Uber Home — Uber tab (rides) to Home — Courier tab (package delivery) flow
Uber's home — uber tab (rides) to home — courier tab (package delivery) flow moves users from Home — Uber tab (rides) to Home — Courier tab (package delivery) across 2 mapped iOS app screens. Use this path for mobile UX teardown work, QA coverage planning, and AI agent navigation context.
Why the Uber Home — Uber tab (rides) to Home — Courier tab (package delivery) flow matters
Navigation patternThis flow shows how Uber carries a user from Home — Uber tab (rides) to Home — Courier tab (package delivery) across real app states.
Testing coverageThe screen path gives QA and product teams concrete screens to verify, including visible UI density, transition order, and repeated mobile states.
Agent groundingAtlas makes this journey usable as navigation context for AI agents that need to understand the app before executing mobile tasks.
Screen path
Uber Home — Uber tab (rides) to Home — Courier tab (package delivery) screenshots
This page is a crawlable breakdown of one real mobile journey. The screenshots, step labels, and element counts make the Uber Home — Uber tab (rides) to Home — Courier tab (package delivery) path easier to compare against competing apps, reproduce during QA planning, and reuse as structured navigation context for app automation.
01
Home — Uber tab (rides)
Step 1 in the Uber Home — Uber tab (rides) to Home — Courier tab (package delivery) flow. Atlas detected 20 UI elements on this screen.
Home — Uber tab (rides)
02
Home — Courier tab (package delivery)
Step 2 in the Uber Home — Uber tab (rides) to Home — Courier tab (package delivery) flow. Atlas detected 13 UI elements on this screen.
Home — Courier tab (package delivery)
How to use it
Apply this flow to product and testing work
For product researchUse the ordered path to understand which screens appear before and after key actions, how much interface density the user sees, and where the app introduces extra decisions or interruptions.
For QA planningTurn each screen in the path into a coverage checkpoint. The screenshot sequence helps teams verify expected states, navigation transitions, and UI inventory without manually rediscovering the journey.