Los Angeles runs on hunger. With 88 cities within one county and a food culture that ranges from Koreatown BBQ to Malibu grain bowls, the delivery market here is unlike any other in the US.
According to Statista, the US online food delivery market crossed $28 billion in 2025, with LA ranking among the top three cities by order volume. That growth has created fierce competition between platforms. Every app burns cash on promos, restaurants battle commission fees, and riders sprint through traffic trying to keep your food hot.
So which app is actually worth your trust and your credit card? The answer isn’t one-size-fits-all. The best food delivery apps Los Angeles residents rely on depend entirely on your neighborhood, cuisine preference, and tolerance for delivery fees. This guide cuts through the noise and gives you a straight verdict on all 15.
Key Takeaways
- DoorDash dominates. It holds roughly 67% of the LA restaurant delivery market; no other app comes close in sheer coverage.
- Free delivery is almost always subscription-gated. DashPass, Eats Pass, and Prime save heavy users $15 to $30 monthly on fees alone.
- Uber Eats wins on speed. In dense neighborhoods such as West Hollywood and Silver Lake, it consistently outperforms competitors in delivery times.
- New challengers are real. Gopuff and Foxtrot are disrupting traditional delivery with 15 to 30-minute windows.
- Fee comparison before ordering matters. Comparing apps before placing an order saves LA residents an average of $4 to $9 per order.
- Liquid Technologies builds the technology stack behind apps like these: faster architecture, smarter AI, and more scalable platforms from day one.
Top 15 Food Delivery Apps in Los Angeles
The top 15 food delivery apps in Los Angeles are ranked here based on real-world experience, not ad spend. Each entry covers ratings, launch year, pros, cons, and who each app genuinely serves best.
Ready to launch the next big food delivery app in Los Angeles?
Let’s design and develop a custom mobile app that competes with the industry leaders and drives real revenue for your business.
Schedule a Free ConsultationDoorDash
| Downloads | 50M+ |
| App Store | 4.8 |
| Play Store | 4.7 |
| Launched | 2013 |
DoorDash is the undisputed leader in food delivery services in Los Angeles. With coverage stretching from Echo Park to Calabasas and a 67% LA market share, it connects more restaurant partners than any competitor. The DashPass subscription transforms it from a convenient option into a near-daily driver for anyone who orders regularly.
| Pros | Cons |
| Widest restaurant selection across all LA neighborhoods, from the central city to the outer suburbs. | Surge pricing during peak hours can unexpectedly double your delivery fee without a clear warning. |
| DashPass pays for itself quickly with daily use. The monthly fee savings are real and consistent | Customer service response times can be frustratingly slow when resolving order issues |
Best For: Anyone in LA who orders more than twice a week. DashPass transforms the economics of ordering and makes DoorDash the clear default choice.
Uber Eats
| Downloads | 75M+ |
| App Store | 4.7 |
| Play Store | 4.5 |
| Launchd | 2014 |
Uber Eats wins on speed and polish. The app experience is genuinely excellent, clean, intuitive, and tightly integrated with Uber rides. For West LA, Silver Lake, and Downtown neighborhoods, Uber Eats consistently delivers faster than competitors. It’s also the best food delivery app, offering free delivery to existing Uber users, since Eats Pass bundles with Uber One for combined ride and food savings.
| Pros | Cons |
| Eats Pass bundles with Uber One, so ride and food savings combine into a single subscription payment | Smaller restaurant selection compared to DoorDash in outer LA neighborhoods and the Valley |
| The group ordering feature is genuinely useful for coordinating office lunches and household meals together | Service fees accumulate quickly on orders without a subscription and significantly increase the total cost |
Best For: Existing Uber users already paying for Uber One, and anyone for whom delivery speed is the top priority above all other factors.
Grubhub
| Downloads | 30M+ |
| App Store | 4.6 |
| Play Store | 4.1 |
| Launched | 2004 |
Grubhub is a veteran of delivery, and it shows in both its strong restaurant partnerships and its occasionally dated UI. For budget-conscious users and Amazon Prime Student members who get Grubhub+ free, it’s one of the smartest choices for delivery food in Los Angeles without overpaying on fees.
| Pros | Cons |
| Free Grubhub+ for Amazon Prime members represents exceptional value that most users completely overlook. | The app’s interface feels outdated compared to DoorDash and Uber Eats in terms of design and features. |
| Perks program rewards frequent users with cash-back on repeat orders from participating restaurants. | Delivery reliability in the San Fernando Valley is inconsistent and disappoints users in those areas regularly |
Best For: Amazon Prime members and budget-first users who order from established chain restaurants and want to minimize monthly delivery costs.
