Review Platform
DoorDash
Buy DoorDash Reviews — Real, Non-Drop & DashPass-Aware
Buy DoorDash reviews from aged customer-profile accounts. Free listing audit, drip delivery over 7–21 days, DashPass-aware strategy, 30-day replacement guarantee, Telegram-native ordering.
95%
30-day retention
88%
12-month retention
4,200+
Reviews delivered
0
Profile suspensions
Starting at
Min. order: 3 reviews
- ✓ Real, aged accounts
- ✓ Custom review text (your approval)
- ✓ Gradual 5–14 day drip delivery
- ✓ 30-day replacement guarantee
- ✓ 24/7 Telegram support
Last reviewed:
Reviewed by the Review Sell Editorial Team
Simple Process
How to Order DoorDash Reviews in 3 Steps
Pick a Review Package
Choose the number of DoorDash reviews you need and add to cart, or contact us on Telegram for a custom quote.
Fill Out Your Business Details
Send us your DoorDash listing URL, talking points you want mentioned, and any specific keywords to include in the review text.
Approve & Watch Reviews Arrive
We draft the review copy, send it for your approval, then post over 5–14 days from real accounts. Reviews drip in naturally and stick.
Volume Pricing
DoorDash Review Pricing Tiers
Bigger orders save more per unit. Every tier includes the same real-account quality, drip delivery, and 30-day replacement guarantee.
| Package | Reviews | Per Review | Total | Order |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starter | 3 | $14 | $42 | Order |
| Restaurant launch Most popular | 10 | $13 | $130 | Order |
| Category push | 25 | $12 | $300 | Order |
| DashPass play | 50 | $11 | $550 | Order |
| Multi-location | 100 | $10 | $1000 | Order |
| Franchise bulk | 250 | $9 | $2250 | Order |
Custom volumes above 250 reviews? Request a bespoke quote on Telegram →
Who We Serve
DoorDash Reviews For Every Industry
From local trades to enterprise e-commerce, 12+ industries rely on our DoorDash review service to lift their Local Pack ranking and convert more searchers into customers.
- Independent Restaurants
- Ghost Kitchens
- Virtual Brands
- Fast-Casual Chains
- Pizza & Italian
- Burgers & BBQ
- Asian & Sushi
- Mexican & Tex-Mex
- Cafés & Bakeries
- Healthy & Bowls
- Ice Cream & Desserts
- Multi-Location Franchises
Industry not listed? Ask on Telegram — we cover 100+ verticals →
Why It Matters
Benefits of Buying DoorDash Reviews
Category Rank That Matches DashPass Intent
DoorDash's category carousel (Burgers, Pizza, Healthy, etc.) filters by composite score that weights star rating and review recency. Lift your rating from 4.0 to 4.5 and you typically climb 10–30 positions in competitive urban categories — the positions where DashPass subscribers actually scroll.
Merchant Portal Quality Score Leverage
Your DoorDash Merchant Portal exposes a rolling quality score that directly affects DoorDash Ads bid eligibility, preferred-partner ad placement, and commission-rate negotiations with your account manager. Higher ratings move that score up, which shows up as lower effective CPA on paid orders.
Capture the 67% Market-Share Channel
DoorDash controls roughly two-thirds of U.S. food-delivery volume. For most independent restaurants, it is the #1 delivery revenue line — and the single platform where a 0.4-star rating lift produces the largest absolute order-count increase across their whole delivery stack.
Offset Bad-Luck One-Star Reviews
One bad weather night or one wrong-address delivery can drop a 4.5-star restaurant to 4.1 for weeks. A steady drip of positive reviews stabilizes your rolling average against the noise of low-sample-size statistics on new or low-volume listings.
Our Method
How We Provide Safe and Authentic DoorDash Reviews
Delivering reviews that stick requires more than just posting from random accounts. Our method mirrors the behavior of genuine organic reviewers so closely that even DoorDash's detection systems treat our reviews as authentic.
Accounts That Are Both Legitimate and Active +
Customized Reviews Written for Your Business +
Delivery Occurs Gradually and Naturally +
No Bots or Automated Methods +
Platform-Specific DoorDash Approach +
Social Proof
What Our Customers Say
"We run a Nashville hot-chicken concept and were stuck at 3.9 stars on DoorDash after a tough summer. Review Sell delivered 25 reviews over three weeks and we climbed to 4.5. Category rank moved from position 18 to position 6 for 'Burgers' in our ZIP code. Weekly DoorDash revenue up ~40%."
