Mrsool Clone | White Label Anything-Delivery Marketplace App
Launch your own anything-delivery marketplace with our readymade Mrsool clone — white label, demo ready, customer-types-the-order intake, courier price negotiation, multi-store routing, Arabic RTL, KSA payment gateways, and full source code.

Production-grade tech, ready to scale
Clean, well-documented code in technologies trusted by enterprises.
So you want to launch the next Mrsool. Here's what we actually ship.
Mrsool is not a courier app. It is an "anything-delivery" marketplace, and the distinction is structural. A customer in Riyadh opens the app, types or voice-notes "I want a chocolate cake from the Saudi German Bakery in Olaya and a charger from Jarir Bookstore", and within 60 seconds three or four couriers within a 3 km radius send price quotes. The customer picks one, the courier rides to both stores, physically buys the items (with platform-fronted cash or post-purchase reimbursement), and delivers them. Bloomberg reported Mrsool's 2021 round at a $1B+ valuation. The platform now runs 4M+ active users, 500,000 orders per day, and 100,000+ couriers across Saudi Arabia and the Gulf.
We already built this Mrsool clone. The codebase ships a native iOS + Android customer app, a separate courier app, free-text and voice-note order intake (with GPT-4 parsing the order into structured items), a reverse-auction quote engine that fans requests to nearby couriers in under 400 ms, a multi-store TSP router, courier expense-float pre-authorisation, Arabic RTL throughout, prayer-time pause, Hijri calendar, and every Saudi payment rail you'd expect — HyperPay, STC Pay, Mada, urpay, plus the GCC-wide PayTabs, Telr, and Network International. One-time price $4,500–$18,000, white-labeled under your brand, deployed in 14–21 days, full unencrypted source code.
Tekrevol and Hyperlocalcloud quote $30,000–$300,000+ over three to twelve months for the same scope. The agencies promising "$30k in 3 months" usually mean a generic courier-app template without the anything-delivery free-text intake, the reverse-auction engine, the courier-buys-it expense float, or the Arabic-first Mrsool experience. Ours is the actual Mrsool model — not a UPS clone with the logo swapped.
Launch your own Mrsool-style anything-delivery platform in 14–21 days.
Request Free DemoMrsool Clone vs Building From Scratch — Let's Be Honest
The honest comparison. An anything-delivery marketplace is genuinely harder than a normal courier app — it stacks free-text order parsing, real-time quote negotiation, courier expense pre-authorisation, multi-store routing, and the entire KSA payment + compliance stack on top of the standard two-sided dispatch problem. Here is the ledger versus a from-scratch custom build:
| What matters to you | Custom Build | Our Mrsool Clone |
|---|---|---|
| Time to first paid delivery | 6–12 months | 14–21 days |
| All-in cost, year one | $80,000 – $300,000+ | $4,500 – $18,000 |
| Engineering team required | 5–7 senior + 1 Arabic UX + 1 DevOps | Zero — we deploy |
| Free-text + voice-note order intake (GPT-4 parsing) | 6–8 weeks | Day one |
| Reverse-auction quote engine | 6–10 weeks to ship + harden | Pre-tuned on Redis pub/sub |
| Courier expense-float pre-authorisation | 4–8 weeks per payment gateway | Stripe + HyperPay flows wired |
| Multi-store TSP routing for one order | 4–6 weeks | OSRM + OpenRouteService included |
| Saudi payment gateways (HyperPay, STC Pay, Mada, urpay) | 4–6 weeks each | All four pre-wired |
| Arabic RTL + Hijri calendar + prayer-time pause | 4–6 weeks of localisation work | Day one — not a retrofit |
| iOS + Android store approval (KSA-specific submissions) | 4–8 weeks per platform | We submit under your brand |
| Source code ownership | What your team wrote | Full unencrypted |
Who's Actually Buying This From Us
Let me save you the "this is for everyone" pitch — it isn't. Seven buyer patterns close on the Mrsool clone:
- KSA tier-2 city founders — operators targeting Dammam, Khobar, Tabuk, Abha, and Madinah where Mrsool's coverage is thinner than in Riyadh and Jeddah, with a hyper-local fleet model the incumbent can't match.
