As the restaurant industry faces continued operational challenges and indoor dining constraints loom across the country, many consumers are turning to food delivery apps, according to eMarketer, which estimates that the number of smartphone food delivery app users will rise 25.2 percent to 45.6 million this year.

eMarketer’s Rimma Kats reports that this figure is expected to decrease slightly in 2021, to 44.1 million, as restaurants likely reopen to indoor diners. But eMarketer also anticipate continued adoption of these apps throughout our forecast period ending in 2023, when the number of users will be 53.9 million.
Companies like Grubhub and Uber Eats have seen an influx of usage during the pandemic, she said. In its most recent earnings, Grubhub reported that the number of active diners grew to 27.5 million in Q2 2020 from 20.3 million in Q2 2019—an increase of 35 percent.

“The strong trends we observed in April persisted throughout the quarter with year-over-year growth of daily average grubs [orders] accelerating each month," Grubhub president and CFO Adam DeWitt said in a company statement. "With that strength continuing in July, it is becoming clear that the current environment has advanced the secular shift toward online food ordering. We remain confident that focusing on restaurant supply and diner loyalty will enable us to keep growing in a sustainable and profitable manner."

Meanwhile, Uber said in its Q2 2020 earnings release on August 6 that more restaurants, including Baskin Robbins, Chopt Creative Salad and A&W Restaurants, have joined its Eats platform, Kats noted.