Instacart Shopper Tax Guide: 1099-NEC, Mileage, and Write-Offs
Instacart pays well in cash flow and badly in tax shock. Your weekly batch payouts hit your bank in full — no withholding, no automatic deductions, no W-2 magic. The IRS still wants its share, and it wants it four times a year. The flip side: as a full-service shopper you drive your own car, which unlocks the single largest deduction in the tax code (mileage at $0.70/mile in 2026), plus a stack of smaller write-offs most shoppers never claim.
This guide walks through what Instacart reports, who actually gets a 1099-NEC, what miles count, and the easy mistakes that can either cost you thousands at tax time or invite an audit you can't defend.
Full-service shopper vs in-store shopper — only one gets a 1099
Instacart has two roles, and only one of them is treated as self-employed:
| Role | Tax classification | What you receive |
|---|---|---|
| Full-service shopper | 1099 independent contractor | 1099-NEC if earnings ≥ $2,000 (TY 2026; was $600 pre-OBBBA) |
| In-store shopper | W-2 part-time employee | W-2 with taxes withheld |
If you shop and deliver — meaning you accept batches in the Shopper app, drive to the store, pick the items, and bring them to a customer — you are a full-service shopper. Everything in this guide applies to you. If Instacart hired you as a part-time employee to shop in-store only, you receive a W-2 and the rules are completely different (no mileage deduction, taxes withheld, none of this matters at quarterly time).
The 1099-NEC from Instacart
Instacart issues tax forms through Stripe, the same payment processor DoorDash and most gig platforms use. If you earned $2,000 or more as a full-service shopper in 2026 (OBBBA raised this from $600), you'll receive a Form 1099-NEC by January 31 of the following year. It's emailed to the address on your shopper account and available inside the Stripe Express portal.
What's on it:
- Box 1 (Nonemployee compensation): your total earnings — batch pay, peak boost, customer tips, heavy-pay bonuses, promotions.
- Maplebear Inc. (Instacart's legal name) and its EIN as the payer.
- Your name, address, and SSN/EIN as the recipient.
What's not on it: any deductions, mileage, or expenses. That's your job to track. Instacart reports the same total to the IRS, so under-reporting it is a fast way to land a CP2000 mismatch notice. Tips you received in cash from customers (rare on Instacart since most tipping is in-app) are still taxable income — report them.
Made less than $2,000?
You won't get a 1099-NEC, but you still owe income tax and self-employment tax on every dollar earned. Pull your earnings history from the Shopper app and report the total on Schedule C. The IRS doesn't care whether the form was issued — only that the income gets reported.
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 shopping reduces your taxable income by 70 cents. A full-time shopper logging 22,000 business miles a year wipes out $15,400 of income — often more than total profit.
What counts as a deductible mile
This is where most Instacart shoppers either leave money on the table or, worse, claim miles they can't defend.
| Trip | Deductible? |
|---|---|
| Driving from your house to the store before any batch is accepted | Generally no (commute) |
| Driving with the Shopper app on, waiting for a batch | Yes |
| Driving to the store after accepting a batch | Yes |
| Driving from store to customer's house | Yes |
| Driving from one customer drop-off to the next store 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 grocery shopping during the same trip | No (the personal portion) |
Two things make these miles defensible: (1) the Shopper app being toggled on, and (2) a contemporaneous mileage log. If your app is on and you're available to accept batches, the IRS generally treats those miles as business. The "commute" rule applies because your tax home is your residence, but if you regularly start the app the moment you leave your driveway, many tax pros treat the entire trip as business. Conservative approach: only log from the moment the app is on.
How Instacart batches affect your mileage logging
Instacart routinely groups two or three orders into a "batch" so you shop multiple customers at once. From a mileage standpoint that's all one continuous business trip — you don't have to break it into pieces. What you do need to capture: the moment you open the app and start driving (or driving toward a likely batch zone), and the moment you close it.
The Shopper app shows in-app distance for active batches, but it usually misses the dead miles between batches and the time spent driving around waiting for an offer. That's typically 30-50% of your real business miles. Use a dedicated tracker so you don't undercount.
Mileage tracking apps
| App | Cost | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Stride | Free | Part-time shoppers, manual start/stop |
| MileIQ | $5.99/mo or $59.99/yr | Auto-detection, swipe to classify |
| Hurdlr | Free tier; Premium $10/mo | Full-time shoppers wanting income + expense + tax estimates in one app |
| Everlance | Free tier; Premium $12/mo | Auto-classification by location |
Whichever you choose, your log needs five things to satisfy the IRS: date, starting point, ending point, total miles, and business purpose. See our full mileage article for the audit-proof log template.
Standard mileage vs actual expenses
You have two methods for deducting vehicle costs and you must pick one in the first year you use the car for business. Most Instacart shoppers come out way ahead with standard mileage.