Instacart
| Downloads | 40M+ |
| App Store | 4.8 |
| Play Store | 4.6 |
| Launched | 2012 |
Instacart redefined grocery delivery and now serves LA’s entire premium grocery ecosystem, with Whole Foods, Sprouts, Gelson’s, and Ralphs operating here. With same-day delivery and real-shopper produce selection, it’s an essential tool for busy Angelenos who prioritize fresh food over fast food.
| Pros | Cons |
| Access to premium LA grocery stores that no restaurant delivery app covers is a unique and real advantage. | Item markups above in-store prices are steep and can surprise first-time users at checkout. |
| Real-time chat with your shopper prevents substitution disasters and keeps your order completely accurate. | Not a restaurant delivery platform; strictly limited to grocery and retail products. |
Best For: Health-conscious LA residents who prefer fresh groceries delivered over restaurant food, particularly near Whole Foods and Sprouts locations.
Postmates (Now Part of Uber Eats)
| Download | 10M+ |
| App Store | 4.6 |
| Play Store | 4.2 |
| Launched | 2011 |
Postmates was born in LA and retains city-native DNA even after its merger with Uber Eats. For longtime users, the Postmates interface remains within the Uber ecosystem, preserving loyalty perks and restaurant relationships. It remains one of the most culturally tuned platforms for LA residents who discovered it first and prefer its curated local selection.
| Pros | Cons |
| Deep local restaurant relationships built over a full decade of operating in the LA market | No fully absorbed into Uber Eats, losing its independent identity and standalone features entirely. |
| Alcohol delivery integration is seamless and covers a wide range of spirits, wine and beer | The standalone Postmates app no longer functions and redirects all users to the Uber Eats platform |
Best For: Legacy Postmates loyalists who want to preserve their order history and ensure their LA favorites remain listed within the Uber Eats ecosystem.
Gopuff
| Downloads | 10M+ |
| App Store | 4.6 |
| Play Store | 4.3 |
| Launched | 2013 |
Gopuff doesn’t deliver from restaurants. It delivers from its own micro-warehouses across LA, which means 15-minute delivery times that feel borderline impossible. Snacks, drinks, OTC medicine, household essentials; if it’s 2 AM and you need anything other than a full restaurant meal, Gopuff wins the race every single time.
| Pros | Cons |
| Delivery under 30 minutes is the norm, not the exception, a genuinely impressive operational achievement. | No restaurant meals; it is limited entirely to convenience and grocery-type products from its warehouse network. |
| Fam membership at $7.99/month is the cheapest subscription in the entre deliver app | Coverage in the outer LA suburbs, such as Pomona and Lancaster, remains thin and inconsistent for residents |
Best For: Night owls, spontaneous snackers, and anyone who needs household essentials delivered in under 30 minutes without leaving home.
Caviar
| Downloads | 5M+ |
| App Store | 4.7 |
| Play Store | 4.3 |
| Launched | 2012 |
Caviar is DoorDash’s premium tier, the velvet rope of food delivery. It focuses exclusively on curated, high-end LA restaurants that don’t appear on the main DoorDash platform. Think Nobu Malibu, Providence, and n/naka. For a date-night dinner at home or an elevated business meal, Caviar positions itself as the only serious option for quality-first ordering in Los Angeles.
| Pros | Cons |
| Access to LA’s top-rated restaurants that carefully guard their delivery exclusively from other platforms. | Premium pricing for both food and fees makes every order feel like a deliberate investment. |
| Presentation and packaging standards are noticeably higher than standard delivery, and food genuinely arrives better. | Limited to high-end restaurants only, making it a special-occasion app rather than a daily-use platform. |
Best For: Foodies and professionals in Beverly Hills, Bel Air, or Pacific Palisades who want a restaurant-quality experience delivered to their door.
