Is Business Mileage Tax Deductible? Yes — Claim 67¢ Per Mile in 2024
100%
Deductible
Line 9
Schedule C
Car and truck expenses
Category
$0.67/mile (2024)
Typical cost
Business mileage is one of the easiest and most valuable deductions for self-employed individuals and single-member LLCs. If you drive for legitimate business purposes—client meetings, supply runs, job sites—you can deduct 67 cents per mile using the IRS standard mileage rate for 2024. The key is accurate mile tracking; the IRS requires detailed records to back up your claim.
Who qualifies?
Self-employed individuals, sole proprietors, freelancers, and single-member LLCs filing Schedule C qualify for this deduction. You must use the vehicle for business purposes (not commuting to a regular office) and choose either the standard mileage rate or actual expense method—you cannot mix methods on the same vehicle within a single tax year.
How to claim it
- 1 Track all business miles in a mileage log or app (date, destination, business purpose, miles driven) throughout the year.
- 2 Choose either the IRS standard mileage rate (67¢/mile in 2024) or the actual expense method—decide before year-end and stick with it.
- 3 Calculate total business miles and multiply by 67¢; enter the result on Schedule C Line 9 (Car and truck expenses).
Pro tip
Use a dedicated mileage app (IRS-compliant options like Stride Health, MileIQ, or Everlance auto-log trips) to eliminate manual tracking errors and ensure consistent documentation. The IRS is strict about mileage audits, so automated records with timestamps are far safer than reconstructed logs.
Source: IRS Publication 463: Travel, Gift, and Car Expenses · Updated for the 2025 tax year
Common questions
What is the IRS standard mileage rate for 2025?
The IRS standard mileage rate for 2025 is 70 cents per mile for business use. This rate is updated annually and covers gas, maintenance, insurance, and depreciation. Parking and tolls are deductible separately on top of the mileage rate.
Can I switch between the standard mileage rate and actual expenses?
You can switch from the standard mileage rate to actual expenses in a later year, but not the reverse — if you start with actual expenses (including depreciation) on a vehicle, you cannot switch to the standard mileage rate for that same vehicle later. Choose carefully in the first year you use a vehicle for business.
Does commuting mileage count as business miles?
No. Driving from your home to a regular place of business is commuting, not business mileage, and is never deductible. However, if your home is your principal place of business (you qualify for the home office deduction), then drives from home to client sites or temporary work locations are deductible business miles.
Judy automatically tracks Business Mileage — Standard Rate
Connect your business bank account and Judy categorizes Business Mileage — Standard Rate charges to Car and truck expenses (Line 9) — no spreadsheets, no manual entry. Get a free 30-day audit first, then subscribe.
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