Drivosity is enterprise software for first-party delivery operations, positioned around improving delivery safety, efficiency, driver recognition, and real-time operational visibility. At its core is the patented DriveScore® system, which uses a scoring algorithm to quantify driver performance and help managers build a culture of safety and accountability.
According to the publicly available site copy, DriveScore® measures key driving behaviors such as speeding, hard braking, acceleration, and sharp turns. It also “gamifies” safe driving, allowing drivers to improve their performance through scores and gain recognition. The platform also emphasizes real-time navigation and tracking, route optimization, and comprehensive analytics, which can be used to identify opportunities for improvement and replicate top-driver practices across the fleet. The company claims benefits such as fewer accidents, reduced extended dwell time, and insurance cost savings, but the page does not provide the statistical methodology or case sources behind these claims.
For pricing, the website only offers a Request a demo option and does not disclose plans, per-vehicle or per-driver pricing, contract terms, or implementation fees. No free plan or trial is mentioned. Information that is critical for enterprise procurement—such as third-party integrations, APIs, role-based permissions, data security and compliance, and deployment options—is also not explained in the main site copy. These should be key questions during the sales demo, for example whether Drivosity can integrate with dispatch systems, POS, TMS, in-vehicle devices, or insurance data platforms.
The main advantage is its focused use case: it builds a clear set of metrics around delivery driver safety and performance. The gamification mechanism may help increase driver engagement, while real-time tracking and analytics are well suited to multi-store and multi-fleet delivery management. The downside is that the public information is relatively marketing-oriented and lacks key procurement details, especially around pricing, compliance, integrations, and permission controls, making quick side-by-side comparison difficult.
Drivosity is better suited to restaurants, retailers, local delivery operators, and chain-store businesses with their own delivery drivers, especially teams looking to reduce accident rates, control insurance and operating costs, and improve delivery service ratings. Companies that only need lightweight outsourced delivery management, or that rely heavily on local map and payment ecosystems, should evaluate it carefully.
Its accessibility from China is unknown, and payment methods are not disclosed. If used in mainland China, companies should test the stability of the official website, admin backend, map navigation, and real-time location tracking, and confirm whether local invoices and contracts are supported. Comparable products include Samsara, Geotab, Verizon Connect, Motive, Onfleet, and Bringg; in China, options to watch include G7易流, fleet services related to 满帮, and solutions within the local mapping and dispatch ecosystem.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on drivosity.com official site.
drivosity.com is an United States SaaS Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach drivosity.com directly.