ChowNow
| Downloads | 3M+ |
| App Store | 4.5 |
| Play Store | 4.0 |
| Launched | 2011 |
ChowNow is the ethical choice in LA delivery. It charges restaurants dramatically lower commission fees than DoorDash or Uber Eats, which means more money stays with local restaurateurs. When you order through ChowNow, you directly support the independent restaurants that make Los Angeles’s delivery food so culturally rich and genuinely diverse.
| Pros | Cons |
| Direct support for independent LA restaurants, the commission fees ChowNow charges are genuinely fair. | The smaller selection means your favorite chains probably won’t appear anywhere on the platform |
| Often cheaper total order price since restaurants don’t inflate menu prices to absorb platform commissions | The app experience lacks the polish and features of major delivery platforms in navigation and search. |
Best For: Community-minded Angelenos who want their money to support local restaurants and independent operators rather than publicly traded platforms.
EZcater
| Downloads | 2M+ |
| App Store | 4.6 |
| Play Store | 4.2 |
| Launchd | 2007 |
EZcater is the only platform on this list built exclusively for business catering. For LA production studios, tech firms, and law offices needing reliable catering for 10 to 200 people, EZcater solves a problem consumer apps completely ignore. Its LA restaurant network for office catering is unmatched and saves corporate coordinators genuine hours of planning time every month.
| Pros | Cons |
| Built for large-order reliability, restaurants are vetted specifically for handling catering-scale volume. | Zero relevance for individual consumers, this is strictly a business-to-business delivery solution. |
| Invoice and expense management tools make corporate billing straightforward and audit-ready. | Minimum order sizes exclude smaller teams and informal office launches from using the platform. |
Best For: Office managers, executive assistants, and event coordinators planning large-scale LA office catering for teams or events.
BiteSquad
| Downloads | 2M+ |
| App Store | 4.4 |
| Play Store | 4.0 |
| Launched | 2012 |
BiteSquad fills the delivery gap in suburban LA. While DoorDash and Uber Eats concentrate density in core urban areas, BiteSquad maintains stronger relationships with restaurants in Pasadena, Burbank, and the South Bay. For residents outside the delivery bullseye, this often means more options and more competitive fees than those charged by the dominant platforms during surge periods.
| Pros | Cons |
| Stronger suburban LA coverage than the major platforms in several key zones outside central LA. | Brand awareness and restaurant selection lag far behind the top three platforms across the city. |
| Customer service is notably more responsive than the industry average, a real differentiator in issue resolution. | App updates are infrequent, creating a slightly behind-the-times user experience compared to the leaders. |
Best For: LA suburban residents in the Valley, Pasadena, or South Bay who feel consistently underserved by the dominant delivery apps.
Shipt
| Downloads | 5M+ |
| App Store | 4.8 |
| Play Store | 4.5 |
| Launched | 2014 |
Shipt is Target’s delivery arm and plays that role exceptionally well. For LA families who shop Target weekly, Shipt makes same-day delivery of groceries, home goods, and pharmacy items genuinely effortless. The $99 annual membership is one of the best value propositions in Los Angeles’ food delivery market for households with consistent Target shopping habits.
| Pros | Cons |
| Same-day delivery from Target, CVS, and other major LA retailers, all accessible from a single app. | Primarily grocery and retail focused, not a restaurant delivery solution for meal orders. |
| Shopper quality is consistently high, with strong community-sourced ratings that filter out unreliable shoppers. | Retailer selection is narrower than Instacart’s in the greater Los Angeles area for grocery shopping. |
Best For: Target-loyal LA households who want effortless same-day delivery on groceries, household goods, and everyday essentials.
Slice
| Downloads | 3M+ |
| App Store | 4.6 |
| Play Store | 4.3 |
| Launched | 2010 |
Slice does exactly one thing and does it better than anyone: pizza delivery from independent pizzerias. In a city like LA, where artisan pizza culture runs deep, from Pizzana in Brentwood to Vito’s in West Hollywood, Slice connects you directly to the best pies without the commission overhead that hurts local shops on bigger platforms.
| Pros | Cons |
| Largest network of independent LA pizzerias not listed on any other major delivery platform. | Absolutely single-category: you cannot order anything other than pizza through the app at any time. |
| Orders go directly to the restaurant, meaning more of your money actually reaches the kitchen team. | No loyalty or subscription program to reward repeat ordering behavior among frequent pizza fans. |
Best For: Pizza enthusiasts who want access to LA’s best local pizzerias, not just chain options with inflated platform pricing.
