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Is Your Uber Account Safe?
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The 99-Year Background Check: Is Your Uber Account Safe?
— By Sergio Avedian —
I will start this article by saying: It is about time! As I receive hundreds of emails a week from drivers all over the country, at least 50 of them are about unjust deactivations. I respond to each one by saying that I have no special powers regarding deactivations. Are there a lot of drivers who should not be on the Uber platform? Absolutely! This may actually help with oversaturations experienced nationwide!
If you've been driving for Uber for five, seven, or even ten years, you probably thought your annual background check was nothing more than a formality. Think again. The 7-year rule is effectively over. Uber is now looking at your entire history and for some drivers, that could mean an unexpected deactivation.
Uber recently expanded its driver screening process in a move that's sending shockwaves through the driver community. The company is now conducting lifetime (99-year) criminal background searches across every county and state where a driver has lived. Even more concerning, these checks aren't just happening when you first sign up, they're being rerun annually, and in some cases, continuously throughout the year and retroactively.
Naturally, drivers are asking the same question: Can something from decades ago cost me my Uber account today?
Let's separate fact from fiction.

What Changed?
Historically, many background checks focused primarily on the previous seven years, largely because several states limited how far consumer reporting agencies could look back for employment purposes. The new system is far more comprehensive.
Instead of stopping at seven years, Uber's background screening partner now searches criminal records dating back as far as records exist. That could mean twenty, thirty, or even fifty years depending on the jurisdiction. Additionally, the search isn't limited to your current address. Every previous county or state where you've lived may now be included in the screening process.
For veteran drivers who have moved several times over the years, that's a significant expansion.
Why Is Uber Doing This?
The answer is fairly straightforward. Uber continues to face enormous pressure from regulators, insurance companies, passengers, and lawmakers to improve rider safety. Every highly publicized incident involving a rideshare driver creates renewed scrutiny of the company's screening procedures. Rather than defending a seven-year lookback, Uber appears to be taking the opposite approach: search everything.
From a corporate risk management standpoint, it makes sense.
From a driver's perspective, however, it creates uncertainty.
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Does Every Old Offense Lead to Deactivation?
Fortunately, no. This is where social media often creates unnecessary panic. Not every decades-old misdemeanor automatically disqualifies someone from driving.
Uber generally evaluates offenses based on several factors:
Violent crimes
Human trafficking
Kidnapping
Serious fraud
Recent DUI convictions
Felony convictions involving public safety
Repeat criminal behavior
Many minor offenses, especially those committed decades ago, may not result in deactivation. However, serious offenses, even if they're very old, could now appear during a background rerun if they were previously missed.
Why Drivers Are Nervous
Imagine you've been driving for Uber since 2016. You've completed over 30,000 trips. You maintain a 4.99 rating. You've never had a complaint. Then suddenly you receive an email saying your account has been placed on hold pending a background review.
That scenario isn't hypothetical anymore. The expanded searches mean drivers who have safely driven for years could unexpectedly have historical records flagged that were never discovered during previous screenings.
It doesn't necessarily mean they'll lose access permanently. But it does mean additional reviews and in some cases temporary deactivations may become more common.
Semi-Annual Checks Are Becoming More Important
Many drivers assume the background check happens only once. Not anymore. Uber periodically reruns background checks throughout a driver's career. Some states like Massachusetts even allow continuous criminal monitoring that can notify Uber if new records appear. That means staying active on the platform isn't enough. Drivers should assume their eligibility is continually being evaluated.
What Should Drivers Do Right Now?
Instead of worrying, take a proactive approach.
1. Check Your Background Report Carefully
Background reports occasionally contain mistakes.
Common errors include:
Incorrect identities
Expunged cases still appearing
Duplicate records
Wrong dispositions
Cases belonging to someone with a similar name
These errors happen more often than many people realize.
If Uber pauses your account because of inaccurate information, you have the right to dispute the report.
2. Keep Your Driving Record Clean
Criminal history isn't the only thing Uber reviews.
Recent moving violations, reckless driving convictions, DUI arrests, or license suspensions remain major factors in determining eligibility. Your safest strategy is maintaining both a clean driving record and clean criminal record going forward.
Since this policy began rolling out, Facebook groups and Reddit forums have exploded with stories claiming drivers were instantly deactivated over decades-old speeding tickets or youthful mistakes. Many of those stories leave out important details. Background checks involve multiple factors, and every case is different. Before assuming the worst, wait until verified information becomes available.
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The Bigger Picture
This policy reflects a larger trend across the gig economy. Platforms aren't relaxing screening standards, they're tightening them. Insurance costs are rising. Regulatory pressure is increasing. Public expectations surrounding passenger safety continue to grow.
Uber is responding by making its screening process more comprehensive than ever before. For the overwhelming majority of drivers with clean records, nothing will change.
But for those with significant criminal histories or inaccurate records that have never been corrected, this could be the year those issues finally surface.
My Final Thoughts
The headline certainly grabs attention: "Uber is checking your entire life." While that's technically closer to reality than ever before, drivers shouldn't immediately panic.
The vast majority of experienced drivers will likely pass these expanded screenings without issue. The real takeaway is this: don't assume your background check ended the day you were approved. In today's rideshare industry, background screening is becoming an ongoing process rather than a one-time event.
Knowing what's on your record, understanding your rights, and addressing any inaccuracies before they become a problem may be one of the smartest things you can do to protect your driving income.
Email me your comments to [email protected]
Sergio@RSG

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