Tax Deductions for Gig Workers (Uber, DoorDash, Instacart)
Data Notice: Figures, rates, and statistics cited in this article are based on the most recent available data at time of writing and may reflect projections or prior-year figures. Always verify current numbers with official sources before making financial, medical, or educational decisions.
Tax Deductions for Gig Workers (Uber, DoorDash, Instacart)
Tax information is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax advice. Consult a licensed tax professional for your specific situation.
Gig workers for platforms like Uber, Lyft, DoorDash, Instacart, TaskRabbit, and others are classified as independent contractors. This means you are responsible for self-employment taxes — but it also means you have access to valuable deductions that can significantly reduce your tax bill.
How Gig Income Is Taxed
As an independent contractor, your gig income is subject to:
| Tax | Rate |
|---|---|
| Federal income tax | 10%–37% (based on bracket) |
| Self-employment tax | 15.3% (on 92.35% of net income) |
| State income tax | Varies by state |
Estimated total tax rate: Most gig workers should expect to owe 25%–35% of their net income in combined taxes. However, deductions reduce your net income, which reduces both your income tax and self-employment tax.
See Self-Employment Tax Guide: Everything Freelancers Need to Know for a detailed breakdown.
The Vehicle Deduction (Your Biggest Write-Off)
For rideshare drivers and delivery workers, vehicle expenses are typically the largest deduction. You have two methods:
Standard Mileage Rate
- 2026 rate: 70 cents per mile for business miles
- Simple to calculate: track miles driven for gig work and multiply by the rate
- Includes gas, insurance, depreciation, and maintenance in the rate
Actual Expense Method
Track all vehicle costs and deduct the business-use percentage:
- Gas and fuel
- Insurance
- Repairs and maintenance
- Tires
- Registration and licensing
- Depreciation
- Car washes
- Lease payments (if leasing)
Which is better? The standard mileage rate is simpler and often produces a larger deduction for gig workers who drive fuel-efficient or older vehicles. The actual expense method may be better for those with expensive vehicles or high maintenance costs.
What Counts as Business Miles
| Counts | Does Not Count |
|---|---|
| Driving to pick up a passenger | Commuting to a regular job |
| Driving between deliveries | Personal errands |
| Driving to a store for Instacart pickup | Driving home after your last delivery (debatable — track it) |
| Driving to meet a TaskRabbit client | Personal trips with the app off |
| Deadheading (driving with the app on, waiting for a ride) | Non-business driving |
Critical: You must track mileage contemporaneously. Use an app like Stride, Everlance, MileIQ, or Gridwise. Reconstructed mileage logs after the fact are not accepted by the IRS.
Mileage Deduction Example
You drove 25,000 total miles in 2026, of which 18,000 were for gig work.
Standard mileage deduction: 18,000 x $0.70 = $12,600
This alone can save $3,000–$4,500 in taxes.
Phone and Data Plan
Your smartphone is essential for gig work. Deduct the business-use percentage:
- If you use your phone 70% for gig work, deduct 70% of your monthly bill
- A second phone used exclusively for gig work is 100% deductible
- Phone accessories (car mount, charger) are deductible
Other Deductible Expenses
| Expense | Deductible? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Insulated delivery bags | Yes | Required for food delivery |
| Phone mount and chargers | Yes | Essential equipment |
| Dash cam | Yes (business %) | Rideshare safety |
| Parking and tolls (business) | Yes | Track separately from mileage |
| Car cleaning / detailing | Yes (business %) | Rideshare vehicle maintenance |
| Water and snacks for passengers | Yes | Rideshare customer service |
| Safety equipment (first aid kit, flashlight) | Yes | Vehicle safety |
| Background check fees | Yes | Required by platforms |
| Platform fees and commissions | Already deducted from your 1099 | Do not double-count |
| Health insurance premiums | Yes | Above-the-line if self-employed |
| Retirement contributions | Yes | SEP IRA, Solo 401(k) |
Understanding Your 1099 Forms
| Form | What It Reports |
|---|---|
| 1099-NEC | Direct earnings from a platform (rare for gig workers) |
| 1099-K | Gross payment volume from payment platforms |
Important: Your 1099-K shows gross earnings before platform fees and commissions. Your actual income is lower. The platform fees are not an additional deduction — they are already reflected in the net amount you received.
If you earned less than $600 from a platform, you may not receive a 1099, but you must still report the income.
Quarterly Estimated Tax Payments
As a gig worker, taxes are not withheld from your earnings. You must make quarterly estimated payments:
| Quarter | Due Date |
|---|---|
| Q1 | April 15 |
| Q2 | June 16 |
| Q3 | September 15 |
| Q4 | January 15 |
Rule of thumb: Set aside 25–30% of your net earnings for taxes. Use the Estimated Quarterly Tax Calculator to determine exact amounts.
See Quarterly Estimated Tax Payments: When and How Much for a complete guide.
Deduction Calculation Example
| Item | Annual Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross gig income | $45,000 |
| Mileage deduction (18,000 miles x $0.70) | -$12,600 |
| Phone (70% business use) | -$840 |
| Delivery bags, supplies | -$200 |
| Parking and tolls | -$600 |
| Health insurance | -$4,800 |
| SEP IRA contribution | -$5,192 |
| Net self-employment income | $20,768 |
| SE tax (15.3% x 92.35%) | $3,076 |
| Half of SE tax deduction | -$1,538 |
Without deductions, taxes on $45,000 would be approximately $12,000–$15,000. With deductions, the tax liability drops to approximately $5,000–$7,000.
Common Mistakes Gig Workers Make
- Not tracking mileage — The mileage deduction is worth thousands; without a log, you lose it
- Forgetting about deadhead miles — Miles driven with the app on but without a passenger/delivery count
- Not making quarterly payments — Leads to underpayment penalties
- Ignoring health insurance deduction — Self-employed health premiums are deductible above the line
- Not contributing to retirement — SEP IRA and Solo 401(k) reduce taxable income and build wealth
- Double-counting platform fees — Fees are already removed from your 1099-K gross amount
- Mixing personal and business expenses — Use a separate bank account or credit card
Key Takeaways
- The mileage deduction (70 cents/mile in 2026) is typically the largest gig worker write-off, worth $5,000–$15,000+ annually
- Track mileage from day one using a dedicated app — reconstructed logs are not accepted by the IRS
- Phone, delivery supplies, parking, tolls, and vehicle maintenance are all deductible
- Self-employed health insurance and retirement contributions provide additional above-the-line deductions
- Set aside 25–30% of net earnings for quarterly estimated tax payments
- Proper deductions can reduce your effective tax rate by 10–15 percentage points
Next Steps
- Calculate your SE tax with the Self-Employment Tax Calculator
- Set up quarterly payments with the Estimated Quarterly Tax Calculator
- Read the complete Self-Employment Tax Guide: Everything Freelancers Need to Know
- Understand your options: 1099 vs W-2: Understanding Your Tax Situation
- File with the right software — Best Tax Software for Self-Employed 2026
- Need help? Find a CPA Near You