DoorDash Driver Tax Guide: 1099, Mileage, and Write-Offs
Dashing pays in cash flow but bills you in tax season. DoorDash does not withhold a single dollar from your weekly deposit, which means everything you make is pre-tax — and the IRS expects its share four times a year, not once. The good news: drivers get the single biggest deduction in the tax code (vehicle mileage at $0.70 per mile in 2026), and most full-time Dashers can wipe out 50-70% of their gross income in legal write-offs.
This guide walks through exactly what DoorDash reports, what to deduct, what trips count, and the mistakes that get drivers audited.
The 1099-NEC from DoorDash
DoorDash uses Stripe to issue tax forms. If you earned $2,000 or more in 2026 (the OBBBA-raised threshold; was $600 in prior years), you will receive a Form 1099-NEC by January 31 of the following year. It will be emailed to the address on your Dasher account and also available inside the Stripe Express portal.
What is on it:
- Box 1 (Nonemployee compensation): your total earnings for the year, including base pay, customer tips, peak pay, and challenge bonuses.
- DoorDash's name, address, and EIN as the payer.
- Your name, address, and SSN/EIN as the recipient.
What is not on it: any deductions, mileage, or expenses. That is your job to track. DoorDash does report the same total to the IRS, so under-reporting it on your return is a fast way to get a CP2000 mismatch notice.
What if I made less than $2,000?
You will not get a 1099-NEC, but you still owe income tax and self-employment tax on every dollar. The IRS does not care whether the form was issued — it cares whether the income was reported. Pull your earnings history from the Dasher app and report the total on Schedule C.
The mileage deduction — your biggest write-off
The 2026 IRS standard mileage rate (our gig worker tax calculator auto-applies it) is $0.70 per mile. Every business mile you drive while dashing reduces your taxable income by 70 cents. For a full-time driver doing 25,000 business miles a year, that is a $17,500 deduction — often more than total profit.
What counts as a business mile
This is where most Dashers leave money on the table or, worse, claim miles they cannot defend in an audit.
| Trip | Deductible? |
|---|---|
| Driving from your house to your first delivery zone | Generally no (commute) |
| Driving with the app on, waiting for an offer | Yes |
| Driving to the restaurant after accepting an order | Yes |
| Driving from restaurant to customer | Yes |
| Driving from drop-off to next pickup with app on | Yes |
| Driving home after closing the app for the day | Generally no (commute) |
| Driving to a gas station mid-shift to refuel | Yes |
| Personal errand mid-shift with app off | No |
Two things make this gray area defensible: (1) the app being toggled on, and (2) a contemporaneous mileage log. If your app is on and you are available to accept orders, the IRS generally treats those miles as business. The "commute" rule applies because your "tax home" is your residence, but if you have a regular, established route — say, you always start dashing the moment you pull out of your driveway with the app on — many tax pros treat the entire trip as deductible. Conservative approach: log only miles from the moment the app is on.
Mileage tracking apps
The DoorDash app reports "active" miles only — usually the dispatch-to-customer leg. That is roughly 50-60% of your real business miles. Use a dedicated tracker so you do not undercount by thousands of miles a year.
| App | Cost | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Stride | Free | Part-time Dashers, manual start/stop |
| MileIQ | $5.99/mo or $59.99/yr | Auto-detection, swipe to classify |
| Hurdlr | Free tier; Premium $10/mo | Full-time drivers who want income + expense + tax estimates in one app |
| Everlance | Free tier; Premium $12/mo | Auto-classification by location |
Whichever you use, make sure it captures: date, starting odometer (or location), ending odometer (or location), total miles, and business purpose. An IRS-acceptable log has all five.
Standard mileage vs actual expenses
You have two choices for vehicle deductions and you must pick one in the first year you use the car for business. Most Dashers come out way ahead with standard mileage.
Standard mileage ($0.70/mi in 2026): one number, one log, done. You cannot also deduct gas, oil changes, depreciation, or insurance — all of that is baked into the rate.
Actual expenses: track every receipt — gas, insurance, registration, depreciation, repairs, tires, car washes — then multiply by your business-use percentage. Wins for drivers with expensive vehicles, low gas mileage, or heavy repair costs.
Example: 25,000 business miles in a 2018 Honda Civic.
- Standard mileage: 25,000 × $0.70 = $17,500
- Actual expenses (rough): $4,500 gas + $1,800 insurance + $600 maintenance + $2,500 depreciation = $9,400 × 80% business use = $7,520
Standard wins by almost $10,000. See our full mileage article for the case where actual wins.
Other deductions Dashers miss
Mileage is the biggest, but not the only deduction. Anything you buy specifically for dashing is potentially deductible.
- Phone & phone bill — if you use your phone 60% of the time for dashing, deduct 60% of the bill and 60% of the phone's cost. A separate "work phone" is 100% deductible.