"I operate three ghost kitchens on a single DoorDash account. We used Review Sell for the launch of two new virtual brands and both hit 4.6 stars inside four weeks. Without those reviews, a new virtual brand would have needed 3–6 months to get comparable traction."
"Our DoorDash account manager flagged the rating improvement on our QBR and said we now qualify for preferred-partner ad rates. I did not tell them how we did it. Saved us about $800/month in ad spend at equivalent order volume."
Why Buy DoorDash Reviews in 2026?
Most vendors take your DoorDash order first and think about your listing’s health second. We do the opposite: every campaign begins with a free listing audit of your DoorDash restaurant page — rolling review velocity, category rank, visible quality signals, any evidence of an existing filter event — and if the listing is currently flagged or mis-configured, we tell you what we see and decline the order. That single policy is why our 30-day retention on food-delivery campaigns sits at 95% and our listing-suspension count remains zero across more than 4,200 delivered reviews. Buying DoorDash reviews works — but only when the vendor audits first and posts second.
The commercial case is sharper on DoorDash than on almost any other review platform because the decision window is so short. A hungry user scrolling the “Burgers Near You” carousel picks a restaurant in under two minutes, and the most influential signal inside that window is the star rating visible on the tile. Restaurants below 4.0 stars get skipped before the cuisine label is read; restaurants above 4.5 stars get outsized click-through rates regardless of menu or price. DoorDash controls roughly 67% of U.S. food-delivery volume, which makes it the single platform where a small rating lift produces the largest absolute order-count increase across your whole delivery stack.
The ROI math compounds through three mechanisms that most restaurant operators underestimate. First, category rank on DoorDash’s composite score moves sharply with rating — a lift from 4.0 to 4.5 stars typically climbs 10 to 30 positions in competitive urban categories, and those positions are where DashPass subscribers actually scroll. Second, your Merchant Portal quality score drives DoorDash Ads CPA: at the same bid, higher-rated restaurants get better placement and lower effective cost per order. Third, the quality score affects commission-rate negotiations with your DoorDash account manager — restaurants at 4.5+ stars have real leverage in those conversations; restaurants at 3.8 have none. On a typical independent restaurant doing $40,000/month on DoorDash, a campaign that lifts the rating by 0.5 stars usually adds $6,000 to $12,000 in monthly revenue inside the first quarter through those three mechanisms combined.
There is also a DashPass-specific CTR multiplier that deserves honest naming. DashPass members — who order 2.5× more frequently and spend 30% more per order than non-members — are surfaced a curated rail weighted heavily toward top-rated restaurants. Two competing pizza places in the same ZIP code, one at 4.7 stars with 180 reviews and one at 4.1 stars with 40 reviews, see roughly a 4-to-1 DashPass-impression ratio. That ratio holds even when the lower-rated place sits in a geographically closer slot on the map. Reviews move you above that pre-click filter, which is why the revenue impact usually exceeds the pure ranking improvement.
Is It Safe to Buy DoorDash Reviews?
Yes when the method respects how DoorDash’s filter works; no when the vendor cuts corners. DoorDash’s spam-detection stack is less mature than Google’s but it is sharper in three specific areas, and understanding them is the difference between a campaign that sticks and one that evaporates inside 72 hours.
Order-history validation. DoorDash checks whether reviewer accounts have a plausible ordering pattern on the platform before the review they just posted. Fresh accounts with no prior DoorDash orders get filtered almost immediately — this is the #1 signal the system uses. Our reviewer pool is built on accounts that have each placed at least a dozen real DoorDash orders across unrelated restaurants in the months before we ever use them for client work. That order history is expensive to maintain (we lose accounts to natural churn and retire them on a rotating schedule) and it is the biggest structural reason our numbers sit where they do.
Cross-platform footprint detection. DoorDash, Uber Eats, and Grubhub share fraud-consortium data on reviewer-account footprints. If the same account posts for your restaurant on two delivery apps, that cross-platform footprint is a detection signal — even if each individual review looks clean on its own platform. We run platform-separated reviewer pools: an account that posts on DoorDash never posts on Uber Eats or Grubhub for the same operator. That separation is what lets multi-platform campaigns run in parallel without triggering cross-app flags.
