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Tax DeductionsDecember 3, 2025Updated: July 11, 202620 min read

Car and Mileage Deduction 2026: Complete Guide to Maximizing Your Business Vehicle Tax Savings

Car and Mileage Deduction 2026: Complete Guide to Maximizing Your Business Vehicle Tax Savings

The IRS standard mileage rate for 2026 is 72.5 cents per business mile, set by IRS Notice 2026-10 and up 2.5 cents from the 2025 rate of 70 cents. Multiply your business miles by $0.725 and that is your deduction: 10,000 business miles equals a $7,250 write-off. If you are still finishing your 2025 tax return, use 70 cents per mile for miles driven in 2025.

Key takeaways:

  • 2026 business rate: 72.5¢ per mile (Notice 2026-10). Medical and active-duty military moving miles: 20.5¢. Charitable miles: 14¢.
  • Self-employed people deduct mileage on Schedule C. W-2 employees cannot deduct unreimbursed mileage; the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) made the TCJA suspension permanent. Employees need employer reimbursement instead.
  • You choose between the standard mileage rate and the actual expense method. The choice you make in a vehicle's first business year restricts your options later.
  • The IRS requires a contemporaneous mileage log (date, destination, business purpose, miles) under IRC § 274(d). Reconstructed logs get thrown out in audits.

How Much Is the Mileage Deduction Worth?

The business mileage deduction calculation is the same for 2025 and 2026; only the IRS rate changes:

Business miles2026 deduction (72.5¢/mile)2025 deduction (70¢/mile)
1,000$725$700
5,000$3,625$3,500
10,000$7,250$7,000
15,000$10,875$10,500
20,000$14,500$14,000

Your actual tax savings equal the deduction times your combined tax rate. A sole proprietor in the 22% bracket also saves self-employment tax, so a 10,000-mile ($7,250) deduction cuts the final tax bill by roughly $2,600. Run your own numbers in the mileage deduction calculator.


Understanding Business Mileage: What Counts and What Doesn't

What IS Deductible Business Travel

Business mileage is any driving you do for business purposes. According to IRS Publication 463 and IRC Section 162, deductible business locations include:

Deductible trips:

  • Driving from your home office to client meetings
  • Visiting suppliers or vendors
  • Traveling to business banking appointments
  • Attending work-related classes or seminars
  • Going to the store for business supplies
  • Traveling between multiple work locations in one day
  • Driving to temporary work sites (expected to last less than 1 year)

What is NOT Deductible: The Commuting Rule

Non-deductible trips:

  • Driving from home to your regular office (commuting)
  • Personal errands, even if you make a business call during the drive
  • Placing advertising on your vehicle doesn't make commuting deductible
  • Listening to business podcasts during your commute doesn't count

Legal Citation: IRC § 262 - Personal, living, and family expenses are not deductible.

Standard mileage vs actual expense comparison


The Home Office Advantage: Convert Commuting to Business Miles

This is the biggest tax hack most business owners miss.

If you have a qualified home office that serves as your principal place of business, the commuting rule doesn't apply. Every trip from your home office becomes a deductible business trip.

Real-World Example

Without Home Office:

  • Kam drives 20 miles each way to her downtown office (40 miles/day)
  • These are non-deductible commuting miles
  • Annual loss: 10,400 miles × $0.725 = $7,540 in lost deductions

With Home Office:

  • Kam establishes a home office for administrative work
  • Same 20-mile trip is now a business trip between two work locations
  • Annual deduction: 10,400 miles × $0.725 = $7,540 deduction
  • Income tax savings in the 24% bracket: $1,810/year, before self-employment tax savings

Source: IRS Publication 587, Business Use of Your Home - states that travel from a home office that qualifies as a principal place of business is deductible. Check whether your workspace qualifies with the home office tax deduction calculator.


Method 1: Standard Mileage Rate (72.5¢ per Mile for 2026)

How the Standard Mileage Rate Works

The standard mileage rate (sometimes called the automatic mileage method) is the simplest option. The IRS sets a rate each year that factors in:

  • Gas and oil
  • Maintenance and repairs
  • Tires
  • Insurance
  • Registration fees
  • Depreciation

2026 rate: 72.5¢ per business mile (the 2025 rate, for returns you file in early 2026, was 70¢)

Source: IRS Notice 2026-10 - announces the standard mileage rates for 2026.