- Gulf operators — founders in the UAE, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, and Oman who want the Mrsool model adapted for their local payment gateways, Arabic dialects, and customer purchasing habits.
- North African operators — Cairo, Casablanca, Algiers, and Tunis founders running the same model with French-Arabic bilingual UX and local-currency rails.
- South Asian founders entering KSA — Pakistani and Indian operators with capital and operational experience in their home markets, opening a Riyadh entity to chase the Saudi opportunity directly.
- SME logistics chains digitising — traditional courier and freight companies with 50-200 vehicles bolting on the anything-delivery consumer surface to monetise idle fleet capacity and brand directly to end customers.
- E-commerce platforms going hyperlocal — Saudi marketplaces (Noon-tier, Salla-tier) adding instant-delivery for any third-party store as a retention and AOV play.
- Existing delivery operators — Jahez, HungerStation, and Talabat resellers who already run a courier roster and want to add the "anything from anywhere" surface that Mrsool owns.
How You Make Money With the Mrsool Clone — 8 Revenue Streams
Eight wired-in revenue streams. Launch with two or three, layer the rest as the courier base scales past the first 300 active scooters:
- Per-order commission. Configurable 12–20% take rate on every accepted quote, routed through HyperPay or Stripe Connect split-payments. Mrsool's own commission has been reported in the 12-18% range depending on category and city. On 4,000 orders per day at a 14% average take of a $9 average order, that compounds to $151,000/month.
- Courier subscription tiers. Free (15% take), Pro ($19/month — 10% take + priority bidding), Power ($59/month — 7% take + multi-rider dispatch for fleet operators). Recurring revenue, and the structure rewards your highest-GMV couriers.
- Store partnership commission. When a courier buys from a partner store on behalf of a customer, the store kicks back 3-8% of the basket value as referral commission. Onboarding 200 partner stores across Riyadh and Jeddah is a documented six-month playbook for any operator launching in KSA.
- Express SLA upcharges. 30-minute Express adds 1.6x to the base fare, 15-minute Ultra adds 2.4x. Your take rate stays constant; the customer pays the urgency premium. Configurable per city and per category.
- Surge multiplier. 1.3x to 2.8x during demand peaks (Friday prayers ending, Ramadan iftar window, public holidays). Couriers opt in and the multiplier flows to your take. Critical for unit economics in the KSA market where peak demand is concentrated.
- Courier expense-float interest. The platform fronts the cash for the courier to physically buy items. Couriers settle on T+1 from earnings; high-volume couriers can opt into a T+0 instant payout for a 1% fee. That fee compounds to material revenue at scale.
- Business account fees. SAR 99–SAR 499/month per business tier ($26–$133), plus per-rider seats. Pharmacies, document-courier desks, and corporate concierge services pay this without negotiation at 100+ deliveries/week.
- Sponsored store placement. Partner stores pay SAR 800–SAR 8,000/month ($213–$2,130) to appear in the homepage carousel or as the suggested store when a customer types "cake" or "charger". Yield-managed self-serve auction.
What's Inside the White Label Mrsool Clone
Fourteen numbered modules. Every one is in the demo — you walk through them on a real iPhone with a real test order and a real courier quote before you commit a dollar.
1. Native iOS + Android Customer + Courier Apps
Four real React Native builds — customer iOS, customer Android, courier iOS, courier Android — with native Swift and Kotlin modules for the background location service, the Arabic RTL layout engine, and the secure-element storage for KSA payment tokens that the App Store reviewers now scrutinise on every Saudi-market submission. Not a webview, not a single "universal" app that fails the background-location capability test.
2. Anything-Delivery Order Intake
The Mrsool defining feature, faithfully reproduced. The customer types in free text ("a vanilla cake from Saudi German Bakery on King Fahd Road and a phone charger from Jarir") or holds the microphone for a voice note in Arabic, English, or Urdu. A GPT-4 parser converts the natural language into a structured list of items with store hints, the customer confirms or edits, and the request fans out to nearby couriers. Voice-note ordering is the single most-used feature in the Arabic-speaking user base.
