posting velocity //
Opens vs closes per day
Based on 115 events over 24 days. Green days had more opens than closes, red vice-versa. The dark line is the 7-day rolling average.
Multiple Locations
Posting timing (day/hour) is available only when there are at least 5 jobs with a real publish stamp spread across 3 distinct days. This company's source doesn't expose post times, or there isn't enough data yet — showing what we know for sure: how many jobs are open, in which domains, and at which seniority levels.
Showing: Israel. Click another pill to switch.
Open now
63
Total active openings across all sites
Δ 28-day
+63
Opens minus closes in the last 28 days
Δ 90-day
+63
Opens minus closes in the last 90 days
posting velocity //
Based on 115 events over 24 days. Green days had more opens than closes, red vice-versa. The dark line is the 7-day rolling average.
role mix //
The green layer is the current share of active openings by role. The grey dashed layer is the 90-day baseline — gaps between them show where the company is shifting its hiring mix.
seniority pyramid //
Distribution of active openings by seniority. The 'unknown' row groups jobs from sources that don't expose seniority.
geography //
Active openings by region. Click a row to see jobs in that area.
time on market //
Median
—
25th pct
22.2 days
75th pct
—
Based on 26 closed jobs and 63 still open (right-censored). Curve is Kaplan-Meier; band is the 95% CI.Low event count — the median will stabilise after ~24 more closures. Until then treat the values as indicative.
Window: 180 days back. Don't read the mean — the long tail biases it. Median and percentiles are the honest summary.
Republish rate
0.0%
0 / 26 of closed jobs reposted within 60 days
company intel · ai-generated
Updated 3d ago
Wolt was founded in Helsinki, Finland, in 2014 by a team that included Mikael Svärd, Juhani Mykkänen (also known as Juhani Mykkänen), Anssi Anttosalka, Oskari Pekkarinen, and several other co-founders. Mikael Svärd served as CEO from the company's founding and remained the public face of Wolt through its explosive growth phase and subsequent acquisition. The company was incorporated in Finland and the founding team identified a gap in the Northern European food delivery market, where incumbent services offered poor mobile UX and limited restaurant selection.
Wolt's global headquarters remain in Helsinki, Finland. In Israel, the company launched formal operations in 2021, with the Israel market office based in Tel Aviv. The Israeli operation expanded to cover Haifa, Jerusalem, and additional cities in the greater Tel Aviv metropolitan area (Gush Dan) over 2022–2023.
Wolt is not independently publicly traded. In November 2021, DoorDash (NYSE: DASH) announced an all-stock acquisition of Wolt valuing the company at approximately $8.1 billion. The transaction closed in August 2022. Wolt had previously raised over $856 million in venture capital prior to the acquisition, with its final pre-acquisition round being a $530 million Series F in January 2021 at a post-money valuation of approximately $5.1 billion. Since August 2022, Wolt operates as a semi-autonomous international subsidiary of DoorDash.
At the time of the DoorDash acquisition, Wolt employed approximately 7,000 people across 23 countries and 250 cities. As of 2024–2025, with expanded integration into DoorDash's global structure and new market entries, total headcount across the combined Wolt operation is estimated at 12,000–15,000 globally. The Israeli headcount is estimated at 50–150 direct employees, primarily focused on market operations, account management, and local Wolt Market warehouse management. R&D roles in Israel are rare, as core engineering remains concentrated in Helsinki, Berlin, and Prague.
Wolt's core product is a local commerce delivery platform: a consumer-facing mobile application that connects users with restaurants, grocery stores, pharmacies, and retail merchants, enabling on-demand delivery typically within 30–60 minutes. The single largest event of the past 12 months for Wolt globally was the November 2024 announcement by DoorDash of its acquisition of Deliveroo (LSE: ROO) for approximately £2.9 billion ($3.6 billion), which, if completed in 2025, will dramatically expand the footprint of the DoorDash/Wolt platform across Western Europe, particularly the United Kingdom. Wolt is a wholly owned subsidiary of DoorDash since August 2022.
Wolt's primary product line is the Wolt app — a marketplace platform available on iOS and Android that aggregates restaurant menus, grocery assortments, pharmacy inventories, and retail product catalogs, fulfilling orders via a fleet of independent courier partners. The Wolt app operates in approximately 25 countries, spanning Finland, Germany, Poland, Czech Republic, Greece, Israel, Japan, and a range of other European and Middle Eastern markets as of 2024.
The problem Wolt solves is the last-mile logistics fragmentation between merchants who cannot economically operate proprietary delivery fleets and consumers who demand rapid, trackable, on-demand fulfillment. In domain-specific terms, Wolt built the dispatch engine, routing algorithms, ETA prediction models, and courier management tooling that make sub-30-minute local delivery economically viable at scale across geographically diverse markets with varying traffic patterns and courier density.
