🍕 Food Delivery App Evidence
That 2 AM Pad Thai Order to an Address You Don’t Recognize? Your Spouse’s Attorney Recognizes It. 🍜📍
📱 What Food Delivery Apps Track
Every time you order food through DoorDash, Grubhub, UberEats, or any delivery app, a detailed record is created:
🔍 Data Captured Per Order
| Data Point | What It Reveals | Divorce Relevance |
|---|---|---|
| Delivery address | Exact location where food was sent | Proves where you actually were |
| Order date & time | When the order was placed and delivered | Creates precise timeline of whereabouts |
| Order contents | What food was ordered | Quantity suggests who you were with |
| Order amount | Total cost including tip | Spending patterns, lifestyle evidence |
| Payment method | Card used for purchase | Hidden accounts, financial tracking |
| Saved addresses | All addresses in your account | Reveals locations you frequent |
| Account activity | Login history, device info | When and where app was used |
| Order frequency | Patterns of ordering | Shows regular presence at locations |
What a Delivery Order Receipt Reveals
Order #847291653
742 Washington Blvd, Apt 4B
Hoboken, NJ 07030
That single order tells a devastating story: He wasn’t at work. He was at someone’s apartment in Hoboken. He ordered food for two people at midnight. Who lives in Apt 4B? A quick property records search will reveal the answer.
⚠️ The “Saved Addresses” Problem
Most people save addresses in their delivery apps for convenience. This creates a map of everywhere they go regularly:
- “Home” — Your shared residence
- “Work” — Their office (supposedly)
- “Mom’s House” — Family addresses
- Unnamed address — Who lives here? Why is it saved?
- Another unnamed address — And this one?
Red flag: Multiple saved addresses that aren’t work, home, or family. Every saved address represents somewhere they spend enough time to order food.
🍕 Where Is Your Spouse Really Eating?
Delivery app data reveals addresses, patterns, and lies.
📞 (201) 205-3201Free consultation | Digital evidence strategies | Delivery data analysis
📊 Major Food Delivery Platforms
🔴 DoorDash
Data collected: Complete order history, all delivery addresses, payment methods, tips, timestamps, saved addresses, favorite restaurants
Access: Account → Orders shows full history | Data download via privacy request
Retention: Indefinite—years of order history available
DashPass: Subscription shows commitment to regular ordering
📱 Other Delivery Platforms
| Platform | Data Tracked | Special Notes |
|---|---|---|
| UberEats | Orders, addresses, timestamps, payment | Links to Uber rideshare data—combined location tracking |
| Grubhub | Order history, addresses, favorites | Often linked to work accounts—expense fraud potential |
| Postmates | Delivery history, addresses, tips | Now merged with UberEats—data combined |
| Seamless | Order history, saved addresses | Popular in NYC metro—extensive histories |
| Instacart | Grocery orders, addresses, payment | Shows where someone is “stocking a kitchen” |
| Amazon Fresh | Grocery delivery addresses, orders | Links to broader Amazon data ecosystem |
🎯 How Delivery Data Is Used in Divorce
⚖️ Common Divorce Applications
| Issue | How Delivery Data Helps |
|---|---|
| Proving affair location | Regular orders to unfamiliar address = regular visits there |
| Destroying alibis | “I was at work” contradicted by delivery to another location |
| Revealing hidden apartment | Saved address or repeated deliveries expose secret residence |
| Proving cohabitation | Regular grocery/food deliveries to new partner’s address |
| Two-person orders | Ordering food for two when claiming to be alone |
| Spending patterns | Excessive delivery spending while claiming hardship |
| Lifestyle evidence | Premium services, expensive restaurants, tips |
The “Order for Two” Problem
Food orders reveal more than just location—they reveal who you’re with:
- 🍕 One pizza, one soda: Probably eating alone
- 🍕 Two entrees, two drinks, dessert: Probably not alone
- 🍕 Two breakfast orders at 9 AM from unfamiliar address: Spent the night
- 🍕 Regular “date night” orders to same address: Ongoing relationship
When your spouse claims they were “working alone” but ordered two steaks and a bottle of wine to an apartment, the lie is obvious.
📋 Case Studies: Food Delivery Data in NJ Divorce
County: Bergen | Discovery: Unknown address saved in DoorDash | Result: Hidden apartment exposed
The wife noticed her husband’s DoorDash account had an address she didn’t recognize saved as “Work 2.” He claimed it was a satellite office. She investigated.
What the data revealed:
- Orders to “Work 2” occurred on evenings and weekends—not work hours
- The address was a residential apartment building in Fort Lee
- He had been ordering dinner there 2-3 times per week for 6 months
- Property records showed the apartment was leased by a woman
- Further investigation confirmed: his affair partner’s residence
County: Hudson | Evidence: Morning delivery orders from unknown location | Pattern: Overnight stays
The husband noticed suspicious UberEats charges on their shared credit card—breakfast orders from restaurants near an address he didn’t recognize.
What the data revealed:
- Multiple breakfast orders (8-9 AM) delivered to an apartment in Weehawken
- Orders were on weekends when wife claimed to be at “her sister’s house”
- Each order was for two people—two breakfast sandwiches, two coffees
- The Weehawken address was not her sister’s
- It belonged to a man she had been seeing
County: Essex | Claim: Husband at office until 10 PM | Reality: Food delivered elsewhere
For months, the husband claimed he was working late at his Newark office several nights per week. His wife checked his Grubhub history.