3. Reverse-Auction Quote Engine
The order broadcasts via Redis pub/sub to every eligible courier within the geofence within 400 ms. Couriers see the request and respond with a price within a configurable 60-second window. The customer sees quotes stream in live (sorted by price, ETA, or rating — customer choice) and accepts one. Anti-collusion rules cap the price spread and flag coordinated outliers for the admin queue.
4. Courier Expense-Float Pre-Authorisation
The hard part nobody else builds correctly. When a courier accepts a quote, the platform pre-authorises an expense float on the courier's wallet (covering the estimated item cost) so they can physically buy the items without using their own cash. After delivery, the courier uploads the receipt photo, the system reconciles, and the customer's stored payment covers the actual item cost plus the agreed delivery fee. The courier's earnings settle on T+1, or T+0 for a 1% fee. The cash-flow design is what separates a real Mrsool clone from a courier-app rebrand.
5. Multi-Store TSP Routing
One order can include items from multiple stores. The router (OSRM + OpenRouteService) computes the shortest combined route across the pickup stops and the final drop-off, with optional priority weighting for stores that close earlier or have express lanes. The courier sees a single trip with sequenced stops; the customer sees a single fare. Critical for the multi-stop orders that drive Mrsool's per-order AOV up.
6. In-App Chat with Arabic Translation
End-to-end chat between customer and courier — text, voice notes, and photos. Translation layer (DeepL primary, Google Translate fallback) handles Arabic ↔ English ↔ Urdu ↔ Hindi ↔ Filipino, the actual language matrix of the Saudi courier and customer base. Chat opens at quote acceptance and closes 60 minutes after delivery to prevent off-platform routing.
7. Receipt Photo Verification
The courier photographs the store receipt before riding to the drop-off. The system OCRs the receipt (via Google Cloud Vision or AWS Textract) and validates the total against the courier's reported item cost, flagging anomalies for the admin queue. The customer sees the receipt in the app for full transparency. This is the trust primitive that lets Mrsool charge premium rates without disputes.
8. Prayer-Time Pause and Hijri Calendar
The platform pauses dispatch and reduces order frequency during the five daily prayer windows (Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, Isha) per the local mosque schedule for each city. Ramadan working-hours mode shifts peak windows to the iftar-to-suhoor period. The Hijri calendar appears alongside Gregorian on every date picker. Vision-2030-aligned compliance defaults — the kind of detail Western-built clones silently skip.
9. KSA Payment Gateways — HyperPay, STC Pay, Mada, urpay
Pre-wired adapters for every payment rail a Saudi customer expects. Mada (the national debit network), STC Pay (telco wallet), urpay (BSF wallet), HyperPay (acquirer for Visa and Mastercard), and cash-on-delivery as the default for first-time customers. Apple Pay and Google Pay tokenise on top of Mada and HyperPay. Pre-wired GCC adapters for PayTabs, Telr, Network International, and Stripe.
10. Courier KYC and Iqama Verification
Persona for document verification at onboarding, Iqama (Saudi residency permit) capture with automated expiry tracking, vehicle photo upload, trade-licence checks for fleet operators, and a background-check integration as an optional add-on. The platform pauses the courier automatically when an Iqama lapses — the compliance check Saudi regulators ask about during the licensing review.
11. PostGIS Routing, Live ETA, Geofencing
PostGIS-backed geospatial primitives — pickup geofences, drop-off zones, surge zones, no-go zones for restricted areas (military zones, palace compounds). Live ETA is computed against Mapbox Directions and validated against historical courier speed for that route segment, so the customer sees a realistic ETA in dense Riyadh traffic, not a Google-Maps best-case fantasy.
12. Business Account Module
A separate sign-up flow for businesses — multi-user roles, dispatcher dashboard, scheduled recurring deliveries ("send our courier to the pharmacy every Tuesday at 09:00"), bulk-CSV upload for daily route lists, monthly invoice generation, and accounting integrations to Zoho Books and QuickBooks. The Saudi corporate-concierge market alone justifies this tier.