Wolt's customers fall into two main groups. On the consumer side, the primary demographic is urban residents aged 25–45 in Tier 1 and Tier 2 European and Middle Eastern cities. On the merchant side, Wolt serves a mix of SMB restaurants and independent retailers, as well as enterprise accounts including McDonald's, KFC, Lidl, H&M, and large supermarket chains that use Wolt's logistics for their own delivery needs. The B2B product, Wolt for Work, is sold to HR managers and procurement officers at companies that want to provide subsidized employee meals — an important growth vertical in the post-COVID return-to-office cycle.
Wolt's B2C business is self-serve: consumers download the app for free, browse restaurants, and pay per order or subscribe to Wolt+. The B2B merchant-side is managed through field sales and inside sales teams operating in each city market, supplemented by a digital onboarding flow for smaller restaurants. Restaurant and retail commission rates are not fully publicly disclosed but are understood to range between 20% and 30% of the transaction value, varying by market and merchant size.
Wolt's proprietary dispatching engine is its clearest technical moat. Built entirely in-house, the engine manages real-time assignment of courier partners to orders, balancing courier proximity, predicted preparation time from each restaurant, and route optimization to minimize end-to-end delivery time while maximizing courier utilization. On the technology stack, Wolt's backend is primarily built in Kotlin and Python, hosted on Google Cloud Platform using Kubernetes for container orchestration, with Apache Kafka handling real-time event streaming. The mobile apps are built with React Native for cross-platform consistency. Wolt's data and ML teams work on demand forecasting models, dynamic pricing optimization, and search personalization within the app.
The Wolt app for consumers is the flagship product. It provides a single interface across all order categories — food, grocery, pharmacy, and retail — with real-time order tracking, live courier GPS position, and an integrated rating and review system. Launched in 2014 initially for restaurants only, the app evolved to cover multiple verticals by 2019 and was available in 23 countries by the time of the DoorDash acquisition in 2022.
Wolt Market is the company's quick-commerce product: a grocery delivery service operated from dark stores (micro-fulfillment centers) located in dense urban neighborhoods. Wolt Market promises delivery of grocery items within 15–30 minutes. The dark store model was piloted in 2020 and scaled aggressively in 2021–2022. In Israel, Wolt Market launched in Tel Aviv and Gush Dan in 2022. Globally, Wolt Market competes directly with Getir (Turkey), Gorillas (Germany, acquired by Getir in 2022), and Gopuff (United States). As of 2023–2024, Wolt Market was operational in dozens of European cities.
Wolt for Work is the enterprise B2B product, enabling companies to manage employee meal budgets, set ordering policies (time windows, spending caps per employee, approved restaurants), and receive consolidated invoices. Wolt for Work had thousands of corporate clients across Europe and Israel as of 2023 reporting, including technology firms, financial institutions, and large enterprises. The product was formalized as a distinct offering in 2019 and has grown significantly as companies implemented structured return-to-office programs in 2022–2024.
Wolt Drive is Wolt's logistics-as-a-service (LaaS) offering, providing third-party businesses access to Wolt's courier network via an API integration. Merchants not listed on the Wolt consumer app can use Wolt Drive for same-day or rapid delivery of their own products to their own customers. Wolt Drive competes with Stuart (owned by GeoPost/DPDgroup) and other last-mile delivery API providers. It was launched commercially in 2021 and represents Wolt's push beyond the consumer marketplace into infrastructure-level logistics.
Wolt+ is the company's subscription program, offering members waived delivery fees and exclusive discounts in exchange for a fixed monthly fee. Pricing for Wolt+ varies by country: approximately 9.99 EUR per month in Finland and Germany, with locally adjusted pricing in each market. Wolt+ launched in 2021 and was available across all Wolt markets by 2023. Wolt has not publicly announced SOC 2 or ISO 27001 certifications specific to its platform, though as a subsidiary of publicly listed DoorDash (NYSE: DASH), Wolt's security practices are subject to DoorDash's SEC-reportable compliance frameworks and the EU's GDPR requirements in European markets.
Uber Eats is Wolt's largest and most direct competitor across European markets. Uber Eats (part of Uber Technologies, NYSE: UBER) operates in virtually all the same Tier 1 and Tier 2 European cities where Wolt is active, including Germany, Poland, Finland, and the Czech Republic. Uber Eats benefits from massive global brand recognition and cross-promotion with Uber's ride-hailing product, while Wolt differentiates primarily on user experience quality, customer service responsiveness, and deeper local market relationships, particularly in Scandinavian and Central European cities where Wolt arrived first and built strong restaurant partnerships.
Deliveroo (LSE: ROO) is a significant indirect competitor, primarily dominant in the United Kingdom and in markets such as France and Belgium. As of November 2024, DoorDash announced a definitive agreement to acquire Deliveroo for approximately £2.9 billion — a transaction expected to close in 2025. If completed, this acquisition will fold Deliveroo into the broader DoorDash-Wolt ecosystem and effectively eliminate it as a standalone competitor, while simultaneously giving Wolt's parent company a strong foothold in the UK market, where Wolt itself had limited penetration.
