Why SynGas Is Particularly Well Suited for Delivery Drivers
SynGas works by calibrating to your specific driving patterns over 150 to 200 miles. Delivery drivers are the ideal SynGas user for this reason: your driving patterns are highly consistent. You typically drive the same types of routes, at similar speeds, with similar stopping and starting behavior, day after day. This consistency gives SynGas the most accurate possible calibration data and tends to produce stronger, more stable optimization results than sporadic or highly variable driving patterns.
High-mileage drivers also complete the calibration period faster than casual drivers. A delivery driver covering 80 to 100 miles per day finishes the calibration cycle in two days. After that, every day of driving produces measurable fuel savings at the optimized calibration level. The cumulative monthly saving for a high-mileage driver is substantially larger than for a driver covering 30 miles a day.
Real Delivery Driver and Fleet Owner Reviews
Three Vans, $280 Saved Every Month
I run a small delivery operation with three Transit vans. Fuel is our biggest variable cost. We put SynGas in all three vans in January and tracked fuel expenses month over month. By March we were spending $280 less per month across the fleet. We have now been running all three for five months and the savings have been consistent throughout. Best investment we made this year.
Amazon Flex Driver Saving $90 a Month
I do Amazon Flex full time and drive about 2,800 miles a month. Before SynGas I was spending around $420 in fuel. Now I am consistently at $330 to $340. The device calibrated in two days given how much I drive. It felt like the improvement happened almost overnight compared to what other reviewers describe. For gig economy drivers this is a no-brainer.
Lyft Driver: 22% Better MPG on My Camry
I drive Lyft about 50 hours a week in my 2019 Camry. Before SynGas I was averaging 32 MPG. After about a week of calibration I am consistently getting 39 to 40 MPG. That is a 22% improvement. At my mileage that works out to around $95 saved per month. The device paid for itself before the end of the first month. Would recommend to every rideshare driver immediately.
ROI Calculator: What SynGas Is Worth to a Delivery Driver
Estimated Monthly Savings by Driver Type
Which Delivery Vehicles Are Compatible With SynGas?
SynGas is compatible with all OBD2-equipped delivery vehicles. This covers the most common commercial light-duty vans used in the US delivery market. The Ford Transit, one of the most widely used delivery vans in the country, has featured an OBD2 port across all generations since 2000. The Ram ProMaster and its predecessor the Dodge Sprinter have been OBD2 compliant since 2001. The Mercedes-Benz Sprinter sold in the US since 2001 includes a standard OBD2 port. The Chevrolet Express and GMC Savana have been OBD2 compliant since 1996.
For rideshare and delivery app drivers who use personal vehicles, SynGas works identically in sedans, compact cars, and hatchbacks as in vans. The key factor is simply that the vehicle has an OBD2 port and was manufactured from 1996 onward, which covers essentially every vehicle currently used for rideshare or gig delivery work. See our detailed breakdown of how OBD2 fuel savers work for the full technical explanation.
Managing SynGas Across a Multi-Vehicle Fleet
Fleet operators running multiple delivery vehicles need one SynGas device per vehicle. Each device calibrates specifically to the vehicle it is installed in, building a unique optimization profile for that vehicle's engine and the driver's patterns. Moving a device from one vehicle to another clears the existing calibration and requires a new 150 to 200 mile learning period in the new vehicle.
For fleets of three or more vehicles, multi-unit bundles available at the official SynGas checkout offer the lowest per-unit pricing. The fleet ROI calculation is straightforward: if each vehicle saves $90 to $130 per month in fuel, a three-vehicle fleet saves $270 to $390 per month at a one-time hardware cost for three devices. At that savings rate the fleet investment pays back within a single month of operation.
According to a US Alternative Fuels Data Center fleet fuel cost analysis, fuel represents between 25% and 40% of total operating costs for light commercial vehicle fleets. Any technology that reduces fuel consumption by 15% to 20% meaningfully improves fleet profitability. For more detail on purchase options, see our SynGas pricing and package guide.