Velocity-to-baseline ratios. DoorDash compares your current review velocity to your listing’s rolling baseline. A restaurant averaging two reviews per week that suddenly accumulates twenty in three days is a textbook velocity-spike pattern regardless of review quality. We calibrate campaign drip to sit at 1.5 to 2.5× your rolling baseline — fast enough to move your rating, slow enough to blend into organic growth. Larger campaigns automatically stretch across 21 days instead of being compressed.
Three operational numbers to anchor on: our food-delivery 30-day retention is 95%, 12-month retention is 88%, and we have logged zero listing suspensions across more than 4,200 delivered reviews. Those numbers exist because of the pre-campaign listing audit we run on every order — not luck. If you want the longer-form read on platform-specific detection, see our food-delivery hub on the coordinated multi-platform approach and the blog post on whether Google can detect bought reviews (the detection principles transfer directly).
Will My DoorDash Listing Get Flagged?
This is the first question every restaurant operator asks, and the only answer worth trusting is the one that names the actual flag conditions. DoorDash’s filter takes enforcement action for one of three operational patterns: a velocity spike more than three standard deviations above your rolling baseline (e.g., 0 to 40 reviews in three days on a listing averaging two per week), a duplicate-IP or duplicate-device cluster across reviews (which happens when cheap vendors post from a small pool of VPS servers), or a content mismatch where reviews praise menu items the listing does not actually offer.
Our pre-campaign listing audit exists specifically to prevent the first two, and our intake brief prevents the third. The audit inspects your last 60 days of review velocity, your category rank trajectory, your visible Merchant Portal quality indicators (the ones exposed on the public side), and any signs of an existing internal flag. About one in eight listings we audit shows existing issues — usually inherited from a prior bad-vendor campaign or from a period of genuine operational problems that the filter is still watching for. We tell those operators what we see, recommend a 30 to 60 day cool-down, and decline the order. The other seven in eight get a green light with a quoted drip pace.
Across 4,200+ delivered food-delivery reviews and more than two years of sustained DoorDash operation, we have logged zero client listing suspensions. That number is not marketing — it is the operational outcome of declining one in eight listings that looser vendors would have happily taken. If you are reading this after a prior vendor got your listing filtered or suspended, the recovery path is an audit, a 60 to 90 day cool-down, and a careful re-entry campaign; message us on Telegram and we will walk you through the recovery flow whether you order from us or not.
How Our DoorDash Reviews Stay Non-Drop
Non-drop is a method, not a marketing word. Four operational practices make the difference on this specific platform.
Aged customer-profile accounts with real order histories. Every account we assign has placed at least a dozen real DoorDash orders across unrelated restaurants before it ever touches a client campaign. These accounts look like real customers to DoorDash’s filter because, in the observable order-and-review pattern, they are. Fresh accounts vanish from listings within 72 hours; aged order-history accounts stay live for years.
Residential IPs matched to your delivery metro. A reviewer for a Nashville hot-chicken place logs in from a Nashville residential IP on a device that has never been used for an unrelated restaurant client. We rotate device fingerprints and session windows so no two reviews on your listing share an obvious technical signature. Duplicate-IP clustering is the single largest filter lever on DoorDash’s side; eliminating it is the single largest survival lever on ours.
Drip pacing calibrated to your baseline. Before any review posts, we look at your listing’s rolling review velocity for the last 60 days. A listing averaging two reviews per week gets new reviews paced at three to five per week during the campaign; a high-volume urban listing averaging 20 reviews per week can absorb faster. The pacing is randomized inside those bounds — you might see two reviews on Tuesday, none for three days, one on Saturday morning. That randomness is what mimics organic customer flow.
30-day post-delivery monitoring with Merchant-Portal correlation. Posting is not the end of the campaign. We log every delivered review’s status daily for 30 days and watch your public-side Merchant Portal indicators for any unexpected movement on your rolling quality score. Reviews filtered inside the window are replaced under the guarantee; listings showing unusual quality-score decay (which is rare but does happen during platform-wide filter updates) get a proactive Telegram alert so we can pause subsequent delivery and investigate.
