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How to Deduct Mileage and Car Expenses

Disclosure: The article may contain affiliate links from partners who may compensate us. However, the words, opinions, and reviews are our own. Learn how we make money to support our mission.

Using your car for business can create a real tax deduction, but it is also an area where people make easy mistakes. Not every drive counts. Not every car expense can be deducted. And if you do not keep records, the deduction gets harder to support.

In this guide, you’ll learn how to deduct mileage and car expenses, choose between the standard mileage rate and actual expense method, and keep the records you need for tax time.


TL;DR: Quick Decision Guide

  • If you use your car for business → you may deduct eligible business driving.
  • If you want the simpler method → use the standard mileage rate if you qualify.
  • If your actual car costs are high → compare the actual expense method.
  • If you are commuting from home to a regular workplace → that mileage is usually not deductible.
  • If you use the car for both business and personal driving → track business miles and total miles.


Step 1: Know What Business Mileage Means

Business mileage is driving connected to your self-employment, freelance work, side hustle, or business activity. It is not the same as personal driving or commuting.

Business mileage may include driving to:

  • Client meetings
  • Temporary job sites
  • Business errands
  • Supply pickups
  • Networking events
  • Professional conferences
  • The bank for business deposits
  • The post office for business shipping
  • A second business location
  • Vendor or contractor meetings

The IRS explains that deductible car expenses can generally be figured using either the standard mileage rate method or actual expense method. If you qualify for both, you may want to calculate both to see which gives the larger deduction.

What to do:
Before claiming mileage, connect each trip to a clear business purpose.

👉 Explore: Tax software and free filing options in the Marketplace →


Step 2: Separate Business Miles From Commuting

Commuting is usually not deductible. That means driving from your home to a regular workplace generally does not count as business mileage.

This matters if you have both a W-2 job and a side hustle. Your commute to your employee job is not a business deduction. But driving from your home office to a client meeting for your freelance business may be deductible if it meets the rules.

Type of DrivingUsually Deductible?
Home to regular W-2 workplaceNo
Home office to client meetingPossibly
Client meeting to supply storePossibly
Business bank deposit tripPossibly
Personal grocery tripNo
Delivery app miles while workingPossibly
Driving to a temporary business locationPossibly

What to do:
Track business trips separately from commuting and personal trips. Do not include regular commuting miles in your business mileage total.

👉 Learn: How to Track Business Expenses for Taxes


Step 3: Choose the Standard Mileage Rate or Actual Expense Method

You generally calculate car deductions using one of two methods.

MethodHow It WorksBest When
Standard mileage rateMultiply business miles by the IRS mileage rateYou want simpler recordkeeping
Actual expense methodDeduct the business-use percentage of actual car costsYour car expenses are high and records are strong

For 2026, the IRS standard mileage rate for business use is 72.5 cents per mile. For 2025, the business mileage rate was 70 cents per mile.

What to do:
If you qualify for both methods, estimate the deduction both ways before choosing. Tax software can often compare them.


Step 4: Use the Standard Mileage Rate Correctly

The standard mileage rate is the simpler method. You multiply your business miles by the IRS rate for that tax year.

Example:
If you drove 3,000 business miles in 2026 and the rate is 72.5 cents per mile:

3,000 × $0.725 = $2,175 business mileage deduction

When you use the standard mileage rate, you generally cannot also deduct actual car costs like gas, repairs, depreciation, lease payments, insurance, or registration fees for that same vehicle use. IRS guidance notes that the standard mileage rate is used in place of actual expenses such as depreciation, lease payments, maintenance, repairs, gasoline, oil, insurance, and registration fees.

You may still be able to deduct business-related parking fees and tolls separately, but not parking at your regular place of business or commuting-related tolls.

What to do:
Use the standard mileage rate only with a mileage log. The rate is simple, but you still need records.


Step 5: Use the Actual Expense Method Carefully

The actual expense method uses the real costs of operating your vehicle for business. You then deduct the business-use percentage.

Actual expenses may include:

  • Gas
  • Oil
  • Repairs
  • Tires
  • Insurance
  • Registration fees
  • Lease payments
  • Depreciation
  • Garage rent
  • Maintenance
  • Car washes, if business-related
  • Loan interest business-use portion, if applicable

Example:
If your total annual car expenses were $8,000 and 40% of your miles were for business, your deductible business portion may be:

$8,000 × 40% = $3,200

What to do:
Use the actual expense method only if you can track total vehicle expenses and total miles for the year. Without total miles, you cannot calculate the business-use percentage well.


Step 6: Keep a Mileage Log

A mileage log is the foundation of a vehicle deduction. Guessing at year-end is risky and usually less accurate.

