Stellantis' Free2move acquires car-sharing service ShareNow from BMW, Mercedes

Breana Noble
The Detroit News

The car-sharing mobility startup within the maker of Jeep will more than double in size, adding 14 European cities mostly in Germany to its service territory with the acquisition of ShareNow from the BMW and Mercedes-Benz groups, the company announced Tuesday.

Details of the deal, which is subject to antitrust reviews, weren't disclosed. The acquisition by Stellantis NV's Free2move of the free-floating car-sharing service, which is expected to close in September, marks the brand's largest step to growing its operations since its inception in 2016.

It will help to accelerate the expansion of Free2move services offering vehicle rentals by the minute, day or month, including in the United States, said Brigitte Courtehoux, the startup's CEO.

Stellantis NV's car-sharing service, Free2move, is acquiring ShareNow, a similar service from the BMW and Mercedes-Benz groups.

"What we are doing with ShareNow, when the closing will be done, here it enforces our leadership worldwide," she said. "In the U.S., we are rolling, and it will continue to grow in an organic way."

The sale of ShareNow, the 2019 creation of the joint venture between Daimler AG's car2go and BMW's DriveNow that left the North American market in early 2020, marks another exit by automakers in the car-sharing space. BMW and Mercedes-Benz instead say they will focus on digital multi-mobility and digital services related to the charging of electric vehicles.

Free2move operates a free-floating car-sharing service in seven cities in the United States and Europe. ShareNow will add 10,000 vehicles to Free2move's fleet of 2,500, and 3.2 million users to its existing 2 million. It wants to grow that to 15 million users worldwide by 2030 with almost $3 billion in annual revenue, up from $42 million last year.

"They didn't find the recipe," Courtehoux said of automakers that have sold and halted car-sharing services. "We already found the recipe."

She declined to detail Free2move's profits, but said the service achieved profitability in the second half of 2020 even as growth slowed amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Growth doubled last year and continues to pick up in 2022, Courtehoux said. 

At the core of its success, she said, is a full slate of service options to support customers. In addition to car-sharing and subscriptions, Free2move has a fleet management data platform for businesses like dealers that it uses in Europe and plans to expand in the United States.

It also offers parking services and has built an electric-vehicle charging network with 250,000 stations in Europe, which it expects to expand to the United States before the end of the year, starting with selling wall boxes.

"It's really a marketplace the customer will use per minute, per day, per month," she said. "It's about providing the whole experience to our customers."

Free2move will add more mobility hubs in the United States as well as make monthly on-demand subscriptions available in more cities. Neither service is available for now in Detroit. Its hubs are in Washington, D.C.; Portland, Oregon; Denver; Columbus, Ohio; and Austin, Texas.

Free2move will soon introduce electric vehicles to its U.S. fleets, made up of Jeep Renegades, some Alfa Romeos, and other vehicles, ramping up around 2025, Courtehoux said. Almost 90% of its fleet in Europe is electrified.

In the more distant future, Courtehoux looks forward to the deployment of autonomous vehicles in her fleet through Stellantis' partnership with Waymo LLC, the self-driving technology company of Google parent Alphabet Inc. There's no timeline, but the United States is likely to be one of the first place to see a Free2move service with autonomous vehicles.

"It will change the game," she said, noting the conveniences of ride-hailing service like that of Uber Technologies Inc. that bring the vehicle to the customer versus having to find a nearby vehicle for the customer to drive in the Free2move app.

"They will be the same, because you will not need the driver," Courtehoux said. "The car will come to you with no driver, and with Free2move, you will not have the car 100 meters (away), because it will be autonomous. It will come to you. It will be exactly the same business."

For now, by increasing deployment of EVs and increasing customer comfort with them, Free2move can help Stellantis to reach its electrification goals, including more than half of U.S. sales being all-electric by 2030. The biggest value, however, is the entrepreneurial mindset the startup takes as Stellantis attempts a transition to a sustainable mobility tech company, Courtehoux said.

"I was in the automotive side," said Courtehoux, who previously was the project manager on the launch of the Peugeot 208 supermini car. "I had the chance to have this new company in the new, digital world, and both have different skills. When you're able to link those skills ... you can be super, super strong."

bnoble@detroitnews.com

Twitter: @BreanaCNoble