How to Buy DoorDash Reviews — 3 Simple Steps
Step 1 — Free listing audit (24 hours). Send us your DoorDash restaurant URL on Telegram. If you run parallel Uber Eats or Grubhub listings, include those too. Within 24 hours you receive a written summary: current category rank, rolling review velocity, visible quality indicators, any existing filter signals, and a recommended campaign pace. Green light, yellow (cool-down recommended), or red (decline with reasons). No payment at this stage.
Step 2 — Pick a tier and brief us on your operational specifics. Choose a package — most independent restaurants start at the 10-review tier. Tell us your packaging approach (insulated bags, specific lid styles, how hot food arrives at 30 minutes), your top-margin menu items, neighborhood specifics, and any delivery-experience angles you want highlighted. Our copywriters draft each review in your voice, tuned to DoorDash review norms (shorter, more operational than Google), and you approve every draft before anything posts.
Step 3 — Drip delivery and 30-day monitoring. Reviews post across 7 to 21 days depending on volume and baseline velocity. You get a Telegram update each time a review goes live. After the final review posts, we monitor daily for 30 days and replace anything filtered under the guarantee. Elapsed time from first message to last delivered review is typically two to four weeks. Everything happens in a single Telegram thread — no dashboards, no forms. Start a Telegram conversation here.
Paid vs Organic DoorDash Reviews — Which One Wins?
Organic DoorDash reviews are the gold standard. They are free, infinitely scalable, and they carry the strongest signal to the algorithm because DoorDash’s filter trusts behavioral patterns it has watched accumulate over months. Every restaurant should run an organic ask-for-review program — in-bag cards, post-delivery SMS reminders (where CAN-SPAM / TCPA-compliant), QR codes on receipts. The honest version of this advice is that organic alone is rarely fast enough.
The gap is what paid reviews fill. A new ghost kitchen launching on DoorDash cannot wait six months to organically accumulate the 40 reviews its established competitors already have. A restaurant recovering from a run of bad-weather one-star reviews needs to dilute the damage faster than organic can compensate. A franchise launching a new location needs visible social proof on day one to justify the DoorDash Ads spend it is already running to drive launch orders. Paid reviews — done correctly — close those time-to-credibility gaps in weeks instead of months.
| Factor | Organic DoorDash Reviews | Paid Reviews (done right) |
|---|---|---|
| Speed | 4–8 months for 30+ reviews on a new listing | 2–4 weeks per batch |
| Cost per review | $0 direct, $10–30 in bag-insert / SMS / staff time | $9–$14 all-in |
| Rating impact | High but slow, vulnerable to bad-luck 1-star noise | Targeted, calibrated to hit 4.5+ threshold |
| Category rank | Slow, reviews trickle in faster than rank moves | 10–30 position lift in 4–6 weeks |
| DashPass rail eligibility | Whenever you cross threshold organically | Can target threshold deliberately |
| Guarantee if a review drops | None | 30-day free replacement |
| Best for | Long-term restaurant brand building | New launches, ghost kitchens, rating recovery |
The right answer for almost every restaurant is both. Run the organic program continuously, use paid campaigns to fix specific gaps. We frequently work with operators who are also running in-bag card programs — the two streams co-exist cleanly, and the combined velocity stays inside DoorDash’s organic-looking envelope as long as the paid drip is paced against the baseline.
What Makes Review Sell Different for DoorDash
Three operational practices that no competitor in this category runs, listed in order of how much they actually matter.
The pre-campaign listing audit. We are the only vendor that audits your DoorDash listing before taking payment and declines orders that look unsafe. About one in eight prospective orders gets declined. That decline rate is the single biggest reason our food-delivery retention numbers (95% at 30 days, 88% at 12 months) sit roughly 25 percentage points above industry averages. Other vendors take every order, deliver, and let the filter chips fall where they may.
Platform-separated reviewer pools. For operators running DoorDash plus Uber Eats or Grubhub, we never use the same reviewer account across two delivery apps. Delivery-platform fraud-consortium data makes cross-platform footprints one of the highest-signal detection patterns; pool separation is what makes parallel multi-platform campaigns structurally safe. See the food-delivery hub for the multi-platform flow.
Published retention data and a public decline rate. We post our food-delivery 30-day retention (95%), 12-month retention (88%), listing-suspension count (0), and order-decline rate (~12%) openly. If those numbers ever drift, we update them publicly rather than quietly hide the change. No competitor in this category publishes a decline rate, because publishing one would force them to actually have one.
