For Just ₦1,300 a month, inDrive drivers in Nigeria can now access healthcare services
For Nigerian ride-hailing drivers, the daily grind often comes with a hidden cost: their own health. Hours spent weaving through Lagos traffic or navigating Abuja’s chaotic streets leave little time to sit in a clinic, wait for a doctor, or pick up prescriptions.
For most, the option has been either skipping care or losing income trying to get it. But inDrive has quietly rewritten that story.
Healthcare at Your Fingertips
For just ₦1,300 a month, inDrive drivers can now access healthcare services directly from their app, thanks to a partnership with Heala, a Nigerian healthtech startup.
The platform doesn’t just offer phone calls with a doctor; it promises a full ecosystem. Drivers can speak to licensed physicians via video, chat, or voice, receive prescriptions, access medications at nearby pharmacies, and even schedule diagnostic tests; all without ever leaving the route that earns them a living.
Families are not left out: spouses and children can be added to the plan, giving drivers the rare sense of security that comes from knowing their loved ones are covered too.
This is more than convenience. It is a lifeline in a system where independent contractors often fall through the cracks. Unlike traditional employees, inDrive drivers do not get benefits like health insurance.
Before this partnership, the choice was stark: work and ignore your health, or take time off and sacrifice income. Heala changes the equation entirely.
What Exactly Is Heala?
Heala is a Nigerian healthtech startup on a mission to make healthcare effortless and accessible.
Through its digital platform, it connects patients, licensed doctors, and insurers, allowing users to consult doctors remotely, receive prescriptions, book diagnostic tests, and even access specialist care; all from their phones.
Designed for people with unpredictable schedules, like ride-hailing drivers, Heala ensures that getting medical attention no longer means leaving work behind or navigating crowded hospitals.
A Platform That Sees the Invisible Workers
“This partnership reflects our continued commitment to improving the wellbeing of our drivers,” says Oladimeji Timothy, country manager for inDrive Nigeria.
And he is right. For too long, the city’s engines — those behind the wheel —have gone unseen, their wellness considered secondary to the convenience they provide passengers. By integrating healthcare into the very app drivers rely on to earn a living, inDrive flips the script.
The move mirrors a quiet but growing trend across Africa’s mobility sector. Platforms like Bolt have experimented with telemedicine, and delivery services such as Chowdeck now provide accident insurance for riders.
But inDrive’s approach goes deeper: it recognizes that access to care isn’t a luxury for gig workers; it’s a structural necessity.
From Roadblocks to Lifelines
The partnership does more than just provide doctors’ appointments. It challenges the way mobility companies think about worker welfare in Africa.
In a landscape where healthcare access is uneven, and traffic grids and long hours make conventional appointments near impossible, this initiative makes preventative and reactive care part of the daily workflow.
Drivers no longer have to choose between health and income; they can have both.
And maybe, just maybe, this model will inspire others in the continent’s booming gig economy to rethink the old narrative: that drivers are replaceable, benefits optional, and wellness a personal problem.
inDrive is quietly proving that innovation doesn’t have to stop at getting people from point A to point B. Sometimes, it starts with making sure the people doing the driving stay healthy enough to keep moving.
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