What the data revealed:
- On “late work” nights, dinner was delivered to an address in Montclair—not Newark
- The Montclair address was a residential home
- Delivery times: 7-8 PM on nights he claimed to be at work until 10
- He wasn’t working late—he was having dinner at someone’s house
- That someone was his coworker, who lived in Montclair
County: Passaic | Discovery: Grocery deliveries to unknown address | Asset: Secret residence
During asset discovery, the wife noticed Instacart charges to an address she didn’t recognize. Not restaurant delivery—grocery delivery.
What the data revealed:
- Regular weekly Instacart deliveries to an apartment in Clifton
- Full grocery orders—not just snacks, but household supplies, cleaning products
- The pattern suggested someone was maintaining a household there
- Property records: husband had a lease in his name at that address
- He had been maintaining a secret second apartment for 18 months
County: Morris | Issue: Business expense claims | Reality: Personal affair expenses
The husband, a business owner, claimed most of his food delivery charges were “business expenses.” His wife suspected he was using the business to fund his affair.
What the data revealed:
- Grubhub “business” orders delivered to residential addresses, not the office
- Late-night orders to the same apartment multiple times per week
- Romantic restaurant orders (steakhouses, nice Italian) coded as “client entertainment”
- Weekend brunch orders to girlfriend’s address as “business development”
- Over $8,000 in personal expenses fraudulently run through the business
County: Union | Issue: Ex-wife denying she moved in with boyfriend | Stakes: Alimony termination
The ex-husband suspected his ex-wife had moved in with her new boyfriend, which would end alimony. She denied living together. Her DoorDash said otherwise.
What the data revealed:
- Her DoorDash had a “Home” address that wasn’t her claimed apartment
- It was her boyfriend’s house in Westfield
- Daily dinner orders to his address—not occasional visits
- Virtually no orders to her own “apartment” for months
- She had effectively moved in while claiming to live alone
County: Middlesex | Issue: Father’s activities during custody time | Evidence: Delivery orders revealed neglect
The mother suspected the father wasn’t actually caring for the children during his custody time. She analyzed his UberEats history.
What the data revealed:
- On custody nights, he ordered expensive adult dinners (sushi, Thai, steakhouse)
- No kid-friendly food ordered despite having children ages 5 and 7
- Some orders delivered to addresses that weren’t his home—bars, a girlfriend’s place
- Children later confirmed: “Daddy drops us at Grandma’s and leaves”
- He was ordering dinner for himself and his girlfriend while kids were elsewhere
County: Somerset | Claim: Husband can’t afford support | Reality: Lavish delivery spending
The husband claimed he couldn’t afford adequate alimony, citing financial hardship. His delivery app history painted a different picture.
What the data revealed:
- DoorDash DashPass subscription ($120/year)
- Average monthly delivery spending: $600-800
- Frequent orders from expensive restaurants
- Large tips ($15-20 per order)
- Total delivery spending while claiming poverty: $9,400 in one year
County: Monmouth | Discovery: Deliveries to local hotels | Pattern: Regular affairs
The wife noticed Grubhub charges to hotels—not far-away business travel hotels, but local hotels just 20 minutes from their home.
What the data revealed:
- Multiple dinner orders delivered to the same Marriott in Red Bank
- Orders were romantic—wine, fancy dinners for two
- Pattern repeated 2-3 times per month for 8 months
- No business reason to stay at a hotel 20 minutes from home
- Hotel records confirmed: rooms booked under his name with a female guest
County: Ocean | Discovery: Delivery addresses matched dating app locations | Pattern: Serial dating
The wife found dating apps on her husband’s phone. He claimed he “just looked” and never met anyone. His DoorDash history proved otherwise.
What the data revealed:
- Multiple dinner orders to various residential addresses
- Each address was a different location—not repeated visits to one person
- Pattern suggested first dates: one dinner order, never the same address twice
- 15+ different residential addresses over 4 months
- He was going on dinner dates at women’s homes throughout the area
🍕 Where Is Your Spouse Really Having Dinner?
Food delivery data reveals addresses, companions, and lies. Let’s find the truth.
📞 (201) 205-3201Free consultation | Digital evidence strategies | Delivery data discovery
🔓 How to Obtain Food Delivery Data
📋 Methods for Accessing Delivery Records
1. Direct Account Access
- Shared accounts: If you share login, view order history directly
- Email receipts: Every order sends a receipt to registered email
- Credit card access: Charges show date, amount, and merchant
2. Data Requests
- CCPA/GDPR: Request complete data download from delivery service
- Includes: All orders, addresses, timestamps, payment info
- Process: Usually through account settings or privacy portal
3. Legal Discovery
- Subpoena: Court order to delivery service for account records
- Interrogatories: Require spouse to disclose all delivery accounts
- Document requests: Demand production of order history
- Credit card subpoena: All charges to delivery services
4. Digital Forensics
- Phone examination: Extract delivery app data from device
- Email analysis: Order receipts and confirmations
- Cloud backup: Delivery data often in phone backups
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
🔗 Related Digital Warfare Topics
📚 Continue Reading the Digital Warfare Series:
🍕 Everyone Has to Eat. The Question Is Where.
Food delivery apps know where your spouse is spending their time. Now you can too.
📞 (201) 205-3201Free consultation | Evidence discovery | Digital forensics referrals
Serving all of New Jersey from our Hudson County office
📍 Serving All New Jersey Counties
Including Hudson, Bergen, Essex, Passaic, Morris, Union, Middlesex, Monmouth, Somerset, Ocean, and all NJ counties. We understand how to leverage food delivery data and other digital evidence in modern divorce cases.