Deductible Car and Truck Expenses
Ordinarily, expenses related to use of a car, van,
pickup or panel truck for business can be deducted as
transportation expenses. Use of larger vehicles, such
as tractor-trailers, is treated differently and is not
part of this discussion. In order to claim a deduction
for business use of a car or truck, a taxpayer must
have ordinary and necessary costs related to one or
more of the following:
Traveling from one work location to another within
the taxpayer’s tax home area. (Generally, the tax home
is the entire city or general area where the taxpayer’s
main place of business is located, regardless of where
he or she resides.)
Visiting customers.
Attending a business meeting away from the regular
workplace.
Getting from home to a temporary workplace when the
taxpayer has one or more regular places of work. (These
temporary workplaces can be either within or outside
taxpayer’s tax home area.)
Expenses related to travel away from home overnight
are travel expenses. These expenses are discussed in
Chapter One of Publication 463, “Travel, Entertainment,
Gift, and Car Expenses.” However, if a taxpayer uses
a car while traveling away from home overnight on business,
the rules for claiming car or truck expenses are the
same as stated above.
It is important to note that costs related to travel
between a taxpayer’s home and regular place of work
are commuting expenses and are not deductible.
Taxpayers can choose to use either the standard mileage
rate or actual expenses to compute their allowable business
deduction. They may want to figure the deduction using
both methods to see which provides a larger deduction.
Standard Mileage Rate Method
The standard mileage rate may be used to figure the
deductible costs of a vehicle that is owned or leased.
If a taxpayer wishes to use the standard mileage rate
for a leased vehicle, it must be used for the entire
lease period. In other words, a taxpayer must use the
standard mileage rate for the first year a vehicle is
available for business use in order to use the standard
mileage rate in subsequent years.
The standard mileage rate is adjusted annually by the
IRS to reflect changes in the cost of operating a vehicle.
In some situations it is adjusted during the year. The
2006 standard mileage rate of 44.5 cents per mile, as
well as rates for previous periods, can be found at
http://www.irs.gov/taxpros/article/0,,id=156624,00.html.
The 2007 rate is 48.5 cents per mile.
The standard mileage rate is used in place of actual
expenses. Taxpayers who choose the standard mileage
rate may not deduct actual expenses, such as depreciation,
lease payments, maintenance and repairs, gasoline (including
gasoline taxes), oil, insurance or vehicle registration
fees. Business-related parking fees and tolls may be
deducted in addition to the standard mileage rate. Fees
for parking at a taxpayer’s main place of business or
tolls related to commuting to and from that main place
of business are personal expenses which are not deductible.
The standard mileage rate cannot be used if the taxpayer:
Uses the car for hire (such as a taxi).
Uses five or more cars at the same time (as in fleet
operations).
Claims depreciation or a section 179 deduction .
Is a rural mail carrier who receives a qualified reimbursemen
Actual Expenses Method
Actual car or truck expenses include:
Depreciation
Lease payments
Registration fees
Licenses
Gas
Insurance
Repairs
Oil
Garage rent
Tires
Tolls
Parking fees
If business use of the vehicle is less than 100 percent,
expenses must be allocated between business and personal
use. Only the business use percentage of each expense
is deductible.
For example, if, based on records maintained by a
taxpayer, total actual vehicle expenses for a given
year are $2,500 and the vehicle is used 75 percent for
business, the allowable deduction using the actual expense
method is $1,875 ($2,500 x 75 percent).
Recordkeeping
It is important to keep complete records to substantiate
items reported on a tax return. In the case of car and
truck expenses, the types of records required depend
on whether the taxpayer claims the standard mileage
rate or actual expenses.
To claim the standard mileage rate, appropriate records
would include documentation identifying the vehicle
and proving ownership or a lease and a daily log showing
miles traveled, destination and business purpose.
For actual expenses, a mileage log helps establish
business use percentage. Taxpayers should also retain
receipts, invoices and other documentation to show cost
and establish the identity of the vehicle for which
the expense was incurred. For depreciation purposes
they need to show the original cost of the vehicle and
any improvements as well as the date it was placed in
service.
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