College campus network
Someone on campus can get it done for way less.
Save on fees, earn extra cash, and get everyday tasks like delivery done by students, faculty, or trusted helpers you add to your network—not random marketplace drivers.
Delivery fees add up. Handoffs get awkward.
Random drivers may not know your campus—and students can access dorms, libraries, and other campus locations much easier.
On a campus, the better network may already be around you.
A campus is full of people in motion—between dorms and dining halls, libraries and coffee shops, bodegas and apartments, classes and work shifts.
SaveNeighbor helps turn that movement into useful help. Not through a marketplace dispatching strangers, but through a trusted network of people already nearby—schoolmates you recognize, staff who know the building, or connect with your favorite delivery person from your regular delivery apps.
Earn extra money by offering everyday campus help. And even further, connect with neighboring residents to offer them your help as well. A flexible side hustle to fit between your studies with no commitment.

The shift
Instead of only using a marketplace, build a trusted campus network.
SaveNeighbor is not a delivery company. It does not employ students or dispatch couriers. It gives your campus community a way to request and offer help through familiar faces—and repeat relationships that random apps cannot replicate.
How it works
Request first.
Coordinate from there.
For food delivery, be sure to request first, order second. For everything else, coordinate pickup and meetup details after someone accepts.

Build your campus network
Add students, faculty, staff, neighbors, and trusted helpers connected to your school. The people you know—or choose to trust.
Send a request
Food, coffee, groceries, pharmacy, packages, errands. Say what you need, when, where to meet, and what you are offering as a tip.
Someone accepts
Your request goes to people in your network—not a random driver dispatched from a city-wide pool.
Coordinate the pickup or errand
For food: request first. Only after acceptance do you place and pre-pay for a pickup order. For other runs, coordinate directly with your helper.
Meet where it makes sense
Dorm lobby, library steps, student center, campus plaza, dining hall, or another permitted place you both agree on—wherever campus rules allow.
Tip directly
Cash or your usual e-payment app. The amount you offered goes to your helper—not a platform taking a cut.
Two sides of the same network
Help out. Get help. Both ways.
When you need something
- Save time between classes or during a busy week
- Skip delivery fees and order pickup directly
- Choose familiar people—not random drivers
- Meet at flexible campus points, not just dorm doors
- Food, errands, essentials, and more—not one use case
When you can help
- Earn extra cash on trips you already make routinely
- Help out a schoolmate, colleague, or neighbor
- Accept requests that fit your schedule—not all day dispatch
- Turn a CVS run or coffee stop into useful work
- Build repeat relationships with regular requests
The strongest use case
Already heading that way?
Someone grabs Dunkin coffee before class everyday. Someone else goes to CVS every weekend. Another person lives across campus near the sandwich shop.
Through SaveNeighbor, people in network can send requests to trusted connections—and helpers can accept the ones that fit trips they're already taking. No separate dispatch. No pretending everyone is on call. Just coordination between people who are already moving.
“I walk to Starbucks everyday—request me if you need anything?”
That instinct, turned into something repeatable.
Meet where it makes sense.
SaveNeighbor coordinates hand-offs wherever convenient. You and your helper agree on a meeting point that works for both of you.
Dorms where permitted. Library steps. Student center. Campus plaza. Dining hall. Any common area or public campus-adjacent space. Wherever you both agree—and wherever your school allows.
Not just food delivery.
A trusted campus network handles the small runs that pile up during a semester.
- Food pickup from a restaurant or dining hall
- CVS, pharmacy, or convenience store runs
- Grocery pickup from markets that offer pickup
- Package and mail drop-offs
- Dorm room cleaning or car washing
- Errands between classes or during a work break

Convenient services are expensive on a college budget.
Your campus already has a better network.
Questions
- Is SaveNeighbor a college delivery app?
- SaveNeighbor is not a delivery app and does not employ drivers. It is a trust-based network for coordinating pickups, errands, and everyday help through people connected to your campus community.
- Can students earn money with SaveNeighbor?
- Yes. Students and other trusted helpers can accept requests that fit their schedule, pick things up on trips they are already making, and receive tips directly from the people they help.
- Can this be used in dorms?
- SaveNeighbor helps coordinate permitted handoffs at agreed meeting points—dorm lobbies, common areas, and other places campus rules allow. We do not promise room delivery or bypassing dorm security or building policies.
- Does SaveNeighbor send drivers?
- No. SaveNeighbor does not dispatch drivers or employ couriers. You request people in your own campus network—students, faculty, staff, neighbors, and helpers you choose to trust.
- Is this only for food delivery?
- No. Food pickup is common, but people use SaveNeighbor for coffee runs, groceries, pharmacy pickup, packages, forgotten items, and everyday campus errands.
- How do campus handoffs work?
- You and your helper agree on a permitted meeting point—library entrance, student center, dorm lobby, campus plaza, or another public campus-adjacent space. Both people need to follow their school’s rules.
- Can faculty and staff use it too?
- Yes. Faculty, staff, students, and campus-adjacent residents can all build networks and request or offer help through people they trust.
- Will someone always be available?
- No—and we will not pretend otherwise. Availability depends on the network you build and who is nearby and free. That is why familiar faces and repeat relationships matter more than instant dispatch.
Build your campus network.
Send your first request.
Free to join. Add people you trust. Invite your favorite campus food spots.
Already signed up? Sign in