13. Admin Command Centre with KSA Compliance Exports
The operator's command surface — live map of every active courier and trip, fraud watchlist, refund queue, courier payout schedule, surge configuration, geofence editor, prayer-time configuration, and an export pipeline for the regulator-friendly reports the Saudi General Authority for Transport (TGA) expects from licensed delivery operators. Built in Next.js, role-gated per ops / finance / compliance / support.
14. White-Label Branding + Arabic RTL Theming Engine
Logo, palette, typography, app icons, splash screens, push-notification copy, paywall copy, email templates, and the launch microsite — all swappable from a single admin surface. The RTL layout engine flips the entire UI for Arabic-default markets and reflows correctly for bilingual customers who switch language mid-session. We rebrand the platform completely under your identity in the first 72 hours.
Want to see the anything-delivery intake, courier bidding, and multi-store routing running on a real device?
Request Demo Access TodayThe Tech Stack — What We Actually Use
Named tools at every layer. Every one is shipping in production on real builds:
- Mobile: React Native + Expo for customer and courier apps, with native Swift and Kotlin modules for background location, push handling, Arabic RTL, and the turn-by-turn navigation overlay.
- Web frontend: Next.js 14 (App Router) + TypeScript + Tailwind for the admin command centre, the business-account dispatcher dashboard, and the public marketing landing page.
- Backend API: Node.js + Fastify + tRPC + Zod for type-safe contracts, deployed on AWS Bahrain or Riyadh region for KSA data-residency requirements (Saudi PDPL compliance).
- Primary database: PostgreSQL 16 with the PostGIS extension for geofences, route lines, surge zones, and the audit-log partition the Saudi regulator asks about during licensing review.
- Cache and pub/sub: Redis on ElastiCache for the quote-broadcast event bus, courier presence, and live trip state.
- Maps and routing: Mapbox primary (geocoding, directions, navigation), Google Maps fallback for older devices. OSRM and OpenRouteService for the multi-store TSP optimisation.
- Payments: HyperPay, STC Pay, Mada, and urpay for KSA; PayTabs, Telr, Network International for the wider GCC; Stripe Connect globally — pre-wired adapters behind a shared interface.
- KYC and identity: Persona for ID + Iqama verification, document upload via S3 with row-level encryption on the residency-permit and trade-licence fields.
- AI order parsing: GPT-4 turbo for converting free-text and voice-note orders into structured item lists with store hints; OpenAI Whisper for Arabic, Urdu, and Filipino voice transcription.
- Receipt OCR: Google Cloud Vision and AWS Textract for receipt extraction and total reconciliation against the courier's reported item cost.
- Translation: DeepL primary and Google Translate fallback for in-app chat across Arabic, English, Urdu, Hindi, Filipino, and Bengali — the actual language matrix of KSA's courier and customer base.
- Analytics warehouse: ClickHouse for event-grain telemetry, surfaced through a Next.js admin UI with Looker Studio embedded for the heavier slicing.
Why Buy From Make An App Like Instead of Other Clone Shops
- 300+ apps shipped, four on-demand delivery builds in the GCC. Two in Saudi Arabia, one in Bahrain, one in the UAE. We are not learning Arabic RTL, prayer-time pause, or HyperPay integration on your money. If you need the standard A-to-B courier flow without the anything-delivery wrapper, the same team also ships the DeliverIt Clone build.
- 14–21 days, not 3–12 months. Tekrevol and Hyperlocalcloud quote a multi-quarter build. Mrsool itself took years to harden the anything-delivery flow — you do not need to repeat that work to ship a viable competitor in tier-2 KSA cities.
- Saudi payment rails pre-wired. HyperPay, STC Pay, Mada, urpay — the four gateways every Saudi customer expects, and the four gateways every Western-built clone shop quietly leaves out and then charges $30,000–$60,000 to retrofit.
- Arabic-first, not retrofit. RTL layout, Hijri calendar, prayer-time pause, Ramadan working-hours, voice-note ordering in Arabic — all in the codebase on day one, not a paid add-on after launch.
- AWS Bahrain or Riyadh region by default. Saudi PDPL (Personal Data Protection Law) compliance configured from the first deployment — not a paid retrofit when the regulator asks where your customer data lives.
