The Shared Mobility services (eg Ride-Hailing, Carsharing, e-Scooter) will be extremely popular in the coming years. By 2028, it is estimated that 25% of the world population will use services. In practice, an increase of 1.4 billion users in 2025 to over 2 billion to 2028 is expected. As cities are looking for solutions for sustainable mobility, common movement not only projects as a trend, but as an essential digital transformation of movements.

According to the survey “Shared Mobility Market 2025–2030”, users of these services will increase by 46% in just three years, from 1.4 billion in 2025 to over $ 2 billion to 2028. This rise is not accidental: a key lever of growth is the integration of Micromobility services, such as e-scooters and e-bikes, e-bikes, e-bikes, Travel platforms.

Increase from 1.4 billion users in 2025 to over 2 billion users by 2028

“Juniper’s new study brings to light an impressive prediction: By 2028, more than 2 billion people worldwide will use common travel services-from e-scooters and e-bikes, to ride-haailing and carsharing. Mobility ”is established as a basic form of urban movement”, Analysts of the Research Society comment.

Underlining that Shared Mobility is on the way to become a way of moving for 1 in 4 people worldwide, research emphasizes that “This transition depends on the cooperation between companies and cities, as well as the necessary infrastructure, eg micro-road networks, parking lots, connecting to MMMs).”

Rise

The possibility of booking and combined use of multiple means of transport through an application – be it a bike or a taxi – radically changes the daily movement of citizens. However, the study warns: In order to achieve the full potential of these services, deeper integration is required by public means of transport.

This means practically creating common travel hubs, where users will be able to leave their e – scooter and board a bus, subway or train immediately. Juniper points out that the absence of cooperation between private providers (such as Ride-Hailing companies) and public transport is a major obstacle. Different technological platforms, lack of common planning and inadequate Pick-Up/Drop-off points are deterrent to adopting common-scale common movement. That is why it proposes the adoption of common technological standards and policies that will enhance interoperability.

The strategic significance of Shared Mobility is not limited to citizens’ service. It is now one of the main pillars of sustainable urban development, helping to reduce traffic congestion, environmental footprint and dependence on private vehicles. For cities, the challenge turns into an opportunity: to design modern, multimodal transport networks, user -friendly and environment.

The survey covers 61 countries and includes over 60,000 data points, thus offering a global image and opportunities in the travel industry. It also highlights which providers are at the top of the innovation and who are late to adapt.