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PHOENIX — Uber is launching a pilot program intended to help the ride-hailing service’s drivers draw their pay faster, an effort that might also fend off emerging payday lenders who are targeting drivers.

Uber will allow drivers to deposit their earnings from each ride into an account with GoBank, a subsidiary of the prepaid debit card company Green Dot. Uber won’t charge any fees for the service, and GoBank will not charge a monthly fee so long as drivers access their accounts at least once every six months. Should it go untouched for longer, drivers would face a monthly fee of $8.95.

San Francisco-based Uber pays its drivers once a week, sometimes leading to financial stress for some members of its largely low- to middle-income workforce.

The pilot program, which Uber is launching in San Francisco and a few other cities, is a direct challenge to companies that offer drivers faster payment in exchange for high fees. Drivers have been increasingly vocal about the need for alternatives, Uber executives said.

“Our drivers should not have to pay for this technology,” said Wayne Ting, Uber’s general manager for the San Francisco Bay Area.

The lack of an option at Uber — by far the largest of the ride-hailing app companies — to pay drivers instantly has increasingly resulted in services going into the business of providing cash advances or deposit services to Uber drivers and other members of the so-called “freelance economy.”

One recently launched service, Clearbanc, charges $2 a day any time an Uber or Lyft driver wants to have money deposited into a Clearbanc account. If a driver works five days a week and wants to be paid at the end of each shift, Clearbanc’s current fee structure would cost a driver $10 a week or roughly $40 a month. That’s far more than any standard bank account or prepaid debit card charges.

Uber competitor Lyft recently launched an instant pay program, but it requires drivers to deposit at least $50 and charges a 50-cent fee for each deposit.

There are other payday advance services, including Activehours, which asks its users to pay whatever they think the service is worth. Another startup, Even, charges $3 a week for its service, which allows its users to “even” out their earnings each week to keep a person’s income more stable.

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