Standard Mileage Calculation Example

Business miles driven: 15,000 Standard mileage rate (2026): $0.725 Total deduction: 15,000 × $0.725 = $10,875

What You CAN Still Deduct

Even when using the standard mileage rate, you can deduct:

ExpenseDeductible?Notes
Interest on car loan✅ YesBusiness-use percentage only
Parking fees✅ YesFor business trips only
Tolls✅ YesFor business trips only
Personal property tax✅ YesVehicle value-based tax only
Gas, maintenance, insurance❌ NoAlready included in standard rate

Can You Deduct Car Loan Interest With the Standard Mileage Rate?

Yes, if you are self-employed. IRS Publication 463 allows Schedule C filers to deduct the business-use percentage of car loan interest as a separate expense, even when using the standard mileage rate. Separately, OBBBA added a personal deduction of up to $10,000 per year for interest on a loan for a new, U.S.-assembled personal vehicle purchased in 2025 through 2028, phasing out above $100,000 MAGI single ($200,000 married filing jointly).

Can You Deduct Personal Property Tax With the Standard Mileage Rate?

Yes. The value-based (ad valorem) portion of your state or local vehicle registration fee is deductible in addition to the standard mileage rate. Self-employed drivers deduct the business-use share on Schedule C; the personal share is deductible only if you itemize, subject to the 2026 SALT cap of $40,400.

Requirements to Use Standard Mileage Rate

⚠️ Critical First-Year Rule:

You MUST use the standard mileage rate in the first year you use a vehicle for business, or you're permanently barred from using it for that vehicle.

Additional requirements:

  • Cannot operate 5+ vehicles simultaneously for business
  • Cannot have used actual expense method with accelerated depreciation, Section 179, or bonus depreciation on this vehicle
  • For leased vehicles: Must use standard mileage for entire lease period

Source: IRS Revenue Procedure 2019-46 - establishes the first-year requirement.


Method 2: Actual Expense Method

How the Actual Expense Method Works

With the actual expense method, you deduct the actual costs of operating your vehicle for business, multiplied by your business-use percentage.

Deductible Expenses

Operating Expenses:

  • ⛽ Gas and oil
  • 🔧 Repairs and maintenance
  • 🚗 Tires
  • 📋 Insurance
  • 📝 Registration fees
  • 🚗 License fees
  • 🅿️ Parking and tolls (business)
  • 🚙 Lease payments
  • 💰 Loan interest

Plus: Vehicle Depreciation

  • The yearly decline in your vehicle's value
  • Calculated using IRS depreciation tables
  • Subject to "luxury auto" limits
  • Alternative: Section 179 expensing (up to certain limits)

Actual Expense Calculation Example

Annual vehicle expenses:

ExpenseAmount
Gas$3,500
Oil changes$200
Repairs$800
Tires$600
Insurance$1,800
Registration$150
Depreciation$4,000
Total expenses$11,050

Business use: 75% Deductible amount: $11,050 × 75% = $8,287.50

When to Use Actual Expenses

The actual expense method typically works better when you have:

An expensive vehicle (over $30,000) ✓ High operating costs (repairs, insurance) ✓ Lower annual mileage (under 12,000 miles) ✓ Business use over 50%SUV/truck over 6,000 lbs (higher Section 179 limits)


Comparing the Two Methods: Which Saves More?

Side-by-Side Comparison

FactorStandard MileageActual Expense
Record keepingTrack miles onlyTrack all expenses + miles
Best forHigh mileage, lower-cost carsExpensive cars, high costs
IRS FormSimpler reportingForm 4562 for depreciation
SwitchingCan switch after year 1Hard to switch back
CalculationMiles × $0.725Expenses × business %

Real-World Scenarios

Scenario 1: High-Mileage Salesperson

  • Vehicle: 2023 Honda Accord ($28,000)
  • Business miles: 20,000
  • Total miles: 25,000 (80% business)
  • Actual expenses: $6,500/year

Standard Mileage: 20,000 × $0.725 = $14,500 deduction ✅ Winner

Actual Expense: $6,500 × 80% = $5,200 deduction


Scenario 2: Expensive SUV, Moderate Mileage

  • Vehicle: 2024 BMW X5 ($75,000)
  • Business miles: 8,000
  • Total miles: 12,000 (67% business)
  • Actual expenses: $18,000/year (including depreciation)

Standard Mileage: 8,000 × $0.725 = $5,800 deduction

Actual Expense: $18,000 × 67% = $12,060 deduction ✅ Winner


IRS Mileage Reimbursement Rate for 2026

If you're an employer reimbursing employees for business driving — or an employee receiving reimbursement — the IRS standard mileage rate also serves as the benchmark for tax-free mileage reimbursement.

