Truck drivers subject to DOT hours-of-service limits can deduct 80% of a special IRS per diem of $80 per day for meals during 2026 travel in the continental U.S., which works out to $64 per full day on the road. The $80 rate (IRS Notice 2025-54) has held since October 1, 2024, so it covers your entire 2025 tax return and 2026 travel through at least September 30, 2026. The deductions in this guide apply to owner-operators and 1099 truck drivers filing Schedule C; W-2 company drivers cannot deduct unreimbursed job expenses on a federal return.
Key takeaways:
- Per diem: $80/day in the continental U.S., $86/day outside it, for October 1, 2025 through September 30, 2026 (IRS Notice 2025-54) — the same rate as the year before. Partial travel days count at 75%, or $60.
- Meals: drivers subject to DOT hours of service deduct 80% of meal costs under IRC §274(n)(3); every other business is capped at 50%.
- The truck: semi tractors over 14,000 lbs GVWR are exempt from the SUV cap. Section 179 covers up to $2.5 million for 2025 ($2.56 million for 2026), and 100% bonus depreciation is permanent again.
- Mileage: the 72.5¢/mile standard rate for 2026 applies only to cars, pickups, panel trucks, and vans, not semis. Owner-operators deduct actual truck expenses.
- W-2 company drivers: no federal deduction for unreimbursed expenses (the TCJA suspension was made permanent in 2025); tax-free per diem is available only through an employer accountable plan.

Owner-operators and 1099 truck drivers can write off every ordinary and necessary business expense on Schedule C: per diem meals at 80%, fuel, repairs, insurance, truck depreciation or Section 179, sleeper berth costs, tolls and scales, licenses and permits, ELD subscriptions, and half of self-employment tax.
Here is what that looks like for an owner-operator with $80,000 net income and 280 days away from home:
| Deduction | Amount |
|---|
| Per diem meals (280 days × $80, deductible at 80%) | $17,920 |
| Truck operating expenses (fuel, repairs, insurance) | $25,000 |
| Sleeper berth and lodging | $2,500 |
| Equipment and supplies | $1,500 |
| Licenses and permits | $1,200 |
| Half of self-employment tax | $5,652 |
| Total deductions | $53,772 |
At the 22% bracket, those deductions cut federal income tax by about $11,830. The business expenses (everything except the SE-tax deduction) also reduce self-employment tax by roughly $6,800, so the combined savings approach $18,600.
Legal Basis: IRC Section 162, IRC Section 274(n)(3), IRS Publication 463, IRS Notice 2025-54
Your tax deductions depend heavily on your employment classification:
| Factor | Owner-Operator (1099) | Company Driver (W-2) |
|---|
| Tax forms received | 1099-NEC | W-2 |
| Business deductions | Full Schedule C | Very limited |
| Per diem method | Tax deduction | Must receive from employer |
| Truck expenses | Fully deductible | Not deductible |
| Self-employment tax | Yes (15.3%) | No (split with employer) |
Important: The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act suspended unreimbursed employee deductions for W-2 drivers through 2025, and the One Big Beautiful Bill Act of 2025 made that repeal permanent. If you're a company driver, the only per diem route is through your employer, typically as a tax-free reimbursement under an accountable plan.
Owner-operators and 1099 independent contractors can deduct all ordinary and necessary business expenses on Schedule C.
The Schedule C principal business activity code for most truck drivers is 484120 (general freight trucking, long-distance). Local drivers use 484110, and specialized freight haulers such as tanker, flatbed, and auto carriers use 484200. The code goes in box B of Schedule C.
Per diem is a daily allowance for meals and incidental expenses while traveling away from your tax home. For truck drivers, this is often the largest deduction.
The IRS sets one flat special per diem rate for transportation workers each October. Truck drivers use this special rate instead of the locality-based GSA tables that apply to other business travelers.
| Period | Continental U.S. (CONUS) | Outside CONUS |
|---|
| Oct 1, 2024 – Sep 30, 2025 (Notice 2024-68) | $80/day | $86/day |
| Oct 1, 2025 – Sep 30, 2026 (Notice 2025-54) | $80/day | $86/day |
Partial travel days, meaning the day you leave and the day you return home, count at 75% of the rate: $60 instead of $80. The IRS will announce the rate for October 1, 2026 onward in the fall of 2026.
Source: IRS Notice 2025-54
Truck drivers subject to DOT hours-of-service limits deduct 80% of meal expenses, whether they use the per diem or actual receipts. IRC § 274(n)(1) caps business meal deductions at 50% for everyone else in 2026; IRC § 274(n)(3) raises that cap to 80% for transportation workers subject to DOT hours of service, which covers most interstate drivers.
| Step | Amount |
|---|
| Days away from tax home | 280 |
| Per diem rate (full days) | $80 |
| Total per diem (280 × $80) | $22,400 |
| Deductible portion (80%) | $17,920 |
| Federal income tax savings at 22% bracket | $3,942 |
Instead of per diem, you can track actual meal costs. This requires keeping all receipts but may result in a larger deduction if you eat at more expensive locations. For example, $22,000 in meal receipts at 80% gives a $17,600 deduction, saving $3,872 at the 22% bracket.
