'Uber For Kids' Is Shutting Down After Failing to Get More FundingThe company, founded in 2014, said on Thursday that would cease operations this week after failing to raise more funding to support itself.

ByKia Kokalitcheva

This story originally appeared onFortune Magazine

Getty
Shuddle ferries children.

Shuddle, a Bay Area startup that ferried children to school and after-school activities, is shutting down.

The company, founded in 2014, said on Thursday that would cease operations this week after failing to raise more funding to support itself, according to a report in theSan Francisco Chronicleand later confirmed toFortuneby the company.

"We worked hard with our existing investors to find new financial resources that would help us continue to grow. But, we could not raise the funding required to continue operations," the company said in a statement toFortune.

Shuddle声名狼籍,n referred to an "Uber for kids," raised $12.2 million in venture capital. It is just the latest so-called "on-demand" service, once a hot niche in Silicon Valley, to shut its doors.

Last year, home cleaning serviceHomejoyand virtual assistant startupZirtualshut down, for example. Parking startups Vatler and Carbon have also closed their doors recently.

To use Shuddle, parents booked a ride by noon the day before they needed it and could track their child's driver and ride in real-time through the mobile app. Shuddle provided both private rides as well as kiddie carpools.

Unlike ride-hailing services like Lyft and Uber, Shuddle and its competitors like HopSkipDrive in Los Angeles and Zum and Kango in the Bay Area all performed driver background checks and training they claim are on par with those of child care providers.

But like these classic car services, they have to keep increasing -- and balancing -- customer demand and driver supply to make the math work. In the case of Shuddle, a single ride's average price was $24, according a Shuddle spokeswoman.

According to the company, it has completed 65,000 rides during its operations, and its business grew by 50 percent in the last six months. But it wasn't enough.

In recent months, Shuddle had undergone a management shuffle. Founder and former CEO Nick Allen ceded the reins to current Shuddle CEO Doug Aley in November.

Shuddle will stop providing rides on Friday.

Wavy Line
Kia Kokalitcheva is a reporter atFortune.

Related Topics

Business News

Google Engineers Rake in Big Bucks with Base Salaries up to $718,000, According to a New Report

The data comes from an internal spreadsheet shared among Google employees, comprised of information from over 12,000 U.S. workers for 2022.

Business News

'That Cannot Be Right': McDonald's in Connecticut Goes Viral For $18 McNuggets, Burgers

The McDonald's is located at a rest stop in Darien, Connecticut.

Business News

This Is the Most Unsanitary Cruise Ship, According to the CDC

The CDC ranked each ship based on tests from eight major areas on board. Here are the most (and least) sanitary.

Business News

'Soul Crushing': Internet Sleuths Notice Something Is Very Off With This Condo Listing

From the grey carpets to the fluorescent lights, it's obvious that this home was not always a home.

Business News

Angry Customers Boycotting Bud Light Haven't Meaningfully Impacted Sales, Says Anheuser-Busch CEO

AB InBev CEO Michel Doukeris addressed the controversy on an earnings call.