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DoorDash, Instacart & Delivery Driver Tax Deductions 2026

Every delivery driver on DoorDash, Instacart, UberEats, Amazon Flex, or Shipt is an independent contractor. That means you pay self-employment tax — but you also get powerful deductions. Here's every write-off you qualify for.

Updated February 2026 · 9 min read · US tax law (IRS)
Written by the TaxLoot Research Team · Verified against IRS Publications 463 & 535 · Updated February 2026

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Delivery Drivers Are Independent Contractors

Whether you drive for DoorDash, Instacart, UberEats, Grubhub, Shipt, Amazon Flex, or Gopuff, you're classified as a 1099 independent contractor. No taxes are withheld from your payments. You file Schedule C with your personal taxes and pay self-employment tax (15.3%) on net profit.

The good news: every legitimate business expense reduces your net profit — and therefore both your income tax and SE tax.

$5,800
Value of 8,000 business miles at 72.5¢/mi
$400+
Saved per $1,000 in deductions at 25%+SE
Jan 31
1099 forms due from platforms

Complete Delivery Driver Deduction Checklist

🚗
Mileage
72.5¢/mile — your largest deduction
🧊
Insulated Bags & Hot Bags
Delivery-specific equipment
📱
Phone & Data Plan
High business-use % for delivery
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Delivery Equipment
Backpacks, straps, cargo boxes
🚿
Car Washes
Keeping vehicle clean for service
🔧
Vehicle Maintenance
Oil changes, tires × business %
🅿️
Parking & Tolls
100% during deliveries
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Auto Insurance
Business-use % of premium
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Instant Pay Fees
Fast pay transfer fees from platforms
🧾
SE Tax Deduction
50% of SE tax you owe
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Platform Service Fees
Commission taken by platform
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SEP-IRA / Solo 401(k)
Up to $72,000 tax-deferred

Mileage: The Biggest Deduction by Far

The standard mileage rate for 2026 is 72.5 cents per mile. For delivery drivers who put 15,000–25,000 miles on their car annually, this is the single most important deduction. Per IRS Publication 463, which governs travel, entertainment, gift, and car expenses, you may choose the standard mileage rate in lieu of tracking all actual vehicle costs — and for most delivery drivers, this is the right call.

⚠️ What counts as business miles for delivery: Miles while driving to the restaurant/store for pickup, miles while making the delivery, and miles driving to your first pickup after opening the app. Miles commuting from home to your "starting zone" do NOT count.

Delivery Miles vs. Miles at the IRS

ScenarioDeductible?
Driving from home to a restaurant to pick up order✅ Yes (first pickup of day may vary)
Driving from restaurant to customer's address✅ Yes
Driving from one delivery zone to another✅ Yes
Normal commuting from home❌ No
Personal errands while in the app❌ No

Insulated Bags, Hot Bags & Delivery Equipment

Delivery-specific gear is fully deductible as a business expense under IRS Publication 535 (Business Expenses), which covers the "ordinary and necessary" standard. Equipment that is required to perform your delivery work — and used exclusively or primarily for that work — qualifies:

Instacart-Specific Deductions

Instacart shoppers have a few unique deductions that DoorDash and UberEats drivers don't:

Amazon Flex-Specific Notes

Amazon Flex drivers delivering packages have different mileage patterns — often driving 50–100 miles per shift in densely-packed routes. Key considerations:

Phone Deduction for Delivery Drivers

Your phone is your tool of the trade. Delivery drivers typically qualify for 85–100% business use on their phone during working hours. You can deduct:

When to Pay Quarterly Estimated Taxes

If you expect to owe $1,000 or more in taxes from delivery income, you must make quarterly estimated payments or face a penalty (currently 5–8% annualized). The 2026 deadlines are April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15, 2027.

A simple rule: set aside 25–30% of every payment you receive into a separate savings account. Pay it to the IRS quarterly. This covers SE tax (15.3%) + federal income tax (~12–22% bracket).

Don't Miss These Easily Overlooked Deductions

💡 The most efficient way to find all of this: Upload your bank statement to TaxLoot. Every gas fill-up, car wash, bag purchase, toll charge, and phone payment is already in there — we just need to scan it.

