Passenger tricycles can accommodate from four passengers up to as many as six or more, excluding the driver. Goods can be placed on the roof. One or two passengers can sit behind the driver while several more can sit in the sidecar, depending upon the design. Additional passengers can sit on the roof or stand hanging onto the side or back of the sidecar. In rainy weather, a tricycle will be completely enclosed in a heavy plastic covering. Tricycles are often painted colorfully, like
jeepneys. Fares are less than taxi fares (if the city or municipality has taxis), yet more expensive than jeepney fares. Fares range from to ₱250, depending on the locality and the distance to be ridden. Inside cities, tricycles often operate as shared taxis, where passenger fares are calculated per passenger and after the distance traveled. These fares are close to the fares of jeepneys. For longer journeys or in areas with heavy tourism, the driver will usually request that the passenger hire the whole tricycle and negotiate a "special fare", which will then be a private hire. Another noteworthy improvement in tricycle technology is observed in
Manila. It is fully electric and distributed by a local company with major Japanese partnership. File:8335Prinza, General Trias, Cavite 45 (cropped).jpg|A motorized tricycle in
General Trias,
Cavite File:Motor tricycles for hire lined up outside public market in downtown Bantayan.JPG|Motor tricycles for hire lined up outside public market in downtown
Bantayan, Cebu File:BEMAC 68VM Passenger QC1.jpg|The BEMAC 68VM Passenger in Quezon City.
Motorela The
motorela, locally nicknamed as "
the mini jeepney", is a variant of a motorized tricycle predominantly used in
Northern Mindanao, particularly in
Cagayan de Oro and
Bukidnon province. It is a motorcycle with an enclosed cabin rigidly attached, and has four wheels – the two wheels of a motorcycle, and an additional wheel on each side. It has the capacity to carry more passengers than the traditional tricycle. The motorela was invented by Rafael D. Floirendo, a mechanic from Cagayan de Oro, in 1964. The name "motorela" originates from a
portmanteau of "motorized" and "
carretela". ==Cargo tricycles==