From 147-second deliveries to KSh109K orders: Uber Eats unveils Kenya’s 2025 Cravings Report

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From 147-second deliveries to KSh109K orders: Uber Eats unveils Kenya’s 2025 Cravings Report

What do Kenya’s cravings say about the country? Quite a lot, it turns out. Uber Eats has released the 2025 Kenya Cravings Report, a light-hearted but telling look at the foods, habits, and hilarious special requests that shaped how Kenyans ate in 2025.

From fried chicken loyalists who know exactly which corner of the menu they want, to poetic special-request writers, to the customer who said “NO CHEESE” 24 times in one order, this inaugural report captures a nation that is busy, curious, unapologetically specific, and powered by convenience.

It also reflects the deeper story revealed in Uber’s 2023 Kenya Economic Impact Report: Kenyans increasingly rely on platforms like Uber and Uber Eats to save time, access local businesses, and create small moments that make every day easier.

In fact, Kenyan Uber Eats users save more than 448,000 hours a year by having meals and essentials delivered to their door, freeing up time for work, family, and life’s real priorities.

What Kenya craved in 2025

Food Fanatics

Fried Chicken Forever: Chicken reigns unchallenged as Kenya’s unofficial national craving. It was the most searched item on Uber Eats with tens of thousands of searches, and the busiest single store serving over 100 meals a day.
Pizza Power: Whether for movie nights, post-exam celebrations, or late-night hunger, pizza held onto its spot as Kenya’s second-most searched food.
Grocery on the Rise: From cooking oil and tomatoes to last-minute spaghetti emergencies, grocery delivery became a reliable household hack. One customer even had a 5-litre bottle of oil delivered in just 150 seconds.
The Big Spenders: One customer placed a premium drinks order worth KSh109,000, complete with high-end wines. Another went big with a KSh102,134 fast-food feast of nearly 20 burgers and sides. And then came the romantic, a “Lover’s Marathon” order costing KES 80,400.

The Super Users

The Everyday Eater: Kenya’s top eater placed 718 orders this year, averaging nearly two a day. At this point, their courier might greet them by name.
The High Roller: Another customer took a quality-over-quantity approach, placing fewer orders but spending more than KSh1.8 million in a year in total. Now that is a dedication to cravings!
The Perfect Pair: One courier and one customer were matched 59 times across 12 eateries. At this point, they are family.

Delivery Legends

The Marathoner: One courier rode 54,961 kilometres this year, more than the distance around the Earth.
The Machine: Another courier completed 6,866 trips, a true Uber Eats delivery champion, keeping the country fed, one meal at a time.
Fast and Furious: The fastest delivery clocked in at 147 seconds. That’s just enough time to reheat your leftovers from yesterday

Special requests that stole the show

The Dairy Protest: One determined user typed “NO CHEESE!!!” over 24 times. Message received.
The Lovers and the Poets: Some Kenyans turned order notes into love letters. One message praised their partner’s strength. Another thanked the restaurant staff for working a holiday shift… but still wanted extra cheese.
Kindness by the Plate: Kenyan customers sprinkled positivity across order notes, with Nairobi leading the country in “please” and “thank you,” followed by Kisumu and Mombasa.

Real Impact Beyond the Fun and Flavour

The inaugural Cravings Report reflects a deeper truth about how Kenyans live, work, and eat today. Uber Eats is supporting real economic value across the country, with the platform creating KSh534 million in additional revenue for restaurants in 2023, helping merchants reach more customers and grow sustainably.

Couriers are also a critical part of this story. Drivers and delivery partners earned KSh2.2 billion more than their next best alternative through flexible work on Uber’s platforms, with the value of flexibility itself estimated at KSh1.6 billion to their livelihoods.

“These insights show just how deeply Uber Eats is woven into everyday life in Kenya,” says Kui Mbugua, General Manager, Uber Eats Kenya. “Every order supports a courier, strengthens a local business, and brings more convenience and choice to customers. This is the food economy Kenya is building, and we’re proud to be part of it.”

And if the Cravings Report is anything to go by, Kenya’s appetite for convenience, creativity, and connection is only just getting started.

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