- Six months of free post-launch support. Bug fixes, App-Store rejection appeals, library patches, payment-gateway SDK refreshes. Most clone shops vanish at handover, especially the ones quoting $300k for the same scope. We don't.
Get an exact quote tailored to your country, courier fleet size, payment-gateway mix, and language pack.
Get Exact Cost EstimationMrsool Clone vs Building From Scratch
| What matters | Custom build | Our Mrsool Clone |
|---|---|---|
| Time to first paid delivery | 6–12 months | 14–21 days |
| All-in cost, year one | $80,000 – $300,000+ | $4,500 – $18,000 |
| Engineering team required | 5–7 senior + 1 Arabic UX + 1 DevOps | Zero — we deploy |
| Free-text + voice-note order intake (GPT-4 parsing) | 6–8 weeks | Day one |
| Reverse-auction quote engine | 6–10 weeks to ship + harden | Pre-tuned on Redis pub/sub |
| Courier expense-float pre-authorisation | 4–8 weeks per payment gateway | Stripe + HyperPay flows wired |
| Multi-store TSP routing for one order | 4–6 weeks | OSRM + OpenRouteService included |
| Saudi payment gateways (HyperPay, STC Pay, Mada, urpay) | 4–6 weeks each | All four pre-wired |
| Arabic RTL + Hijri calendar + prayer-time pause | 4–6 weeks of localisation work | Day one — not a retrofit |
| iOS + Android store approval (KSA-specific submissions) | 4–8 weeks per platform | We submit under your brand |
| Source code ownership | What your team wrote | Full unencrypted |
Feature Highlights
Native iOS + Android Customer + Courier Apps
Four real React Native builds — customer iOS, customer Android, courier iOS, courier Android — with native Swift and Kotlin modules for the background location service, the Arabic RTL layout engine, and the secure-element storage for KSA payment tokens that the App Store reviewers now scrutinise on every Saudi-market submission. Not a webview, not a single "universal" app that fails the background-location capability test.
Anything-Delivery Order Intake
The Mrsool defining feature, faithfully reproduced. The customer types in free text ("a vanilla cake from Saudi German Bakery on King Fahd Road and a phone charger from Jarir") or holds the microphone for a voice note in Arabic, English, or Urdu. A GPT-4 parser converts the natural language into a structured list of items with store hints, the customer confirms or edits, and the request fans out to nearby couriers. Voice-note ordering is the single most-used feature in the Arabic-speaking user base.
Reverse-Auction Quote Engine
The order broadcasts via Redis pub/sub to every eligible courier within the geofence within 400 ms. Couriers see the request and respond with a price within a configurable 60-second window. The customer sees quotes stream in live (sorted by price, ETA, or rating — customer choice) and accepts one. Anti-collusion rules cap the price spread and flag coordinated outliers for the admin queue.
Courier Expense-Float Pre-Authorisation
The hard part nobody else builds correctly. When a courier accepts a quote, the platform pre-authorises an expense float on the courier's wallet (covering the estimated item cost) so they can physically buy the items without using their own cash. After delivery, the courier uploads the receipt photo, the system reconciles, and the customer's stored payment covers the actual item cost plus the agreed delivery fee. The courier's earnings settle on T+1, or T+0 for a 1% fee. The cash-flow design is what separates a real Mrsool clone from a courier-app rebrand.
Multi-Store TSP Routing
One order can include items from multiple stores. The router (OSRM + OpenRouteService) computes the shortest combined route across the pickup stops and the final drop-off, with optional priority weighting for stores that close earlier or have express lanes. The courier sees a single trip with sequenced stops; the customer sees a single fare. Critical for the multi-stop orders that drive Mrsool's per-order AOV up.
In-App Chat with Arabic Translation
End-to-end chat between customer and courier — text, voice notes, and photos. Translation layer (DeepL primary, Google Translate fallback) handles Arabic ↔ English ↔ Urdu ↔ Hindi ↔ Filipino, the actual language matrix of the Saudi courier and customer base. Chat opens at quote acceptance and closes 60 minutes after delivery to prevent off-platform routing.