How Mileage Reimbursement Works

When an employer reimburses business mileage at or below the IRS standard rate (72.5 cents per mile for 2026), the reimbursement is:

  • Tax-free for the employee — not reported as income on their W-2
  • Fully deductible for the employer as a business expense
  • Governed by an accountable plan under IRS regulations

An accountable plan requires three things:

  1. The expense must have a business connection
  2. The employee must adequately account for expenses within a reasonable time (typically 60 days)
  3. The employee must return excess reimbursements within a reasonable time (typically 120 days)

Source: IRS Publication 463 and Treasury Regulation § 1.62-2

Reimbursement vs. Deduction: Key Differences

SituationTax Treatment
Self-employed (Schedule C filer)Deduct mileage on Schedule C
Employee reimbursed under accountable planTax-free reimbursement, no deduction needed
Employee reimbursed above IRS rateExcess is taxable W-2 income
Employee NOT reimbursedNo deduction available (TCJA suspended unreimbursed employee expenses; OBBBA made the suspension permanent)

Can W-2 Employees Deduct Mileage in 2026?

No. W-2 employees cannot deduct unreimbursed business mileage on their federal return. The TCJA suspended unreimbursed employee expenses starting in 2018, and OBBBA made that suspension permanent. The only exceptions are Armed Forces reservists, qualified performing artists, and fee-basis state or local government officials, who claim vehicle expenses on Form 2106. Everyone else should ask their employer for tax-free reimbursement under an accountable plan.

Can Employers Reimburse More Than 72.5 Cents Per Mile?

Yes, but the excess above the IRS standard rate is treated as taxable income to the employee and subject to payroll taxes. Many companies choose to reimburse at exactly the IRS rate to keep things simple.


Special Rules and Limits

Luxury Auto Depreciation Limits

The IRS imposes annual depreciation limits on "passenger automobiles" (generally vehicles under 6,000 lbs). For vehicles placed in service in 2026:

YearMaximum Depreciation
1st year$20,300 (with bonus depreciation)
1st year$12,300 (without bonus)
2nd year$19,800
3rd year$11,900
Each year after$7,160

Bonus depreciation itself is 100% and permanent under OBBBA for property acquired after January 19, 2025, but for passenger automobiles it only adds $8,000 to the first-year cap. Model the year-by-year schedule with the depreciation calculator.

Source: IRC § 280F and Rev. Proc. 2026-15 - limit depreciation deductions for passenger automobiles placed in service in 2026.

Heavy SUVs and Trucks (Over 6,000 lbs)

Vehicles with a gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR) over 6,000 lbs have different rules:

  • Not subject to luxury auto limits
  • Can qualify for Section 179 expensing up to $32,000 (2026 limit, Rev. Proc. 2025-32)
  • Remaining basis above the SUV cap can be written off with 100% bonus depreciation
  • Warning: taking Section 179 or bonus depreciation permanently bars the standard mileage rate for that vehicle

Examples of vehicles over 6,000 lbs GVWR:

  • Ford F-150
  • Chevy Suburban
  • BMW X7
  • Mercedes GLS
  • Cadillac Escalade

Record-Keeping Requirements: What the IRS Demands

IRC Section 274(d): The Strict Substantiation Rule

Vehicle expenses are subject to heightened scrutiny under IRC § 274(d). You must maintain contemporaneous records showing:

  1. Mileage:

    • Date of each trip
    • Business destination
    • Business purpose
    • Miles driven
    • Starting and ending odometer readings (annually)
  2. Expenses (if using actual expense method):

    • Receipts for all expenses over $75
    • Credit card statements
    • Canceled checks
    • Invoices

Do You Need Odometer Readings for Every Trip?

No. The IRS requires your total miles for the year (record the odometer on January 1 and December 31) plus a per-trip log of date, destination, business purpose, and miles driven. Per-trip odometer readings are not required as long as the log shows each trip's mileage; a tracking app or your trip odometer satisfies this.

Best Practices

Do This:

  • Use a mileage tracking app (MileIQ, Everlance, TripLog)
  • Log trips within 24 hours (contemporaneous requirement)
  • Keep a written logbook as backup (start with this free mileage log template)
  • Record odometer readings on January 1 and December 31
  • Save all receipts digitally
  • Note business purpose for each trip

Don't Do This:

  • Recreate mileage logs from memory (IRS will disallow)
  • Use rough estimates
  • Claim 100% business use (red flag for audits)
  • Forget to separate personal and business trips

Case Law: Sanford v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo 2013-212 - Taxpayer's entire mileage deduction disallowed due to inadequate records, despite admitting some business use occurred.