Foxtrot
| Downloads | 1M+ |
| App Store | 4.7 |
| Play Store | 4.4 |
| Launched | 2013 |
Foxtrot is a curated corner store in app form. Premium wine, artisan snacks, local craft beer, and high-quality prepared foods, all delivered in under 30 minutes. For LA residents who view delivery as a lifestyle choice rather than just convenience, Foxtrot’s editorial product selection and design-forward packaging feel intentionally elevated and refreshingly distinct.
| Pros | Cons |
| Curated premium selection feels like a boutique shop rather than a warehouse fulfillment center. | Higher price points on almost everything compared to mainstream delivery alternatives in LA. |
| Alcohol and specialty food deliveries arrive faster than those from most dedicated restaurant delivery apps. | Limited LA location coverage compared to the established delivery incumbents serving the full city. |
Best For: Design-conscious Angelenos in West Hollywood or Los Feliz who treat what they eat and drink as a deliberate lifestyle statement.
Amazon Fresh
| Downloads | 50M+ |
| App Store | 4.5 |
| Play Store | 4.2 |
| Launched | 2016 |
If you’re already a Prime member, and statistically, most LA households are, Amazon Fresh is a no-brainer add-on. Same-day grocery delivery from Whole Foods and Amazon Fresh stores across LA with no extra subscription cost. The integration with your existing Amazon account makes reordering pantry staples effortless and genuinely frictionless for repeat buyers.
| Pros | Cons |
| Free same-day grocery delivery for Prime members with no additional subscription fee required. | Only meaningful if you already subscribe to Amazon Prime at the current annual rate. |
| Whole Foods integration gives Prime members premium LA grocery access at zero delivery upcharge. | Availability windows fill up quickly in dense LA zip codes during peak demand periods and on weekends. |
Best For: Prime subscribers who want to maximize their membership value, with grocery delivery already included in their monthly fee.
Walmart Delivery
| Downloads | 40M+ |
| App Store | 4.7 |
| Play Store | 4.4 |
| Launched | 2017 |
Walmart’s delivery platform quietly became one of the most competitive options for value-focused LA households. With Walmart+ offering $12.95 per month for delivery and extensive coverage across LA County, it is the go-to for families prioritizing grocery budgets. The selection spans groceries, electronics, and home goods, making it a genuine one-stop delivery solution for price-sensitive households.
| Pros | Cons |
| Walmart+ membership includes Paramount+ streaming, stacking entertainment value on top of delivery savings. | Brand perception doesn’t align with LA’s health-forward, organic grocery culture for many residents. |
| Unbeatable pricing on everyday groceries compared to premium grocery delivery alternatives in LA. | Customer service for delivery issues is inconsistent across LA service zones. |
Best For: Budget-conscious LA families who prioritize value and product variety over premium brand positioning and curated selection.
Liquid Technologies’ Vision for Long-Term Development
Most development shops write code. Liquid Technologies asks better questions first. Before a single line is written, we consider scale, market fit, and what the platform will need to be in three years. That mindset is why the apps they build don’t just launch, but they last.
Data over opinions. Liquid runs architecture reviews, A/B strategy sessions, and technology stack debates with a single filter: which decision best serves the product in year three, not just at launch? Short-term thinking is the enemy of good software, and we systematically resist it at every phase of mobile app development.
How Liquid Sees the Future
Liquid builds across the full delivery technology stack:
- Mobile App Development: iOS and Android, native and cross-platform
- UI/UX Design: Conversion-focused interfaces built for real users, not stakeholder presentations
- Artificial Intelligence: Demand forecasting, route optimization, and personalization engines
- MVP Design: Validated prototypes that tell you what to build before you commit to building it
- Real-Time Logistics Infrastructure: Driver apps, order management, and dispatch systems
- Payment Architecture: Multi-party payment splits, wallet integrations, and fraud prevention
- Analytics Dashboards: Restaurant performance, delivery metrics, and revenue attribution
Conclusion
The food delivery Los Angeles market rewards platforms built on real technology, not just marketing spend. If you’re on the other side of this equation and you’re building the next platform that reshapes how LA eats, you don’t need just a dev shop. You need a team that thinks about what your app will look like at a million users, not just a hundred. That’s what Liquid Technologies is built for.