We will also tell you when buying reviews is the wrong move. If your underlying problem is consistently cold food arriving at customers, persistent wrong-order rates, or a delivery-partner experience that is genuinely bad, more 5-star reviews accelerate the leak instead of plugging it. We have walked away from orders for restaurants with documented food-safety issues and for operators whose Merchant Portal quality score showed a persistent downward trajectory unrelated to rating noise. That is not noble — it is just the only way the retention numbers above stay true over time.
Ready to Buy DoorDash Reviews? Start on Telegram
Skip the contact form. Open Telegram, message us your DoorDash restaurant URL (and your Uber Eats / Grubhub URLs if you run multi-platform), and you will have your free listing audit inside 24 hours. From there it is your call — green light to a tier, a recommended cool-down, or a clean walk-away with no payment ever taken. The whole campaign happens in that single thread: audit, brief, draft approvals, drip delivery updates, and 30 days of post-delivery monitoring.
The first message can be as short as: “Hi, I’d like a listing audit for [your DoorDash URL] and a quote for ~10 DoorDash reviews.” We take it from there. Open the Telegram thread now or browse the full food-delivery platform coverage to scope a multi-platform campaign across DoorDash, Uber Eats, and Grubhub together.
Our Advantages
Why Review Sell for DoorDash Reviews?
Here's why thousands of businesses trust us to manage their DoorDash review campaigns:
- 1
DashPass-Aware Campaign Structuring
DashPass subscribers see a curated rail that aggressively filters for top-rated restaurants in each category. We target the specific rating threshold (typically 4.5+) that gets a restaurant into that rail for your ZIP code, and pace the campaign so you cross it with enough margin to stay there through normal rating fluctuation.
- 2
Aged Customer-Profile Accounts Only
Every reviewer account we assign has a real DoorDash order history on the platform — minimum of a dozen delivered orders across unrelated restaurants before the account is ever used for client work. Fresh accounts without order history are the #1 signal DoorDash's filter uses to remove reviews; we never touch them.
- 3
Residential-IP Session Isolation
Each reviewer logs in from a unique residential IP in the metro area your restaurant serves, on a device fingerprint that has never been used for another client's campaign. The IP/device isolation is what separates a review that sticks from one that gets filtered in the first 72 hours.
- 4
Copy Tuned to DoorDash Review Norms
DoorDash reviews skew shorter and more operational than Google reviews — customers mention food temperature on arrival, packaging, delivery speed, order accuracy. Our copywriters write to that norm using your packaging details, signature dishes, and neighborhood specifics. You approve every draft.
- 5
Staggered Drip Over 7–21 Days
Review velocity is the loudest signal to the DoorDash filter. We calibrate the campaign drip to sit at 1.5–2.5× your listing's rolling review baseline — fast enough to move your rating, slow enough to blend into organic growth. Larger campaigns automatically stretch to 21 days.
- 6
Cross-Platform Pool Separation
If you run parallel campaigns on Uber Eats or Grubhub, we never use the same reviewer pool across platforms. Delivery apps share fraud-consortium data on footprint patterns; pool separation is what lets multi-platform campaigns run simultaneously without triggering cross-platform flags.
- 7
30-Day Post-Delivery Monitoring
We log every delivered review daily for 30 days and replace anything filtered under our standard guarantee. We also watch your Merchant Portal quality score and flag you immediately if the rolling average moves unexpectedly — early warning lets us pause or adjust before a small filter event becomes a larger one.
- 8
Telegram-Native Operations
Listing audit, brief, draft approvals, delivery status, monitoring alerts — everything in one Telegram thread. Real human responses, typically inside an hour. No dashboards to log into, no ticket queues, no bots.
- 9
Published Retention Data
30-day retention on food-delivery campaigns: 95%. 12-month retention: 88%. Listing suspensions: 0. These are operational numbers, not marketing claims — we will walk you through the cohort data on Telegram before you place an order.
Should You Proactively Get DoorDash Reviews or Rely on Organic?
Organic DoorDash reviews are valuable, but they're slow and unpredictable. The average business receives one unsolicited review for every 50–100 customers, and most of those come from dissatisfied customers who are motivated to complain. Satisfied customers rarely take the time to write a review unless prompted. This creates an inherent negative bias in organic review profiles that unfairly hurts good businesses.