Electric Vehicles and Tax Benefits

EV-Specific Deduction Rules

Standard Mileage Rate:

  • Same 72.5¢ per mile applies to EVs
  • Often MORE favorable for EVs: charging at home costs far less per mile than the rate assumes

Actual Expense Method:

  • Electricity costs (business %)
  • Maintenance (typically lower for EVs)
  • Full depreciation available
  • Higher insurance costs

Federal EV Tax Credits Ended Under OBBBA

The federal EV purchase credits are gone for vehicles bought in 2026. OBBBA terminated the Clean Vehicle Credit (IRC § 30D, up to $7,500) and the Commercial Clean Vehicle Credit (IRC § 45W) for vehicles acquired after September 30, 2025. The EV charger credit (IRC § 30C) lasted slightly longer but only covers chargers placed in service before July 1, 2026.

If you acquired a qualifying EV or installed a charger before those cutoff dates, you can still claim the credit on the return for the year you placed it in service. Some states still offer their own EV rebates and credits.

Source: IRS FAQs on OBBBA changes to §§ 25E, 30C, 30D, 45W


Making the First-Year Decision

The Decision Matrix

Choose Standard Mileage (72.5¢/mile) if:

  • ✅ You drive many business miles
  • ✅ You have an average or low-cost vehicle
  • ✅ You want simple record-keeping
  • ✅ Your operating costs are average
  • ✅ You use the vehicle less than 50% for business

Choose Actual Expenses if:

  • ✅ You have an expensive vehicle (>$40,000)
  • ✅ You drive fewer business miles
  • ✅ Your operating costs are high
  • ✅ You use the vehicle more than 50% for business
  • ✅ You have an SUV/truck over 6,000 lbs

Pro Tip: Calculate Both Methods

In your first year, calculate your deduction both ways before you file. Once you file using a method, you've made your election for that vehicle.

Many tax software programs (including Jupid) will calculate both methods for you and recommend the one that saves you more.


Common Mistakes That Cost Thousands

Mistake #1: Not Establishing a Home Office

Lost Opportunity: Converting 10,000 commuting miles to business miles Cost: 10,000 × $0.725 = $7,250 in lost deductions Tax Impact: $1,595 to $2,683 in income tax (22% to 37% bracket), plus self-employment tax

Mistake #2: Switching Methods Incorrectly

The Problem: Using actual expense method in Year 1, then trying to switch to standard mileage Result: Permanently barred from standard mileage rate for that vehicle

Mistake #3: Poor Record-Keeping

In an audit, the burden of proof is on you. IRC § 274(d) lets the IRS disallow the entire vehicle deduction when the log is missing or reconstructed after the fact, even if some business driving clearly happened (that is exactly what occurred in Sanford v. Commissioner, cited above). Penalties and interest come on top of the disallowed deduction.

Mistake #4: Mixing Personal and Business Without Proper Documentation

Red Flags for IRS:

  • Claiming 100% business use
  • Round numbers (exactly 10,000 miles)
  • No personal vehicle available
  • Claiming commuting as business

Simplify Your Car Deductions With AI

Tracking mileage, choosing the right method, and maintaining IRS-compliant records shouldn't consume hours of your time. At Jupid, our AI-powered platform automates the entire process.

What makes Jupid different for vehicle deductions:

95.9% categorization accuracy — Jupid's AI auto-categorizes your vehicle expenses from connected bank accounts

WhatsApp and iMessage support — Ask questions like "Should I use standard mileage or actual expenses?" and get instant, personalized answers from your AI accountant, or forward gas and repair receipts straight from your phone

Bank connection — Connect your accounts and Jupid automatically catches gas, maintenance, and repair expenses you might miss

Example conversation:

  • You: "I drove 15,000 business miles this year in my 2023 Toyota Camry. Which method saves me more?"
  • Jupid: "Based on your vehicle and mileage, the standard mileage rate would give you a $10,875 deduction (15,000 × $0.725). If the business-use share of your actual expenses is less than $10,875, standard mileage is better. I can help you total your actual expenses if you'd like to compare."

Try Jupid — maximize your vehicle deductions with AI →


How to Claim Your Mileage Deduction on Your Tax Return

Filing the mileage deduction depends on your business entity type. Here's where to report it:

Self-Employed / Sole Proprietors

  1. Calculate total business miles and deduction amount
  2. Complete Part IV of Schedule C (Form 1040) — Vehicle Expenses
  3. Report the deduction on Line 9 (Car and truck expenses) of Schedule C
  4. If you have multiple vehicles, complete Form 4562 Section V for each

Single-Member LLC

Same as sole proprietor — report on Schedule C attached to your personal Form 1040.