Receipt Photo Verification
The courier photographs the store receipt before riding to the drop-off. The system OCRs the receipt (via Google Cloud Vision or AWS Textract) and validates the total against the courier's reported item cost, flagging anomalies for the admin queue. The customer sees the receipt in the app for full transparency. This is the trust primitive that lets Mrsool charge premium rates without disputes.
Prayer-Time Pause and Hijri Calendar
The platform pauses dispatch and reduces order frequency during the five daily prayer windows (Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, Isha) per the local mosque schedule for each city. Ramadan working-hours mode shifts peak windows to the iftar-to-suhoor period. The Hijri calendar appears alongside Gregorian on every date picker. Vision-2030-aligned compliance defaults — the kind of detail Western-built clones silently skip.
KSA Payment Gateways — HyperPay, STC Pay, Mada, urpay
Pre-wired adapters for every payment rail a Saudi customer expects. Mada (the national debit network), STC Pay (telco wallet), urpay (BSF wallet), HyperPay (acquirer for Visa and Mastercard), and cash-on-delivery as the default for first-time customers. Apple Pay and Google Pay tokenise on top of Mada and HyperPay. Pre-wired GCC adapters for PayTabs, Telr, Network International, and Stripe.
Courier KYC and Iqama Verification
Persona for document verification at onboarding, Iqama (Saudi residency permit) capture with automated expiry tracking, vehicle photo upload, trade-licence checks for fleet operators, and a background-check integration as an optional add-on. The platform pauses the courier automatically when an Iqama lapses — the compliance check Saudi regulators ask about during the licensing review.
PostGIS Routing, Live ETA, Geofencing
PostGIS-backed geospatial primitives — pickup geofences, drop-off zones, surge zones, no-go zones for restricted areas (military zones, palace compounds). Live ETA is computed against Mapbox Directions and validated against historical courier speed for that route segment, so the customer sees a realistic ETA in dense Riyadh traffic, not a Google-Maps best-case fantasy.
Business Account Module
A separate sign-up flow for businesses — multi-user roles, dispatcher dashboard, scheduled recurring deliveries ("send our courier to the pharmacy every Tuesday at 09:00"), bulk-CSV upload for daily route lists, monthly invoice generation, and accounting integrations to Zoho Books and QuickBooks. The Saudi corporate-concierge market alone justifies this tier.
Admin Command Centre with KSA Compliance Exports
The operator's command surface — live map of every active courier and trip, fraud watchlist, refund queue, courier payout schedule, surge configuration, geofence editor, prayer-time configuration, and an export pipeline for the regulator-friendly reports the Saudi General Authority for Transport (TGA) expects from licensed delivery operators. Built in Next.js, role-gated per ops / finance / compliance / support.
White-Label Branding + Arabic RTL Theming Engine
Logo, palette, typography, app icons, splash screens, push-notification copy, paywall copy, email templates, and the launch microsite — all swappable from a single admin surface. The RTL layout engine flips the entire UI for Arabic-default markets and reflows correctly for bilingual customers who switch language mid-session. We rebrand the platform completely under your identity in the first 72 hours.
Built for serious operators
KSA tier-2 city founders — operators targeting Dammam, Khobar, Tabuk, Abha, and Madinah where Mrsool's coverage is thinner than in Riyadh and Jeddah, with a hyper-local fleet model the incumbent can't match.
Gulf operators — founders in the UAE, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, and Oman who want the Mrsool model adapted for their local payment gateways, Arabic dialects, and customer purchasing habits.
North African operators — Cairo, Casablanca, Algiers, and Tunis founders running the same model with French-Arabic bilingual UX and local-currency rails.
South Asian founders entering KSA — Pakistani and Indian operators with capital and operational experience in their home markets, opening a Riyadh entity to chase the Saudi opportunity directly.
SME logistics chains digitising — traditional courier and freight companies with 50-200 vehicles bolting on the anything-delivery consumer surface to monetise idle fleet capacity and brand directly to end customers.
E-commerce platforms going hyperlocal — Saudi marketplaces (Noon-tier, Salla-tier) adding instant-delivery for any third-party store as a retention and AOV play.