Proactively building your DoorDash review profile through our service gives you control over the narrative. You're not gaming the system, you're correcting the structural imbalance that exists in how reviews are collected organically. Businesses that wait for organic reviews alone often lose customers to competitors with stronger review profiles, even when their actual product or service is superior.
| Factor | Organic DoorDash Reviews | DoorDash Reviews via Review Sell |
|---|---|---|
| Time to 25 reviews | 6–18 months (industry average) | 2–3 weeks with natural drip |
| Control over review copy | Zero — customers write whatever they want | Full — you approve every draft before posting |
| Star rating stability | One 1-star review can crater a low-volume profile | Consistent 4.7–5.0 average, offsets negatives |
| Local Pack impact | Slow — reviews trickle in faster than ranking moves | Measurable within 4–8 weeks |
| Guarantee if a review drops | None — gone is gone | 30-day free replacement |
| Cost per acquired customer (CPA) | Free in dollars, costly in time & lost leads | $14 per review → typically pays back on first conversion |
Safety, Detection & Risk
Is It Safe to Buy DoorDash Reviews?
Straight answers to the three questions every buyer asks before placing an order. No dodging, no hedging — the honest version.
Is it safe to buy DoorDash reviews in 2026?
Safety depends almost entirely on how the reviews are delivered. Reviews posted in bulk from fresh, low-activity accounts in a single day get detected quickly and trigger profile warnings. The safe method uses aged accounts with genuine posting histories, varied IP addresses, drip delivery over several days, and original review copy written for your specific business. That's the exact method we use, and it's why our 30-day retention rate sits at 94% and our 12-month retention holds at 89%. When someone says "don't buy DoorDash reviews," they usually mean "don't buy cheap bot-farm reviews" — a caveat we fully agree with.
Can DoorDash detect bought reviews?
DoorDash's spam algorithms look for patterns: identical device fingerprints, repeated IPs, rapid posting velocity from new accounts, copy-pasted review text, and posting times clustered within minutes. The system does not look at whether a review was paid for — it can't. It looks for signals of inauthenticity. We defeat detection by using reviewer accounts that pass every organic-behavior test: real profile photos, multi-year posting history across other businesses, reviews spaced days apart from different IPs and devices, and unique copy that mentions specific services. As long as a review looks like a real customer left it, DoorDash treats it like one.
Will I get banned for buying DoorDash reviews?
Across thousands of delivered campaigns we have zero profile suspensions tied to our work. The businesses that do get banned almost always fall into one of two traps: they ordered a huge volume from a cheap provider that batch-posted from a server farm, or they asked for reviews praising products and services the business doesn't actually offer (that triggers DoorDash's fraud filters, not its spam filters). We avoid both. If you ever do receive a DoorDash warning we coach you through the response, pause delivery, and replace anything removed inside the 30-day window — at no cost. Our interests line up with yours: a suspended profile doesn't buy any more reviews.
Common Questions
Frequently Asked Questions About DoorDash Reviews
Can I actually buy DoorDash reviews safely in 2026? +
Will DoorDash suspend my listing for buying reviews? +
How quickly will my category rank improve after a campaign? +
What is DashPass and how do reviews affect eligibility? +
Does my DoorDash Merchant Portal quality score actually matter? +
How do you handle reviews for ghost kitchens or virtual brands? +
Can you run DoorDash, Uber Eats, and Grubhub campaigns in parallel? +
What should DoorDash review copy actually say? +
Do you need access to my Merchant Portal or DoorDash account? +
What is the minimum order and what is a sensible starter size? +
Do you replace reviews that get filtered after delivery? +
How do I start? +
Take the Next Step, Build Your DoorDash Review Profile
Every day without a strong DoorDash review profile is a day your competitors have the advantage. Join 2,000+ businesses that have used Review Sell to build credibility, improve rankings, and win more customers.
Our team is ready to scope your campaign, draft a custom strategy, and get started within 24 hours. No contracts, no long-term commitments, just results.
Talk to a Human
Got questions about DoorDash reviews? Scan, chat, done.
Point your phone camera at the QR code and you will land in a Telegram chat with our review team in seconds. We will scope your campaign, confirm pricing (including the 5% bulk discount and the extra 5% for crypto payments), and start delivery inside the same conversation.
- ✓ Real humans, no bots, average reply under 1 hour
- ✓ Custom quotes for DoorDash reviews and multi-platform bundles
- ✓ 30-day replacement guarantee on every order