Real Tax Scenario: Marcus, Full-Time DoorDash Driver

Abstract percentages and IRS code sections are useful, but seeing a real example with actual numbers makes the tax math click. Marcus is a full-time DoorDash and UberEats driver in Phoenix, Arizona. He drives six days a week and treats it like a business — which means he tracked every mile and every expense. Here's how his 2026 taxes played out.

Marcus's Income and Deductions

Marcus's Schedule C net profit before the health insurance deduction: $46,000 − $17,400 − $972 − $420 − $680 = $26,528

From there, two more deductions kick in automatically on Form 1040:

Marcus's adjusted gross income: $26,528 − $2,029 (SE) − $3,600 (health insurance) = $20,899. Then the QBI deduction of $5,306 and the standard deduction of $16,100 (2026 single filer) reduce his taxable income further.

Before vs. After Deductions

ScenarioWithout DeductionsWith All Deductions
Gross Income$46,000$46,000
Schedule C Deductions$0−$19,472 (mileage + phone + equipment + tolls)
Net SE Income$46,000$26,528
SE Tax (15.3%)$7,038$4,059
SE Tax Deduction (50%)$0−$2,029
Health Insurance Deduction$0−$3,600
QBI Deduction (20%)$0−$5,306
Standard Deduction (Single 2026)−$16,100−$16,100
Federal Taxable Income$29,900~$8,399 (approx.)
Estimated Federal Tax Owed~$7,800+~$840–$1,000
Estimated Total Tax Savings~$5,800+

The difference between Marcus filing correctly and filing carelessly is over $5,800 in taxes. That's money that stays in his pocket — legally — simply by tracking what he was already spending on his business. The IRS built these deductions into the tax code because gig workers bear 100% of their own vehicle wear, equipment costs, and operating expenses. The system is designed to account for that — but only if you claim it.

DoorDash drivers miss thousands in deductions every year. What's hiding in your transactions?

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Note on the QBI deduction: The Section 199A Qualified Business Income deduction is available through at least tax year 2025 and was extended in recent legislative discussions for 2026. Verify current-year status with a tax professional. Most delivery drivers earning under $197,300 (single) or $394,600 (married filing jointly) qualify for the full 20% deduction.

Mileage Rate vs. Actual Expenses: Which Is Better for Delivery Drivers?

IRS Publication 463 gives you two choices for deducting vehicle costs. The standard mileage rate is simpler. The actual expense method requires tracking every dollar you spend on the vehicle and applying your business-use percentage. Most delivery drivers choose the standard mileage rate — and for good reason, as the comparison below shows.

Let's use a real vehicle example to make the math concrete:

MethodCalculationDeduction Total
Standard Mileage (72.5¢/mile)24,000 × $0.725$17,400
Actual Expense Method Breakdown (75% business use)
Gas$3,200 × 75%$2,400
Auto Insurance$1,800 × 75%$1,350
Maintenance (oil, tires, etc.)$1,200 × 75%$900
Depreciation$4,500 × 75%$3,375
Actual Expense Total$8,025
Winner: Standard Mileage by $9,375 for this driver

In this scenario, the standard mileage method delivers more than twice the deduction of tracking actual expenses. This is typical for delivery drivers because they accumulate high business mileage relative to total miles — and because the 72.5¢/mile rate already bakes in a generous estimate for depreciation, fuel, and maintenance at scale.

⚠️ Critical rule from IRS Pub 463: You must choose your deduction method in the first year you use a vehicle for business. If you use standard mileage in year one, you can switch to actual expenses in later years (with some restrictions). If you use actual expenses (including Section 179 or bonus depreciation) in year one, you generally cannot switch to standard mileage for that vehicle. Make the right call upfront.

There are scenarios where actual expenses win: if you drive a very high-cost vehicle (luxury car with high insurance), or if your business-use percentage is moderate but your gas and insurance are extremely high. Run the numbers both ways before committing in year one.

State Income Tax Notes for Delivery Drivers

Federal SE tax and federal income tax are only part of your tax picture. Most states also impose income taxes on self-employment earnings — and a few have unique rules that specifically affect gig economy workers. Here's what delivery drivers need to know state by state.

