Wings

Wings is not just a delivery app. It’s a full-scale system that connects personal deliveries, professional couriers, and small business logistics—all in a single platform. Below are the key features of Wings, explained clearly, practically, and in terms of how they work in real life.

1. One platform for every type of delivery

Unified delivery

Wings allows users to handle a wide variety of logistical tasks—from food and groceries to documents, pets, heavy equipment, and even international purchases—all within a single interface. Each delivery is created as a “mission,” fully customizable. Users describe the task, couriers respond with offers, and the user chooses the best fit.

  • No need to use five different apps—everything is in one
  • Users create tasks freely, with no rigid categories
  • Wings supports real-world scenarios that don’t fit into standard formats

2. Couriers are not gig workers—they’re independent professionals

Courier profile

In Wings, couriers are not just system-assigned agents. They choose their missions, set prices, define how they get paid, and build reputations through reviews and certifications.

  • Clients can develop loyalty with trusted couriers
  • Accountability is real—courier profiles are public and transparent
  • There’s incentive to grow, not just “complete another job”

3. A logistics platform for small and medium businesses

Business storefront

Wings provides infrastructure, not commissions. Businesses use storefronts, track deliveries, manage couriers, and keep full control—while paying only for usage.

  • Branded delivery powered by your own team
  • Full control from task creation to delivery
  • 0% commission — save up to 30% compared to platforms

4. A free market between couriers and clients

Peer logistics

Wings supports private, peer-to-peer logistics. Any user can send or request help with delivery or purchase. The platform enables direct interaction, not rigid service types.

  • Freedom to create any delivery scenario
  • Use-cases reflect real human needs
  • Trust is built directly—not algorithmically