Strategy: Compare both methods. If your actual meals exceed $80/day, use the actual expense method. If not, per diem is simpler and often better.
Not on a federal return. W-2 company drivers cannot deduct per diem or any other unreimbursed job expense; the deduction was suspended by the TCJA and permanently repealed by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The workaround is employer-paid per diem under an accountable plan: the carrier pays you a per-mile or per-day meal allowance that arrives tax-free and never shows up in your W-2 wages. A few states, including California, New York, and Pennsylvania, still allow unreimbursed employee expenses on the state return.
Per diem removes the need for meal receipts, not for travel records. Under Rev. Proc. 2019-48, you must still substantiate the time, place, and business purpose of each trip; ELD logs and trip sheets do this job. Two limits to know: self-employed drivers can use per diem only for meals and incidental expenses, and lodging always requires actual receipts.
For owner-operators, truck expenses are a major deduction category. You have two options:
The 2026 IRS standard mileage rate is 72.5 cents per mile (Notice 2026-10).
Important limitation: The IRS allows the standard mileage rate only for cars, vans, pickups, and panel trucks (IRS Publication 463). A semi tractor is none of those, so owner-operators use the actual expense method for the rig.
However, if you use a personal vehicle for business (driving to pick up your truck, etc.), you can use the standard mileage rate for those trips.
Track all truck-related expenses and deduct the business-use percentage:
✅ Deductible truck expenses:
- Fuel
- Oil and lubricants
- Tires
- Repairs and maintenance
- Insurance
- Registration and licensing
- Truck payments (interest portion)
- Depreciation
- Truck washes
- Tolls and scales
Annual truck expenses:
Fuel: $45,000
Repairs and maintenance: $8,000
Insurance: $6,000
Depreciation: $12,000
Tires: $3,500
Registration/permits: $2,500
Tolls and scales: $1,500
Total truck expenses: $78,500
Business use (typically 100% for OTR): $78,500
Tax savings at 22% bracket: $17,270
Use our Mileage Deduction Calculator for personal vehicle trips.
Vehicle weight decides the write-off limit. SUVs and trucks between 6,000 and 14,000 lbs GVWR hit a Section 179 vehicle cap of $32,000 in 2026 ($31,300 in 2025). Vehicles over 14,000 lbs GVWR, including semi tractors and most straight trucks, have no vehicle cap: you can expense the full purchase price under Section 179, up to the overall limit of $2.5 million for 2025 or $2.56 million for 2026. On top of that, 100% bonus depreciation is permanent again for equipment acquired and placed in service after January 19, 2025, so a new or used tractor can typically be written off in full in year one. Financed trucks qualify too: you deduct the full purchase price while still making payments, and the loan interest is deductible separately.
When you sleep in your truck's sleeper berth, you can deduct related expenses:
✅ Deductible sleeper expenses:
- Bedding and pillows
- Sleeping bag
- Mattress pad or upgrade
- 12V appliances (microwave, refrigerator)
- Curtains and privacy screens
- Cleaning supplies
- Laundromat expenses
When you stay in hotels (during home time, truck repairs, etc.), lodging is 100% deductible as a business expense.
Annual hotel expenses: $2,400
Deductible: $2,400 (100%)
Tax savings at 22% bracket: $528
All ordinary and necessary equipment for trucking is 100% deductible.
✅ Communication and navigation:
- CB radio
- GPS unit
- Smartphone (business portion)
- Satellite radio subscription (if business-related)
✅ Compliance and logging:
- ELD (Electronic Logging Device)
- ELD subscription fees
- Logbook and trip sheets
- Permit book and organizer
✅ Safety gear:
- Load securement equipment (chains, straps, binders)
- Gloves, boots, safety vest
- Hard hat
- Flashlight and warning triangles
- Fire extinguisher
✅ Comfort and convenience:
- Cooler
- Coffee maker
- Portable stove
- Power inverter
- Tool kit
ELD device: $300
GPS unit: $200
CB radio: $150
Safety equipment: $300
Load securement: $400
Power inverter: $150
Tools: $200
Total equipment deduction: $1,700
Tax savings at 22% bracket: $374
Professional licenses and permits required for trucking are fully deductible.
✅ Licenses:
- CDL renewal fees
- CDL endorsement fees
- Medical examination (DOT physical)
- Drug testing fees
- Background check fees
✅ Permits and registrations:
- IFTA (International Fuel Tax Agreement) fees
- IRP (International Registration Plan) fees
- Oversize/overweight permits
- Hazmat endorsement and fees
- State-specific permits
✅ Insurance:
- Cargo insurance
- Bobtail insurance
- Occupational accident insurance
- Health insurance (self-employed deduction)
| Expense | Typical Cost |
|---|
| CDL renewal | $50-$150 |
| DOT physical | $75-$150 |
| Drug test | $50-$100 |
| IFTA stickers | $5-$15/quarter |
| IRP registration | $500-$2,500+ |
| Hazmat endorsement | $100-$200 |
| Total | $795-$3,160+ |
All 100% deductible on Schedule C.
