IRS Mileage Rate 2026: Get Paid for Every Mile You Drive
If you use your personal vehicle for business, medical, or charitable purposes, the IRS allows you to deduct a specific amount for every mile driven. For 2026, the Standard Mileage Rate for business has been officially set at 72.5 cents per mile. This rate covers gas, insurance, repairs, and depreciation in one simple calculation. Here are the official rates and the strict logbook rules you must follow.
1. The Rule: Standard vs. Actual
You generally have two ways to calculate your car deduction.
2. Actual Expenses (Hard): You track every single receipt for gas, insurance, and repairs, then multiply by the [% of Business Use].
2. Official 2026 Rates (Checklist)
Use the correct rate for your specific activity.
| Category | Rate (2026) | Who Qualifies? |
|---|---|---|
| Business | 72.5 cents | Self-employed, Gig workers (Uber/DoorDash). |
| Medical | 20.5 cents | Driving to doctors/hospitals (Itemizers only). |
| Moving | 20.5 cents | Active Duty Military on PCS orders only. |
| Charity | 14 cents | Volunteers driving for non-profits. |
3. Timeline: The “Audit” Carryover
Mileage doesn’t roll over, but the risk does. If you don’t log it today, you can’t prove it 3 years from now.
| Time | Status | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|
| Day of Trip | Active | |
| Filing Date | Filed | |
| +3 Years | Safe |
4. Strategy: The “First Year” Rule
How you file in Year 1 determines your future options.
- The Strategy: You generally must use the Standard Mileage Rate (72.5¢) in the first year you use a car for business.
- The Flexibility: In later years, you can switch back and forth between Standard and Actual expenses.
- The Mistake: If you use “Actual Expenses” in Year 1, you are stuck with that method for the life of the car. You cannot switch to Standard Mileage later.
5. Warning: The Commuting Rule
Driving to work is personal, not business.
⛔ Home to Office = $0
The IRS is strict on “Commuting Miles.”
- Commuting: Drive from Home ➔ Main Office. (Not Deductible).
- Business: Drive from Office ➔ Client Site. (Deductible).
- Temporary: Drive from Home ➔ Temporary Work Site (e.g., distant client). (Deductible).
- Home Office: If your home is your principal place of business, driving from Home ➔ Client Site is deductible.