How you make money
- 01
Per-order commission. Configurable 12–20% take rate on every accepted quote, routed through HyperPay or Stripe Connect split-payments. Mrsool's own commission has been reported in the 12-18% range depending on category and city. On 4,000 orders per day at a 14% average take of a $9 average order, that compounds to $151,000/month.
- 02
Courier subscription tiers. Free (15% take), Pro ($19/month — 10% take + priority bidding), Power ($59/month — 7% take + multi-rider dispatch for fleet operators). Recurring revenue, and the structure rewards your highest-GMV couriers.
- 03
Store partnership commission. When a courier buys from a partner store on behalf of a customer, the store kicks back 3-8% of the basket value as referral commission. Onboarding 200 partner stores across Riyadh and Jeddah is a documented six-month playbook for any operator launching in KSA.
- 04
Express SLA upcharges. 30-minute Express adds 1.6x to the base fare, 15-minute Ultra adds 2.4x. Your take rate stays constant; the customer pays the urgency premium. Configurable per city and per category.
- 05
Surge multiplier. 1.3x to 2.8x during demand peaks (Friday prayers ending, Ramadan iftar window, public holidays). Couriers opt in and the multiplier flows to your take. Critical for unit economics in the KSA market where peak demand is concentrated.
- 06
Courier expense-float interest. The platform fronts the cash for the courier to physically buy items. Couriers settle on T+1 from earnings; high-volume couriers can opt into a T+0 instant payout for a 1% fee. That fee compounds to material revenue at scale.
- 07
Business account fees. SAR 99–SAR 499/month per business tier ($26–$133), plus per-rider seats. Pharmacies, document-courier desks, and corporate concierge services pay this without negotiation at 100+ deliveries/week.
- 08
Sponsored store placement. Partner stores pay SAR 800–SAR 8,000/month ($213–$2,130) to appear in the homepage carousel or as the suggested store when a customer types "cake" or "charger". Yield-managed self-serve auction.
What's in the package
- Full unencrypted source code — iOS, Android, web, admin, API
- Live demo + walkthrough before purchase
- White-label setup — logo, colors, domain, app icons, splash
- Deployment on your server
- Apps submitted to App Store + Play Store under your brand
- 6 months of free updates, bug fixes & priority support
- Full technical, API & admin documentation
- Custom integrations on request
- 7-day money-back guarantee
- Tech stack: Mobile: React Native + Expo for customer and courier apps, with native Swift and Kotlin modules for background location, push handling, Arabic RTL, and the turn-by-turn navigation overlay., Web frontend: Next.js 14 (App Router) + TypeScript + Tailwind for the admin command centre, the business-account dispatcher dashboard, and the public marketing landing page., Backend API: Node.js + Fastify + tRPC + Zod for type-safe contracts, deployed on AWS Bahrain or Riyadh region for KSA data-residency requirements (Saudi PDPL compliance)., Primary database: PostgreSQL 16 with the PostGIS extension for geofences, route lines, surge zones, and the audit-log partition the Saudi regulator asks about during licensing review.
How it works
- 1
Demo call
45-minute walkthrough of admin, user app, and customisation. No pressure.
- 2
Custom quote
You get a tailored 24-hour roadmap with timeline + price for your business model.
- 3
Kickoff
Pay 30% to start. We rebrand the platform with your logo, colors, and domain.
- 4
Deployment
We install on your server, submit iOS + Android apps to the stores under your identity.
- 5
Go live
Walkthrough credentials handed over. You start onboarding sellers / users / customers.
- 6
6 months support
Bug fixes, updates, priority Slack. Most clone shops vanish — we don't.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a Mrsool clone app cost?
Our white-label Mrsool clone is priced at $4,500–$18,000 one-time, depending on which modules you turn on. Starter ($4,500) covers the customer app, courier app, single-store ordering, and Stripe-only payments. Growth ($8,000) adds the anything-delivery free-text + voice-note intake, the reverse-auction quote engine, and KSA payment gateways (HyperPay, STC Pay, Mada, urpay). Pro ($13,000) layers in courier expense-float pre-authorisation, multi-store TSP routing, receipt OCR, and the business account module. Enterprise ($18,000) opens full source code, reseller licensing, and the Arabic RTL theming admin. No per-order platform tax — the price is one-time.