Partnerships and S-Corps

  • Business vehicle expenses are reported on the entity return (Form 1065 or 1120-S)
  • If an employee-shareholder uses a personal vehicle: the business reimburses under an accountable plan
  • Unreimbursed partner expenses go on Schedule E via the partner's K-1

Required Forms

Business TypePrimary FormVehicle Section
Sole proprietor / Single-member LLCSchedule CPart IV, Line 9
PartnershipForm 1065Deductions section
S-CorpForm 1120-SDeductions section
Actual expense with depreciationForm 4562Section V

Pro Tip: Keep your mileage log for at least 3 years after filing (the IRS statute of limitations). If you underreported income by more than 25%, keep it for 6 years.


Checklist: Your Action Plan for 2026

Setup (at the start of the year, or today if you haven't yet):

  • Decide if you'll use standard mileage or actual expense method
  • If actual expenses: Set up a system to track all vehicle costs
  • Record your vehicle's odometer reading (January 1, or the day you start tracking)
  • Set up a mileage tracking app or logbook
  • Determine if you qualify for a home office deduction

Throughout 2026:

  • Log every business trip within 24 hours
  • Save all vehicle-related receipts (if using actual expenses)
  • Review your method quarterly - are you on track?
  • Keep personal and business use separate

Before Filing Your 2026 Tax Return:

  • Calculate total business miles for the year
  • Record December 31 odometer reading
  • If actual expenses: Total all vehicle costs
  • Calculate deduction using both methods (first year only)
  • Choose the method that gives you the largest deduction
  • Ensure you have documentation for all deductions

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the IRS mileage rate for 2026?

The IRS standard mileage rate for 2026 is 72.5 cents per mile for business driving, as announced in IRS Notice 2026-10. This is an increase of 2.5 cents from the 2025 rate of 70 cents per mile. Medical and moving mileage (moving applies to active-duty military and certain intelligence-community members only) is 20.5 cents per mile for 2026, and charitable driving remains at 14 cents per mile.

What is the new mileage rate for 2026 compared to previous years?

The new 2026 IRS mileage rate of 72.5 cents per mile continues the upward trend: it was 65.5 cents in 2023, 67 cents in 2024, 70 cents in 2025, and now 72.5 cents for 2026. The increase reflects rising vehicle operating costs including fuel, insurance, and maintenance.

Can I deduct mileage for driving to and from work?

No. Driving between your home and your regular place of work is considered commuting and is not deductible. However, if you have a qualified home office that serves as your principal place of business, trips from your home to client sites or other business locations become deductible business mileage.

What is the 2026 mileage reimbursement rate for employers?

The IRS mileage reimbursement rate for 2026 is 72.5 cents per mile — the same as the standard mileage rate. Employers who reimburse at or below this rate under an accountable plan can provide tax-free reimbursements to employees. Reimbursement above 72.5 cents per mile is treated as taxable income.

Should I use the standard mileage rate or actual expenses?

If you drive many business miles in an average-cost vehicle, the standard mileage rate (72.5 cents/mile) typically gives a larger deduction. If you drive fewer miles in an expensive vehicle with high operating costs, actual expenses may be better. Calculate both ways in your first year — once you choose actual expenses with accelerated depreciation, you cannot switch back to standard mileage for that vehicle.


Final Thoughts

Car and mileage deductions represent one of the largest potential tax savings for small business owners and self-employed individuals. With the 2026 standard mileage rate at 72.5¢ per mile, someone driving just 12,000 business miles can deduct $8,700, which is worth $1,914 to $3,219 in income tax savings depending on their bracket, plus self-employment tax savings.

The key is choosing the right method in year one, maintaining meticulous records, and never treating your commute as a business trip unless you have a qualified home office.

Remember: The IRS scrutinizes vehicle deductions more than almost any other business expense. Proper documentation isn't just recommended—it's required by law under IRC § 274(d).

Sources and Additional Reading:

Disclaimer: This article provides general tax information and should not be considered legal or tax advice. Tax laws change frequently, and individual circumstances vary. Consult with a qualified tax professional or use Jupid's AI-powered platform for personalized guidance.

Last updated: July 11, 2026

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Slava Akulov
Slava Akulov

CEO & Co-Founder

Fintech CEO with 10+ years building accounting and financial technology products. Previously co-founded and scaled an AI-powered accounting platform to $30M revenue and 100K+ business users, achieving 30,000 customers per accountant through automation — recognized by CNBC as a top fintech company. Holds a Master's in Management Information Systems. At Jupid, he leads the development of AI-native bookkeeping, tax, and compliance tools designed for freelancers and small business owners.

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