Key Takeaways
- Mileage is often the single largest deduction for rideshare and delivery drivers, and a contemporaneous log is what makes it stick.
- A phone used for gig work qualifies for a partial deduction based on the percentage of business use.
- Equipment essential to your work is deductible, and Section 179 may allow an immediate full write-off in many cases.
- Strong recordkeeping is the difference between a deduction that saves money and one that gets denied during a review.
- Giggle Finance can help bridge the cash flow gap if your tax bill arrives before your refund or your next big earning week.
How Taxes Work For Those in The Gig Economy
Filing taxes is part of the deal when you work in the gig economy, and it follows a different path than it does for W-2 employees. Learning the basics, from self-employment tax to quarterly payments, gives you the foundation to file with confidence and keep more of what you earn.Self-Employment Tax Explained
When you earn through platforms like Uber, DoorDash, Fiverr, or your own small business, you're treated as self-employed for tax purposes. That means your taxes include both regular income tax, depending on your state, and a 15.3% self-employment tax, which covers the Social Security and Medicare contributions an employer would normally split with you.Quarterly Estimated Payments
The IRS expects you to pay taxes as you earn rather than waiting until April. If you'll owe more than $1,000 for the year, you're generally required to make quarterly estimated payments, which fall in April, June, September, and January. Keep in mind that missing these payments can lead to underpayment penalties, even if you settle the full amount when you file.The 1099-NEC and Schedule C Basics
Each platform you earn from will issue a 1099-NEC if you earned $2,000 or more from them during the year. Those forms report your gross earnings to the IRS, which you'll then summarize on Schedule C, the form used for reporting self-employment income and deductions.Common Tax Deductions Every Gig Worker Should Know
The gig worker tax deductions that consistently make the biggest difference fall into a few key categories. Some apply to almost every gig worker, while others depend on the kind of work you do.Mileage Deduction
Drivers and delivery workers typically save more on mileage than on any other deduction. The IRS gives you two ways to claim it, and choosing the right method depends on your vehicle costs and how much you drive.Standard Mileage Rate vs. Actual Expenses
The standard mileage rate is a flat per-mile amount set by the IRS each year. Starting January 1, 2026, the IRS standard mileage rates are:- 72.5 cents per mile for business use
- 20.5 cents per mile for medical purposes
- 20.5 cents per mile for moving purposes, available only to certain active-duty Armed Forces members and qualifying members of the intelligence community
- 14 cents per mile for charitable service
What Counts as Deductible Mileage
Not every mile you drive qualifies. The deductible miles include time spent driving between deliveries, picking up passengers, heading to a gas station for a fill-up during a shift, and traveling to a client meeting. Personal errands during a shift, your commute from home to your first pickup if you don't have a qualifying home office, and any non-business detours don't count.Phone Deduction
Your phone is essentially the office for most gig work. Whether you're accepting rides, communicating with clients, navigating to deliveries, or invoicing freelance work, the device qualifies for a partial tax deduction.How to Calculate Business Use Percentage
The deduction is based on the percentage of total phone use that's tied to business. If you use your phone 70% of the time for gig work and 30% for personal use, you can deduct 70% of your eligible phone-related expenses. You could also dedicate a separate phone exclusively to gig work, and the entire cost of that device and plan would count as a business expense.What's Deductible Beyond the Device
Other deductible items in this category often include the monthly service plan, accessories such as phone mounts and chargers, and additional services needed for your business.Equipment Deduction
Equipment used to earn your income is generally deductible. The specifics depend on the kind of work you do and how the IRS treats the asset's expected lifespan.H Common Deductible Equipment by Gig Type
Different gig works require different tools. Some examples include:- Drivers: Insulated delivery bags, hot bags, dashcams, phone mounts, seat covers, vehicle floor mats, emergency roadside kits, and reflective vests for driving at night.
- Freelancers: laptops, monitors, laptop stands, software subscriptions, office chairs, desks, microphones, and headphones.
- Salon and Beauty Professionals: Chairs, styling tools, products, sanitation equipment, and station setups.
- Food Truck Operators: Food truck, kitchen equipment, generators, point-of-sale systems, and serving supplies.
- Photographers: Cameras, lenses, lighting kits, tripods, memory cards, and editing software.
- Personal Trainers: Weights, mats, resistance bands, uniforms, and any equipment used for client sessions.
Section 179 vs. Depreciation
Some business equipment is expected to last more than a year, which means the IRS treats it differently from a one-time expense. The cost is typically spread out over the asset's useful life through depreciation, allowing you to claim a portion of the cost as a deduction each year instead of the full amount upfront. Two special rules can speed up that timeline for self-employed earners. The first is bonus depreciation, which allows a percentage of an eligible asset's cost to be deducted in the first year it's placed in service. For tax year 2025, qualifying property is eligible for a 100% first-year deduction under this rule. Standard depreciation rules apply when an asset doesn't qualify for bonus depreciation or when you choose to opt out. The second rule is Section 179, named after the section of the tax code that created it. Section 179 lets you deduct part or all of the cost of qualifying business property in the year you bought it and put it into service, with an annual cap set at $2,560,000 for tax years beginning in 2026. Any portion that isn't deducted under Section 179 falls under standard depreciation rules in the years that follow.Other Deductions Gig Workers Often Miss
Beyond the big three, several deductions add up to real savings across a tax year. These tend to be the ones that get overlooked or go unheard when people file in a hurry.
Health Insurance Premiums
Self-employed earners can often deduct their health insurance premiums for themselves, their spouse, and their dependents. The deduction has eligibility rules, including not being eligible for an employer-sponsored plan through a spouse, so it's worth confirming the details before claiming it. However, it's important to take note that your deduction can't exceed what your business actually earned during the year. If your gig work or sole proprietorship ended the year in the red, you wouldn't be able to claim the deduction, since there's no positive income to apply it against.Home Office Use
A dedicated workspace used regularly and exclusively for your business may qualify for a home office deduction. The IRS offers a simplified method based on square footage, as well as an actual expense method that calculates actual expenditures against your overall residence expenses.- Simplified Method: Multiply your dedicated workspace's square footage by $5 per square foot, up to a maximum of 300 square feet. The deduction caps out at $1,500 per year, and the recordkeeping is minimal, which makes this the easier choice for most gig workers with smaller workspaces.
- Actual Expenses Method: Apply your business-use percentage to the real costs of running your home, including mortgage interest, property taxes, maintenance and repairs, insurance, and utilities. This method is calculated on Form 8829 and requires detailed records throughout the year. Still, it can produce a larger deduction if your home expenses are significant and your workspace takes up a meaningful share of the property.