Track:

Mileage DetailWhy It Matters
DateShows when the trip happened
Starting locationSupports the route
DestinationShows where you went
Business purposeExplains why the trip was deductible
Miles drivenUsed to calculate deduction
Odometer readingsHelps support total mileage
Parking and tollsMay be separately deductible

You can use a notebook, spreadsheet, mileage app, calendar, or bookkeeping software. The best system is the one you will actually use.

What to do:
Record mileage as close to the trip as possible. Do not wait until tax season to recreate a year of driving.

Smile Money Tip:
Your mileage log does not need to be fancy. It needs to be consistent, clear, and connected to real business activity.


Step 7: Track Total Miles Too

If you use the actual expense method, or if your car is used for both business and personal driving, you need to know total annual miles.

Total miles help calculate your business-use percentage.

Miles TypeExample
Total annual miles15,000
Business miles6,000
Business-use percentage40%

Even if you use the standard mileage rate, tracking total miles can help support your records and business-use pattern.

What to do:
Write down your odometer reading on January 1 and December 31, or when you start and stop using the car for business during the year.


Step 8: Be Careful With Mixed-Use Vehicles

Most freelancers and small business owners use the same vehicle for both business and personal life. That is fine, but only the business portion is deductible.

Do not deduct personal driving, such as:

  • Grocery trips
  • School drop-offs
  • Family errands
  • Vacations
  • Personal appointments
  • Regular commuting
  • Personal meals or shopping trips

If a trip has both business and personal purposes, document the business portion clearly.

What to do:
When in doubt, write a note. A quick explanation can help you remember why the trip was or was not business-related.


Step 9: Know When Employees Usually Cannot Deduct Mileage

If you are a W-2 employee using your car for work, federal rules generally do not allow unreimbursed employee business expense deductions for most employees under current law. Some states may treat this differently, and certain categories of workers may have exceptions.

If your employer reimburses mileage under an accountable plan, that reimbursement may not be taxable to you if it follows the rules.

What to do:
If you are an employee, ask your employer about reimbursement. Do not assume unreimbursed work driving is deductible on your federal return.


Step 10: Report the Deduction Correctly

If you are self-employed, car and truck expenses are typically reported on Schedule C. You may need to answer questions about the vehicle, business miles, commuting miles, other miles, and whether you have evidence to support the deduction.

Publication 463 explains deductible travel, gift, and car expenses, including what records you need and how to report expenses on your return.

What to do:
Use tax software that supports business vehicle expenses or work with a tax professional if you are unsure which method to choose.


Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Deducting commuting miles
  • Guessing mileage at year-end
  • Claiming both standard mileage and actual car expenses for the same use
  • Forgetting parking and tolls tied to business driving
  • Not tracking total miles
  • Deducting 100% of a mixed-use vehicle
  • Ignoring state rules
  • Forgetting to save repair, insurance, or gas records when using actual expenses
  • Assuming an LLC makes personal driving deductible

FAQs on Deducting Mileage and Car Expenses

  1. Can I deduct mileage from home to work?

    Usually no. Regular commuting from home to a regular workplace is generally not deductible.

  2. Can I deduct mileage for my side hustle?

    Yes, if the miles are ordinary, necessary, business-related, and properly tracked. Examples may include driving to clients, deliveries, supplies, or temporary business locations.

  3. Which is better: standard mileage or actual expenses?

    It depends. The IRS says if you qualify for both methods, you may want to figure the deduction both ways and choose the larger one.

  4. Can I deduct gas and mileage?

    Not for the same business use. If you use the standard mileage rate, gas and many other actual car expenses are already built into the rate.

  5. What is the 2026 IRS business mileage rate?

    The 2026 business standard mileage rate is 72.5 cents per mile.


Final Thought

Mileage and car expenses can be valuable deductions, but only when the driving is truly business-related and well documented. The deduction is not about turning your car into a tax trick. It is about recognizing the real cost of using your vehicle to earn business income.

Track trips as they happen, separate business from personal miles, compare the two methods when you can, and keep records that make your deduction easy to explain.

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Author Bio

Picture of Jason Vitug

Jason Vitug

Jason Vitug is the founder and CEO of phroogal. His writings explore the intersection of money, wellness, and life. Jason is a New York Times reviewed author, speaker, and world traveler, and Plutus-award winning creator. He holds an MBA from Norwich University and a BS in Finance from Rutgers University. View my favorite things
Picture of Jason Vitug

Jason Vitug

Jason Vitug is the founder and CEO of phroogal. His writings explore the intersection of money, wellness, and life. Jason is a New York Times reviewed author, speaker, and world traveler, and Plutus-award winning creator. He holds an MBA from Norwich University and a BS in Finance from Rutgers University. View my favorite things