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Mileage · Gig 8 min read · Updated June 2026

DoorDash Mileage Deduction: Track It, Maximise It, Keep More

DoorDash reports only a fraction of the miles you actually drive. The gap between what they report and what you can legally deduct is real money — here's how to capture all of it.

For most DoorDash drivers, the mileage deduction is the single biggest tax write-off they have — bigger than phone bills, hot bags, or any other expense combined. And most drivers under-claim it, because they rely on the mileage figure DoorDash gives them, which only counts active delivery miles.

This guide shows what actually counts, how to track it properly, and roughly how much it's worth.

Why this matters

At the 2025 standard rate of 70¢ per mile, every 1,000 business miles you log is a $700 deduction. A part-time Dasher easily drives 8,000–15,000 business miles a year — that's a $5,600–$10,500 deduction most people partially miss.

What miles you can actually deduct

As an independent contractor, you can deduct all the miles you drive for the business while online and available, not just the miles on an active order. That includes:

  • Driving to a hot spot or busy zone to start dashing
  • Driving to the restaurant to pick up an order
  • Driving the order to the customer
  • Driving between deliveries and back to a wait area while still online
  • Driving to get gas or supplies for the work, in some cases

DoorDash's in-app estimate typically only covers the restaurant-to-customer leg. Everything else — often 30–50% more — is on you to record.

⚠️ The grey zone. Your very first drive from home to your opening hot spot, and the last drive home, can look like commuting to the IRS. Many drivers reduce risk by logging on (going "available") before leaving, which strengthens the argument those miles are business. Talk to a tax pro about your situation.

Standard mileage rate vs actual expenses

You pick one method per vehicle:

MethodHow it worksBest for
Standard mileageBusiness miles × IRS rate (70¢ in 2025)Most gig drivers — simpler, usually bigger
Actual expensesBusiness-use % of gas, repairs, insurance, depreciationExpensive vehicles, low MPG, heavy repairs

For the vast majority of Dashers in fuel-efficient cars, the standard mileage rate wins and is far less paperwork — your mileage log is the documentation.

How to track DoorDash miles properly

  1. Record your odometer at the start and end of each dashing session, or at minimum on Jan 1 and Dec 31.
  2. Log each session with date, the zones you covered, the business purpose ("DoorDash delivery shift"), and total miles.
  3. Capture the in-between miles DoorDash ignores — to the hot spot, between orders, repositioning.
  4. Reconcile monthly so you're not reconstructing a year at tax time.
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A worked deduction example

Part-time Dasher, one year

Active delivery miles DoorDash reported: 6,200
Actual business miles you logged: 9,400
Extra miles captured: 3,200
Deduction at 70¢ — DoorDash figure: $4,340
Deduction at 70¢ — your real log: $6,580
Difference in your pocket: ~$2,240 of deduction

That difference, at a 22% marginal rate, is roughly $490 in real tax saved — just for logging the miles the app didn't count.

Frequently asked questions

Can I use the DoorDash mileage estimate for taxes?
You can, but it usually undercounts your true business miles because it only reflects active deliveries. Keeping your own log almost always yields a larger, fully defensible deduction.
Do I need receipts if I use the standard mileage rate?
For the mileage deduction itself, your log is the key record. You don't need fuel receipts under the standard mileage method, but keep records of tolls and parking, which are deductible on top.
What if I drive for Uber and DoorDash the same day?
All online business miles count regardless of platform. Log the total business miles for the day; you don't need to split them by app for the mileage deduction.
Is my drive home deductible?
The first and last legs can resemble commuting. Going online before you leave strengthens the business case, but check with a tax professional.