yours shouldn’t.