How long will it take to launch in Saudi Arabia or the Gulf?
Standard delivery is 14–21 days from kickoff. Days 1–4 are rebrand: logo, palette, app icons, splash screens, push-notification certificates, Arabic and English copy. Days 5–14 are integration: your AWS Bahrain or Riyadh region, your HyperPay merchant account, your Mada and STC Pay credentials, your Mapbox API key, your Persona KYC project, and the OpenAI key for order parsing. Days 15–20 are private QA with three test couriers and real orders across multi-store and single-store flows. Day 21 is handover. TGA licensing and operator-side compliance run in parallel for 30–60 days depending on your structure.
Do I get the full source code of the Mrsool clone?
Yes — full unencrypted source code on the Pro and Enterprise plans. That covers the customer iOS and Android apps, courier iOS and Android apps, Next.js admin command centre, Node.js + Fastify backend, the anything-delivery GPT-4 parser, the reverse-auction engine, all four KSA payment-gateway adapters, the courier expense-float ledger, the receipt OCR pipeline, the multi-store TSP router, and the Arabic RTL theming engine. No encrypted blobs, no rented "core engine", no licence renewals. Your engineering team can fork any module on day one. IP transfer is documented in the contract.
How does the "anything-delivery" courier-buys-it model work?
The customer types or voice-notes what they want from any store ("a chocolate cake from Saudi German Bakery and a charger from Jarir"). A GPT-4 parser converts the request into structured items. Nearby couriers see the order and send price quotes within 60 seconds. The customer accepts a quote, the platform pre-authorises an expense float on the courier's wallet, the courier rides to the store and physically buys the items, uploads the receipt photo (validated via OCR), and delivers. Customer pays via Mada / STC Pay / card / cash. Courier earnings settle on T+1 (or T+0 for a 1% fee). It is the actual Mrsool model — not a courier app with the logo swapped.
Which Saudi payment gateways are pre-wired?
Four KSA gateways shipped in the codebase: HyperPay (the acquirer for Visa, Mastercard, and Apple Pay tokenisation), Mada (the Saudi national debit network — the default for most domestic transactions), STC Pay (the telco-issued wallet held by ~10M Saudi customers), and urpay (the BSF wallet popular among younger users). Cash-on-delivery is the default for first-time customers per the local trust pattern. For wider GCC deployment, PayTabs, Telr, and Network International adapters ship alongside. Stripe Connect handles global card payments and split-payout routing to couriers.
Does the clone support Arabic-first UI, Hijri calendar, and prayer-time pause?
Yes. Arabic RTL is the default layout direction — the entire UI flips, reflows, and tests against the four-script Arabic typography rules (Naskh, Kufic, Diwani fonts all supported). The Hijri calendar appears alongside Gregorian on every date picker. Prayer-time pause uses the local mosque schedule per city to automatically reduce dispatch frequency during Fajr, Dhuhr, Asr, Maghrib, and Isha windows. Ramadan working-hours mode shifts peak windows to iftar-to-suhoor. All four are in the codebase on day one, not a paid retrofit — and they are the features Western-built clone shops silently skip.
What commission can I realistically charge couriers?
Mrsool itself runs 12–18% commission depending on city and category. The market range across KSA and the wider GCC is 10–22%. Conservative year-one math: 4,000 orders per day at an average $9 order value with a 14% take rate puts you at $151,000/month in commission revenue alone, before SLA upcharges, surge multipliers, store partnership commissions, expense-float interest, business account fees, or sponsored placement revenue. Platform-cost breakeven hits in month two to three for most operators at this volume profile.
Do you provide a live demo before I purchase?
Yes — a 45-minute live walkthrough on real devices before any contract is signed. You see a customer voice-note an Arabic order from a real iPhone, GPT-4 parse it into structured items, three couriers send live quotes within a minute, the customer accept the best quote, the courier ride to two stores on a real multi-store route, photograph and upload the receipt, complete the delivery, and the payout route through HyperPay or Stripe Connect on T+1. We share screen, you ask the operational and compliance questions, and you leave the call with a tailored 24-hour quote for your country, language pack, and gateway preferences. No deposit required.
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