Owner-operators pay 15.3% self-employment tax on net earnings:
- 12.4% Social Security (on first $184,500 for 2026)
- 2.9% Medicare (no limit)
You can deduct 50% of your self-employment tax as an adjustment to income.
Example:
| Step | Amount |
|---|
| Net trucking income | $75,000 |
| Taxable SE base (92.35% of net) | $69,263 |
| Self-employment tax (15.3%) | $10,597 |
| Deductible portion (50%) | $5,299 |
| Income tax savings at 22% bracket | $1,166 |
Self-employment tax applies to 92.35% of net profit, not the full amount, so the tax on $75,000 is $10,597 rather than $11,475.
Use our Self-Employment Tax Calculator to calculate your exact liability.
Self-employed owner-operators can deduct 100% of health insurance premiums for themselves, their spouse, and dependents.
✅ You must show a net profit on Schedule C
✅ You cannot be eligible for an employer-subsidized plan
- Health insurance premiums
- Dental and vision insurance
- Medicare premiums
- Long-term care insurance (with age-based limits)
For the complete guide, see Health Insurance Deduction for Self-Employed 2026.
Owner-operators can contribute to tax-advantaged retirement accounts that reduce taxable income.
- Contribute up to 25% of net self-employment income
- Maximum contribution: $72,000 for 2026 (was $70,000 in 2025)
- Simple to set up, flexible contributions
- Employee contribution: Up to $24,500 (2026)
- Catch-up contribution (age 50+): Additional $8,000, or $11,250 at ages 60-63
- Employer contribution: Up to 25% of net income
- Total maximum: $72,000 (or $80,000 with the age-50 catch-up)
Example: A driver with $75,000 net income can contribute about $15,000 to a SEP IRA (the 25%-of-compensation limit works out to roughly 20% of net self-employment earnings), saving $3,300 at the 22% bracket.
If you maintain a home office for administrative tasks (scheduling loads, paperwork, bookkeeping), you may qualify for the home office deduction.
$5 per square foot, up to 300 square feet = $1,500 maximum
✅ Administrative activities:
- Load planning and scheduling
- Invoicing and bookkeeping
- Compliance paperwork
- Route planning
Try our Home Office Tax Deduction Calculator.
No. As of July 2026, the $7,500 truck driver tax credit has not become law. The Strengthening Supply Chains Through Truck Driver Incentives Act (H.R. 2391), reintroduced in March 2025, would create a refundable credit of up to $7,500 for drivers holding a Class A CDL who log at least 1,900 on-duty hours in the year, and up to $10,000 for new drivers and apprentices. The bill has not passed either chamber of Congress, so there is nothing to claim on your 2025 or 2026 return.
Problem: Estimating days away from home instead of keeping a log
Impact: IRS can disallow the per diem deduction, potentially $17,900+ lost on a 280-day year
Solution: Use your ELD records or logbooks to verify days away from your tax home.
Problem: Deducting only 50% of meals like other businesses
Impact: Losing 30% of your meal deduction
Solution: As a DOT-regulated driver, you're entitled to the 80% deduction under IRC § 274(n)(3).
Problem: Mixing personal and business expenses
Impact: Difficulty proving deductions in an audit
Solution: Separate business bank account for all trucking income and expenses.
Problem: Waiting until April to pay taxes owed
Impact: Underpayment interest (7% annual rate in Q3 2026, adjusted quarterly)
Solution: Pay estimated taxes quarterly: April 15, June 15, September 15, January 15.
Between driving, logging miles, and managing paperwork, tracking expenses is a full-time job. Jupid automates the process so you can focus on the road.
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Example conversation:
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- Jupid: "Yes, tire expenses are 100% deductible as a vehicle operating expense under IRC § 162. I've categorized it as 'Truck Maintenance' on your Schedule C."
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- IRC § 162 - Trade or Business Expenses
- IRC § 274(n)(3) - 80% Meal Deduction for DOT Transportation Workers
- IRC § 162(l) - Self-Employed Health Insurance Deduction
- IRC § 199A - Qualified Business Income Deduction
- IRS Notice 2026-10 - Standard Mileage Rates for 2026
| Item | 2026 Limit |
|---|
| Standard mileage rate | 72.5¢ per mile (cars, pickups, vans only) |
| Trucker per diem (CONUS) | $80/day ($60 on partial days) |
| Trucker per diem (outside CONUS) | $86/day |
| Trucker meal deduction | 80% (vs. 50% standard) |
| Section 179 limit | $2.56 million (no SUV cap over 14,000 lbs GVWR) |
| SE tax rate | 15.3% on 92.35% of net profit |
| SE tax deduction | 50% of SE tax |
| Social Security wage base | $184,500 |
| SEP IRA maximum | $72,000 or 25% of compensation |
| Schedule C business code | 484120 (long-distance general freight) |
Disclaimer
This article provides general information about tax deductions for truck drivers and should not be considered tax advice. Tax laws change frequently, and individual circumstances vary significantly. The deductions described apply primarily to owner-operators and independent contractors; W-2 company drivers have limited deduction options. Per diem rates and rules vary—consult IRS guidance and a tax professional for your specific situation.
Tax Year: 2026
Last Updated: July 11, 2026