Standard mileage ($0.70/mi in 2026): one number, one log, done. Gas, oil changes, depreciation, and insurance are all 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 shoppers with expensive vehicles, low MPG, or heavy repair costs.
Example: 22,000 business miles in a 2017 Toyota RAV4.
- Standard mileage: 22,000 × $0.70 = $15,400
- Actual expenses (rough): $4,200 gas + $1,700 insurance + $700 maintenance + $2,200 depreciation = $8,800 × 75% business use = $6,600
Standard wins by nearly $9,000.
Other deductions Instacart shoppers miss
Mileage is the giant. These are the smaller ones that add up to thousands:
- Phone bill — the business-use percentage of your monthly cell bill. If you use your phone 60% of the time for shopping, deduct 60% of the bill. A separate "shopper phone" is 100% deductible.
- Hot bags, cold bags, insulated coolers — fully deductible.
- Phone mount, dashboard charger, fast-charging cables — fully deductible.
- Hand sanitizer, disinfectant wipes, cleaning supplies for your car between batches.
- Reusable shopping bags, dolly or cart, bag clips, bungee cords for hauling heavy orders.
- Auto insurance increase for adding rideshare/delivery coverage. The portion above your personal premium is deductible.
- Health insurance premiums if you're self-employed and not eligible for a spouse's plan — see SE health insurance deduction.
- Tolls and parking incurred while shopping. Save digital receipts; E-ZPass statements work.
- Roadside assistance (AAA) — at your business-use percentage.
- Car washes — courts have allowed these when business use of the vehicle creates the dirt.
- Bank account fees for a separate shopper account.
- Tax software, mileage app subscriptions, accountant fees — all deductible.
What's not deductible: drinks and snacks for yourself during a shift (the IRS treats personal food as a cost of being alive, not of doing business), groceries you buy for your own household even if "while you were already at the store," and traffic tickets.
Self-employment tax — the surprise bill
Every self-employed worker owes 15.3% self-employment tax (12.4% Social Security + 2.9% Medicare) on net earnings, on top of regular income tax. As a W-2 employee your employer covered half of FICA. As a full-service shopper, you pay both halves yourself.
Half of SE tax is deductible above the line as an adjustment to income, which softens but doesn't eliminate the bill. See self-employment tax explained for the full breakdown.
Quarterly estimated taxes
The IRS expects you to pay tax as you earn it. For Instacart shoppers that means four payments a year:
| 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 at the federal short-term rate + 3% — that's 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 and expenses. Curious whether the take-home actually beats a W-2 job? The Freelance rate calculator shows your effective hourly after vehicle costs and tax.
Practical rule for full-time shoppers: set aside 20-25% of every weekly Instacart payout in a separate savings account. After mileage, taxable profit is much smaller than gross — that's why the rate is lower than the 30% rule for non-vehicle freelancers.
Common pitfalls Instacart shoppers fall into
- Forgetting tip income. Tips are part of Box 1 on your 1099-NEC and already in your reported total — but if you ever take a cash tip from a customer, that's still taxable income to add on top.
- Mixing personal grocery runs with shopping shifts and claiming all the miles. The personal portion isn't deductible. If you stop at the store for your own milk on the way home with the app off, those miles are personal.
- Round-number mileage. "I drove exactly 20,000 miles" is an audit flag. Real logs end in odd numbers like 19,847.
- Mileage that exceeds total annual miles on the car. The IRS can pull odometer readings from state inspection records or your insurance carrier.
- Claiming 100% business use of your only vehicle. If it's also your daily driver, 100% is hard to defend. 70-90% is more typical.
- Net loss multiple years in a row. A consistent loss makes the IRS treat shopping as a hobby, not a business, and they can disallow the loss.
- Skipping quarterly payments because "I'll just pay in April." The penalty interest accrues from each missed quarter, not from April 15.
FAQs
Does Instacart take taxes out? No. Full-service shoppers are independent contractors. Nothing is withheld. Only in-store shoppers (W-2 employees) have taxes withheld.
Do I need an LLC to shop? No. The default sole proprietorship is taxed identically. An LLC adds liability protection but no automatic tax benefit at typical shopper income levels. See LLC vs sole prop.
I shop for Instacart and DoorDash — do I file separate Schedule Cs? No. All gig delivery income goes on the same Schedule C as one self-employment activity. All business miles across all platforms count. You'll receive a separate 1099 from each platform — see our DoorDash driver guide for the parallel rules.
Can I deduct the bags Instacart sent me at signup? If they were free, there's nothing to deduct. If you bought additional or replacement bags, fully deductible.
What if I don't have a written mileage log for last year? You can reconstruct from the Shopper app's batch history, Google Timeline, and bank records — but it's risky and the IRS may disallow estimates. Start a contemporaneous log today and use it forward.