California

California passed AB5 in 2019, which would have reclassified gig workers as employees. Proposition 22 (2020) overturned this specifically for app-based delivery and rideshare workers — meaning DoorDash and UberEats drivers remain independent contractors under California law. You still file Schedule C at the federal level.

California state income tax runs up to 13.3% — the highest marginal rate in the country. California also imposes State Disability Insurance (SDI); gig workers may have contributions withheld by some platforms. California conforms to federal Schedule C deductions, so your federal deductions reduce your CA state tax too.

New York

New York state income tax tops out at 10.9% at higher income levels. New York City residents face an additional city income tax of up to 3.876% on top of state tax — meaning a NYC DoorDash driver can face a combined state + city + SE + federal marginal rate exceeding 50%. Accurate deductions are especially critical in New York.

Texas and Florida

Both Texas and Florida have no state income tax. DoorDash drivers in these states owe only federal income tax and federal SE tax. This is a meaningful advantage — a driver earning $30,000 net profit in Texas saves roughly $1,800–$3,300 compared to the same driver in California or New York.

Washington State

Washington has no personal income tax, but businesses — including sole proprietors in some cases — may owe the Business and Occupation (B&O) tax depending on gross receipts and business classification. Most delivery drivers operating as sole proprietors fall under thresholds that exempt them, but it's worth confirming with a local tax professional.

Illinois, Georgia, and Arizona

Illinois imposes a flat 4.95% income tax rate on all income. Georgia's rate runs to 5.49%. Arizona's marginal rates are moderate (2.5% flat rate as of 2023 reform). All three states conform to the federal Schedule C structure, so your federal deductions carry over directly.

💡 State deduction detection: TaxLoot's deduction scanner identifies expenses that are deductible at both the federal and state level. Upload your bank statement and we'll flag everything — including state-specific deductible expenses for your region.

How to Keep an IRS-Compliant Mileage Log

Mileage is almost always a delivery driver's largest single deduction — and it's the deduction the IRS most frequently challenges in audits of Schedule C filers. Per IRS Publication 463, Section 4 (Recordkeeping), a valid mileage log must contain four pieces of information for each business trip:

  1. Date of the trip
  2. Miles driven for business purposes
  3. Destination (the name or general location)
  4. Business purpose (e.g., "DoorDash delivery from Chipotle to customer address")

The log must be kept contemporaneously — meaning close in time to when the trip happens, not reconstructed from memory months later at tax time. A weekly summary is acceptable; an annual estimate is not.

Best Apps for Mileage Tracking

The Odometer Snapshot Method

As a backup or supplement to GPS apps: photograph your odometer on January 1 (or the first day you start driving for gig platforms) and again on December 31. This establishes your total annual mileage. Combined with your GPS app's business mileage log, it creates a bulletproof record. Store the photos with your tax documents.

Reconstructing a Lost Mileage Log

If you didn't track mileage in real time, you're not completely out of options — but your reconstructed log must be supported by corroborating evidence. The IRS may accept reconstruction based on: Google Maps Timeline (which logs every location if enabled), platform earnings history (number of deliveries per day × average delivery distance), and bank records showing fuel purchases on specific dates. This is a last resort — contemporaneous records are far stronger.

⚠️ IRS audit trigger: The IRS has noted in audit training materials that round-number mileage claims (exactly 10,000 miles, exactly 20,000 miles) raise red flags. A GPS app produces non-round numbers like 18,247 miles — which is inherently more credible. Use a tracking app. It takes 30 seconds to set up and creates indisputable, timestamped records.

IRS Audit Red Flags for Delivery Drivers

Schedule C filers — including delivery drivers — are audited at higher rates than W-2 employees. The IRS uses automated Discriminant Inventory Function (DIF) scoring to flag returns that deviate significantly from statistical norms for your income level and occupation. Here are the specific patterns that trigger scrutiny for gig delivery workers:

⚠️ These are the #1 triggers for Schedule C audits for gig workers. The IRS has sophisticated data on what "normal" delivery driver expense ratios look like. Extreme outliers — claiming vehicle expenses equal to 90% of gross income, for example — flag your return for review.

