For many self-employed individuals and small business owners, a vehicle is an essential tool for generating income. Whether you’re a consultant meeting clients, a contractor traveling to job sites, or a delivery driver, the miles you drive for business purposes can significantly reduce your taxable income. Understanding and properly claiming the self-employed mileage deduction is crucial for maximizing your tax refund and ensuring compliance with IRS regulations. This guide will walk you through everything you need to know about the mileage deduction, from what qualifies as business mileage to the different methods of calculating your deduction. We’ll cover IRS requirements, record-keeping best practices, and how choosing the right business structure, like an LLC or S-Corp, can impact your ability to claim these deductions. At Lovie, we help entrepreneurs navigate the complexities of business formation, and understanding tax deductions is a vital part of running a successful business.
Not all miles driven are deductible. The IRS defines business mileage as travel that is ordinary and necessary for your trade or business. This typically includes trips to meet clients or customers, travel between different work locations, going to and from a temporary work site (if you have a regular place of business), and business-related errands. For example, if you are a freelance graphic designer based in California and drive to a client's office in San Francisco for a meeting, those miles
The IRS allows two primary methods for calculating your vehicle expense deduction: the standard mileage rate method and the actual expense method. You must choose one method for the year and generally cannot switch between them mid-year. However, you can choose a different method each tax year. The standard mileage rate method is often the simplest. For 2023, the IRS rate for business miles is 65.5 cents per mile. For 2024, it increased to 67 cents per mile. To use this method, you track your b
The IRS is very specific about the records you must maintain to support your mileage deduction claim. Simply estimating your miles is not sufficient and can lead to disallowed deductions if audited. For both the standard mileage rate and the actual expense method, you must keep a contemporaneous log of your business mileage. This means recording your trips as they happen, not trying to reconstruct them months later. Your mileage log should include essential details for each trip: the date of th
How you own your vehicle and the structure of your business can impact how you claim mileage deductions. If you own the vehicle yourself and use it for your sole proprietorship or partnership, you can claim the deduction on your personal tax return (Schedule C for sole proprietors, Form 1065 for partnerships). However, if your business is structured as an LLC or corporation, the ownership and deduction method can differ. For an LLC, if you are a single-member LLC taxed as a disregarded entity,
One of the most common pitfalls is inconsistent or non-existent record-keeping. The IRS requires contemporaneous records, meaning you must log your miles as you drive them. Waiting until tax season to try and recall or estimate your mileage is a red flag for auditors. Another mistake is incorrectly classifying commuting miles as business miles. Remember, travel from your home to your regular place of business is almost always considered commuting and is not deductible. Confusing the two calcula
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