Out-of-hours answering for UK taxi and private hire firms means a trained desk answers your line in your firm's name when your office is shut, takes the booking, and enters it into your dispatch software. It catches the evening, weekend-night, and early-hours fares that otherwise ring out to voicemail and go to a rival.
The cruel thing about taxi and private hire demand is that it peaks when your office is closed. Evenings, weekend nights, and the small hours are when the phone rings hardest and when most firms have nobody to answer it. Out-of-hours answering closes that gap. Here is why it matters and how it works without staffing a night office.
When the office is shut, the demand isn't
A booking line that rings out after hours is a booking line bleeding money. The caller doesn't leave a voicemail and wait — they ring the next firm and book. For private hire especially, where every fare must be pre-booked, an unanswered phone is a fare that legally couldn't happen any other way. The lost work concentrates in exactly the windows you can't staff.
Why voicemail doesn't cut it
Voicemail feels like a safety net. It isn't. People booking a cab want a car now or for a set time, not a callback whenever someone checks the messages. A voicemail in a taxi firm is a missed fare with a recording attached. The only thing that holds the booking is a human answering and taking it there and then.
Stop losing fares to voicemail. We pick up the calls your in-house team cannot staff.
What out-of-hours answering covers
A proper out-of-hours desk does the booking, not just message-taking. It answers in your firm's name and works inside your software:
- Answers the line in three rings, in your brand voice
- Takes the booking and enters it into Autocab, iCabbi, or your platform
- Handles account customers and standing instructions to your rules
- Manages no-shows and re-covers overnight
- Hands back a clean summary of the night's bookings each morning
How to start without staffing a night office
You don't hire a night team — you route the out-of-hours window to a desk that is already staffed at those hours. Start with the heaviest-loss window, usually evenings and weekend nights, prove the recovered fares against your old missed-call log, then widen as it pays for itself. Most firms find a handful of recovered fares a night covers the cost several times over.