Platform-by-Platform Comparison

Not all delivery platforms work the same way from a tax and logistics standpoint. Here's how the major platforms compare on the details that matter most to your taxes and cash flow:

Platform 1099-NEC Threshold Issued By Instant Pay Fee In-App Expense Tracking Quarterly Tax Reminders
DoorDash $2,000 Jan 31 $1.99/transfer Basic mileage tracker (inaccurate — do not rely on this) No
UberEats $2,000 Jan 31 $0.25/transfer (Instant Pay) Yes — Uber Pro tax summary with mileage estimate Yes (basic reminders)
Instacart $2,000 Jan 31 $3.99/transfer None No
Amazon Flex $2,000 Jan 31 No fee (standard ACH) None No
Shipt $2,000 Jan 31 $1.50/transfer None No

Important note on Instacart's $3.99 instant pay fee: if you transfer earnings weekly throughout the year, that's 52 transfers × $3.99 = $207.48 in fees alone — every dollar of which is deductible. DoorDash drivers doing the same: 52 × $1.99 = $103.48 in deductible fees. Small numbers that add up, and many drivers forget to claim them.

Also worth noting: UberEats's mileage estimate in its tax summary is known to be inaccurate (it typically only counts miles while a passenger order is active, missing miles driven to restaurants). Always use a third-party mileage tracker as your primary record — regardless of what the platform shows.

No Tax on Tips 2026: What Delivery Drivers Need to Know

One of the biggest tax changes for DoorDash drivers in 2026 is the new Qualified Tips Deduction — a provision in the TCJA extension that lets workers in tipped industries deduct up to $25,000 in tip income ($12,500 if single) directly from their taxable income. For delivery drivers who collect tips on every order, this is potentially thousands of dollars off your tax bill on top of every other deduction in this guide.

⚡ 2026 Qualified Tips Deduction — Key Numbers

  • Married Filing Jointly: deduct up to $25,000 in tip income
  • Single / Head of Household: deduct up to $12,500 in tip income
  • Type: above-the-line deduction (no itemizing required)
  • Applies to: in-app tips, cash tips, credit card tips — all count
  • Important: does NOT eliminate SE tax on tips — just income tax

Does This Apply to Delivery Drivers?

Yes. The IRS has confirmed that delivery drivers for DoorDash, Instacart, UberEats, Amazon Flex, and similar platforms qualify under the "service industry" definition included in the TCJA extension. Your in-app tips reported on your 1099-NEC count as qualified tips for this deduction.

How to Claim It

The Qualified Tips Deduction is claimed on Schedule 1 (Form 1040), Line 24 as an "Other Adjustments" deduction. You'll need to know your total tip income for the year — check your DoorDash, Instacart, or platform earnings breakdown, which separates base pay from tips. Your tax software should have a specific line for this in 2026.

Real Example: How Much Does It Save?

Marcus's tip deduction math:

ItemAmount
Total tip income (full year)$8,400
Qualified Tips Deduction (single filer)−$8,400 (under $12,500 cap)
Federal income tax saved (22% bracket)$1,848
SE tax still owed on tips$1,286 (15.3% × 92.35%)
Net savings from this deduction alone$1,848

Note: SE tax is not eliminated by this deduction — only federal income tax. State income tax treatment varies by state.