- Hot bag & cooler bag — fully deductible. Even the official DoorDash-branded bag.
- Phone mount, dashboard charger, USB cables — fully deductible.
- Increase in auto insurance premium for adding rideshare/delivery coverage. The portion above your personal premium is deductible.
- Health insurance premiums if you are self-employed and not eligible for a spouse's plan — see SE health insurance deduction.
- Toll fees and parking incurred while dashing. Save digital receipts; E-ZPass statements work.
- Roadside assistance (AAA membership) — business-use percentage.
- Car washes — courts have ruled these deductible if the business use of the vehicle creates the dirt.
- Drinks & snacks for the car — generally not deductible. The IRS treats personal food and drink as a cost of being alive, not a cost of doing business. The exception: bottled water you keep specifically for customers (rare).
- DoorDash subscription fees (DashPass for personal use is not deductible; mid-shift food for yourself is not deductible).
- Bank account fees for a separate dasher account.
- Tax software, mileage app subscriptions, accountant fees — all deductible.
Self-employment tax — the surprise bill
On top of regular income tax, every self-employed worker owes 15.3% self-employment tax (12.4% Social Security + 2.9% Medicare) on net earnings. This is the same FICA tax that comes out of a W-2 paycheck — except your W-2 employer was paying half of it. As a Dasher, you pay both halves.
You get to deduct half of SE tax as an adjustment to income, which softens the blow but does not eliminate it. See self-employment tax explained for the full breakdown.
Quarterly estimated taxes
The IRS expects you to pay tax as you earn it. For W-2 workers that happens automatically through payroll withholding. For Dashers it happens four times a year, on these dates:
| Quarter | Income period | Due date |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 2026 | Jan 1 – Mar 31 | April 15, 2026 |
| Q2 2026 | Apr 1 – May 31 | June 15, 2026 |
| Q3 2026 | Jun 1 – Aug 31 | September 15, 2026 |
| Q4 2026 | Sep 1 – Dec 31 | January 15, 2027 |
Skip them and the IRS charges underpayment interest — currently 7% in Q1 2026 and 6% from Q2 onward. To estimate what you owe each quarter, run the Quarterly1099 calculator with your year-to-date earnings minus year-to-date mileage.
A simple rule for full-time Dashers: set aside 20-25% of every weekly deposit into a separate savings account. After mileage, your taxable profit is much smaller than your gross — that is why the rate is lower than the 30% rule for non-vehicle freelancers. New to quoting your time? The Freelance rate calculator shows what hourly take-home you actually need to clear after vehicle costs and tax.
What about state tax?
If you live in California, New York, Oregon, or any of the 41 income-tax states, you owe state income tax on your Dasher profit too. Most of those states want quarterly estimates as well. Check our state-by-state guide for your rates and due dates.
Audit triggers Dashers should know about
- Round-number mileage. "I drove exactly 20,000 miles" is a flag. Real logs end in odd numbers like 22,847.
- Mileage that exceeds total annual miles on the car. The IRS can pull your odometer reading from state inspection records or your insurance company.
- Net loss multiple years in a row. A consistent loss makes the IRS think it is a hobby, not a business, and they can disallow the loss.
- 100% business use of a single vehicle. If it is your only car, claiming 100% is hard to defend. 70-90% is more typical.
- Deducting personal meals as "business meals." Your lunch is not a business meal just because you ate it between deliveries.
Putting it all together — a real example
Maria dashed full time in 2026. Her numbers:
- Gross earnings (1099-NEC): $42,000
- Business miles logged in Hurdlr: 24,000 → $16,800 deduction
- Phone bill (70% business × $80/mo × 12): $672
- Hot bag, mounts, cables, car washes: $310
- Tolls: $420
- Tax software: $120
Net profit on Schedule C: $42,000 − $18,922 = $23,078. SE tax: ~$3,261. Federal income tax (single, standard deduction): ~$428 after standard deduction and QBI. Total federal owed: about $3,689 — roughly 8.8% of her gross. Without the mileage log, the same gross would have generated closer to $9,000 in federal tax.
FAQs
Does DoorDash take taxes out? No. You are a 1099 contractor, not an employee. Nothing is withheld.
Do I need an LLC to dash? No. The default is sole proprietor, which is taxed identically. An LLC adds liability protection but no tax benefit at typical Dasher income levels. See LLC vs sole prop.
Can I deduct miles if I do not have a written log? Technically yes if you can reconstruct them from the Dasher app, Google Timeline, and bank records — but it is risky. Start a real log today.
What if I dash for Uber Eats and Grubhub too? All gig income goes on the same Schedule C. All business miles across all platforms count. You will receive a separate 1099 from each platform.
Can I write off the cost of buying my car? Only under the actual-expense method (via depreciation or Section 179). Standard mileage already includes a depreciation component, so you cannot double-dip.