Glovo, a Spanish food delivery platform owned by Delivery Hero (Frankfurt: DHER) since 2022, competes directly with Wolt in Southern and Eastern European markets including Poland, Romania, and portions of the Balkans. Delivery Hero is one of the largest food delivery conglomerates globally, and the Glovo-Delivery Hero combination provides meaningful scale and capital resources in overlapping geographies. Wolt has defended its position in markets like Poland and Czech Republic through first-mover advantage and operational excellence, but Glovo's Delivery Hero backing represents an ongoing structural competitive pressure.
In Israel specifically, the primary competitor is 10bis, a food ordering platform that was acquired by Just Eat Takeaway (AMS: TKWY) in 2021. 10bis had long dominated the Israeli corporate lunch market (Wolt for Work's primary battleground in Israel), but Wolt's entry in 2021 with a superior mobile experience and broader restaurant coverage eroded 10bis's consumer market share meaningfully through 2022–2023. Mishloach and other local Israeli delivery platforms operate in specific niches but are not Wolt's primary competitive concern.
Wolt does not appear in Gartner Magic Quadrant reports, as the food and local commerce delivery category is not covered by that framework. From a pricing-positioning standpoint, Wolt is positioned as a mid-to-premium service: delivery fees are not the lowest in each market, but Wolt competes on speed, reliability, and UX quality rather than on being the cheapest option. The Wolt+ subscription is priced to encourage frequency among high-value urban consumers. Key sector tailwinds include continued urbanization, growth in the quick-commerce grocery segment, and the post-COVID normalization of on-demand delivery as a recurring behavior. Key headwinds include tightening European regulation on gig-economy courier classification (paralleling California's AB5), and investor pressure on DoorDash to improve consolidated unit economics globally.
Wolt launched in Israel in 2021, entering Tel Aviv and the greater Gush Dan metropolitan area as its first Israeli market. By 2022, operations had expanded to include Haifa and Jerusalem, and by 2023 additional secondary cities in the Sharon and south-central regions were added. The Israel market office is based in Tel Aviv, consistent with Wolt's general model of locating country-level management in the primary metro of each market.
The Israeli employee headcount for Wolt direct employees is not publicly disclosed, but is estimated at between 50 and 150 based on LinkedIn headcount data and published job listings. Functions present in Israel include Country General Management, Restaurant and Retail Account Management, Courier Operations Management, Wolt Market local warehouse management, and Israel-focused Marketing. Finance, legal, and HR for Israel are typically managed as part of Wolt's regional EMEA structure rather than as dedicated Israeli teams. Independent courier partners (gig workers) in Israel number in the thousands and are not counted as direct employees.
In terms of recent moves, Wolt expanded its Wolt Market dark store operations in Tel Aviv during 2023, indicating market growth rather than contraction. No Israeli office closures or significant headcount reductions have been publicly reported for Wolt Israel in the 2023–2024 period. This contrasts with some other international delivery players that reduced Israeli operations. Wolt's trajectory in Israel over the past 24 months has been one of cautious but consistent expansion.
Wolt's founders — Mikael Svärd and the Helsinki-based founding team — are Finnish, not Israeli. The Israeli country management team is composed of locally hired Israeli professionals. There is no publicly documented policy at Wolt of specifically recruiting from IDF Unit 8200, Unit 81, or Mamram — the elite military-technical units that feed talent into many Israeli tech companies — though individual employees may carry that background. The Israeli tech ecosystem's general reliance on post-military talent pipelines means such backgrounds are common in any Tel Aviv operation.
For roles typically recruited in Israel, Wolt's Israeli job postings have included: City Operations Manager, Account Manager (Restaurants), Account Manager (Retail), Courier Operations Specialist, Wolt Market Store Manager, Israel Marketing Manager, and Wolt for Work Business Development Manager. Software engineering and data science roles advertised for Israel are rare; core R&D remains anchored in Helsinki and Berlin with secondary engineering hubs in Prague and Tel Aviv (the latter primarily for Wolt's DoorDash integration work post-2022 rather than for core platform development). Notable investors with Israeli ties who backed Wolt before the DoorDash acquisition include 83North (formerly Greylock IL), a venture fund with offices in Tel Aviv and London that has deep roots in the Israeli startup ecosystem. 83North participated in Wolt's growth-stage funding rounds, linking the company to the Israeli VC community prior to the acquisition.
Sources
Company website
news feed
No recent news about this company.
key people & leadership
4 key people, sourced from public records — with a per-row confidence score.
Juhani Mykkänen
Co-Founder
One of the founding team members of Wolt at its 2014 Helsinki founding; exact ongoing role post-DoorDash acquisition is not publicly confirmed.
leadership
Tony Xu
CEO, DoorDash (parent company)
Miki Kuusi
Co-Founder and CEO
Mikael Svärd
Co-Founder and CEO (pre-DoorDash acquisition)