Important Warnings

  • Unreported tips don't qualify — only tips that appear on your 1099-NEC or other official income records. Cash tips you pocketed and didn't report don't qualify and shouldn't be claimed.
  • SE tax still applies — this deduction reduces your federal income tax, not your 15.3% self-employment tax. Both still apply to tip income.
  • State taxes vary — California, New York, and most states have NOT adopted the federal tips deduction. You may still owe state income tax on full tip income. Check your state's 2026 guidance.
  • New legislation — verify with IRS — as this is new for 2026, confirm the current rules with the IRS website (irs.gov) or a tax professional before filing.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much can DoorDash drivers deduct per mile in 2026?
The 2026 IRS standard mileage rate is 72.5 cents per mile. For a driver putting 24,000 business miles on their vehicle, that's $17,400 in mileage deductions alone — before any other expense. The rate covers fuel, oil, insurance, depreciation, and maintenance, so you don't deduct those separately when using the standard rate. Authorized by IRS Publication 463.
What if I earned under $600 from DoorDash?
DoorDash won't send a 1099-NEC if you earned under the $600 threshold — but you still must report the income on Schedule C and still owe self-employment tax on your net profit. The 1099 threshold only determines what the platform is required to report to the IRS. Your obligation to report income has no minimum threshold. Keep your own records of all earnings.
Can I deduct my car payment?
No. Car loan payments are not deductible as a business expense. You deduct vehicle costs through either the standard mileage rate (72.5¢/mile) or the actual expense method (depreciation + operating costs × business %). The loan payment is a financing arrangement, not a business expense — the underlying vehicle cost is captured through depreciation instead.
Do I need a separate business bank account?
It's not legally required for sole proprietors, but it is strongly recommended. Mixing business and personal funds creates messy records, makes deduction tracking harder, and looks unfavorable in an audit. A free business checking account at a credit union or online bank costs nothing and creates a clean paper trail. The IRS views commingled accounts as a sign of disorganization.
What if I drive for multiple platforms (DoorDash and UberEats both)?
All business miles across all platforms are deductible. You track total business miles driven regardless of which app you were working under. You report all delivery income combined on a single Schedule C under the business description "Delivery Driver" (or similar). Each platform issues its own 1099-NEC, and you add all platform earnings together on Schedule C Line 1.
Is the DoorDash Red Card deductible?
The physical card itself isn't a deductible item. However, any fees DoorDash charges related to declined transactions that you pay out of pocket — or any supplies you purchase with the card for business purposes — may be deductible as ordinary business expenses. Review your statements for any card-related charges DoorDash didn't reimburse.
Can delivery drivers deduct meals eaten during shifts?
Generally no. The IRS requires business meals to have a specific, documented business purpose beyond self-sustenance. Eating lunch while between deliveries doesn't qualify. The exception would be a meal with a client or business associate for a clear business purpose — not applicable to solo delivery work. Meals are one of the most commonly over-claimed deductions that auditors catch.
What is the SE tax deduction?
Self-employment tax (15.3% on net SE income up to $184,500 in 2026) is paid in full by independent contractors — both the employer and employee portions. To partially offset this, the IRS allows you to deduct 50% of your SE tax as an adjustment to income on Form 1040, Schedule 1. This reduces your adjusted gross income, which in turn reduces your income tax — but does not reduce the SE tax itself.
Can I deduct health insurance as a delivery driver?
Yes — this is one of the most valuable deductions available to self-employed workers. If you're self-employed and pay your own health insurance premiums (not covered by a spouse's employer plan or Medicaid), you can deduct 100% of those premiums as an above-the-line adjustment to income on Form 1040 (not Schedule C). This reduces your AGI and therefore your income tax. It does not reduce SE tax.
What is the QBI deduction and do delivery drivers qualify?
The Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction under Section 199A allows most self-employed individuals to deduct 20% of net business income from their taxable income. For 2026, delivery drivers earning under approximately $197,300 (single) or $394,600 (married filing jointly) generally qualify for the full 20% deduction. On $26,528 of net delivery income, that's $5,306 off your taxable income — a significant benefit that many drivers don't know exists.
Should I form an LLC for DoorDash?
A single-member LLC has no federal income tax benefit — the IRS treats it identically to a sole proprietorship (Schedule C). Where an LLC provides value is liability protection. An S-Corp election can begin to save SE tax once your net delivery income exceeds roughly $60,000, but the administrative costs (payroll, extra filings, accountant fees) must be weighed against the savings. Below that threshold, a plain sole proprietorship is the most efficient structure for most drivers.
How do I file if I drove for DoorDash only part of the year?
The process is identical — you file Schedule C for whatever income you earned during the period you were active. Deductions are claimed only for the period when you were actively driving. Mileage only counts from when you started using the vehicle for delivery work. If you started driving in March, your mileage log begins in March.

Tools & Resources

These guides dive deeper into the specific topics covered on this page. Bookmark them for reference at tax time:

📚 Related guides:  Mileage Deduction  ·  Self-Employed  ·  Uber & Lyft Drivers  ·  Freelancers  ·  Home Office  ·  Healthcare Workers  ·  Content Creators  ·  Mileage Calculator  ·  Quarterly Taxes  ·  Schedule C Guide  ·  Real Estate Agents  ·  Investment Losses  ·  No Tax on Tips 2026  ·  All Tax Guides →

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