Vehicle expense deduction rules across the top 10 jurisdictions for freelancers and self-employed individuals. Covers per-kilometre/mileage rates, actual cost methods, logbook requirements, business-use caps, and common mistakes.
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Commuting is not a business trip
Commuting is NOT a business trip. Travel from home to your regular place of work is commuting. It is personal, and it is NOT deductible in ANY jurisdiction (though Germany has a partial commute allowance, the Entfernungspauschale, which is technically a reduction in taxable income rather than a business expense). Business trips include: travel to client sites, travel to meetings, travel to temporary workplaces, travel between business locations, travel to the bank/post office for business errands.
United States vehicle expense methods
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United States vehicle expense methods
| Method | Rate/Formula | Log required? | Business use cap | Citation | |---|---|---|---|---| | **Standard mileage rate** | **70 cents per mile** (2025, IRS announced rate — verify annually) | Yes. Must maintain a contemporaneous mileage log: date, destination, business purpose, miles driven. | No personal miles can be claimed. Must have records to substantiate business vs. personal split. | IRS Rev. Proc. (annual); IRC Section 274(d) | | **Actual expense method** | Total actual vehicle costs (gas, oil, tires, repairs, insurance, registration, depreciation/lease payments) multiplied by (business miles / total miles). | Yes. Same log requirement. Also need all receipts for actual expenses. | Depreciation limits (luxury auto caps): Section 280F. Year 1: $12,400 (2025, verify). Bonus depreciation may increase first-year limit. | IRC Section 162; Section 280F |IRS Rev. Proc. (annual); IRC Section 274(d); IRC Section 162; Section 280F
United Kingdom vehicle expense methods
| Method | Rate/Formula | Log required? | Business use cap | Citation | |---|---|---|---|---| | **Simplified mileage rate** | First 10,000 business miles: **45p per mile**. Above 10,000 miles: **25p per mile**. | Yes. Must maintain a mileage log with date, destination, purpose, and miles. | Only business miles claimed. Personal miles excluded. | ITTOIA 2005 s94B; HMRC Simplified Expenses | | **Actual cost method** | Total actual costs (fuel, insurance, servicing, repairs, road tax, MOT, depreciation/capital allowances) multiplied by business-use percentage. | Yes. Need a mileage log to determine business-use percentage AND receipts for all costs. | Must apportion between business and personal. | ITTOIA 2005 s34; CAA 2001 for capital allowances |
Functional role: Vehicle expense deduction rules and calculation methods by jurisdiction Status: Active reference data
Vehicle expenses are a high-audit-risk category because the line between business and personal use is inherently blurred. Every jurisdiction requires some method of distinguishing business trips from personal trips. This file provides the rules, rates, and logbook requirements for the top 10 jurisdictions.
United States vehicle expense methods
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United States vehicle expense methods (IRS Rev. Proc. (annual); IRC Section 274(d); IRC Section 162; Section 280F)
| Method | Rate/Formula | Log required? | Business use cap | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard mileage rate | 70 cents per mile (2025, IRS announced rate — verify annually) | Yes. Must maintain a contemporaneous mileage log: date, destination, business purpose, miles driven. | No personal miles can be claimed. Must have records to substantiate business vs. personal split. | IRS Rev. Proc. (annual); IRC Section 274(d) |
| Actual expense method | Total actual vehicle costs (gas, oil, tires, repairs, insurance, registration, depreciation/lease payments) multiplied by (business miles / total miles). | Yes. Same log requirement. Also need all receipts for actual expenses. | Depreciation limits (luxury auto caps): Section 280F. Year 1: $12,400 (2025, verify). Bonus depreciation may increase first-year limit. | IRC Section 162; Section 280F |
United Kingdom vehicle expense methods (ITTOIA 2005 s94B; HMRC Simplified Expenses; ITTOIA 2005 s34; CAA 2001)
| Method | Rate/Formula | Log required? | Business use cap | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Simplified mileage rate | First 10,000 business miles: 45p per mile. Above 10,000 miles: 25p per mile. | Yes. Must maintain a mileage log with date, destination, purpose, and miles. | Only business miles claimed. Personal miles excluded. | ITTOIA 2005 s94B; HMRC Simplified Expenses |
| Actual cost method | Total actual costs (fuel, insurance, servicing, repairs, road tax, MOT, depreciation/capital allowances) multiplied by business-use percentage. | Yes. Need a mileage log to determine business-use percentage AND receipts for all costs. | Must apportion between business and personal. | ITTOIA 2005 s34; CAA 2001 for capital allowances |
Germany vehicle expense methods (EStG Section 9 Abs. 1 Satz 3 Nr. 4; EStG Section 4 Abs. 5 Nr. 6; EStG Section 6 Abs. 1 Nr. 4 Satz 2)
| Method | Rate/Formula | Log required? | Business use cap | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Entfernungspauschale (commute allowance) | 30 cents per km for one-way distance (first 20 km). 38 cents per km from km 21 onward. Only for commute to primary workplace. | No log required for commute — only the distance. | Only counts actual working days. Maximum one trip per working day. | EStG Section 9 Abs. 1 Satz 3 Nr. 4 |
| Fahrtenbuch (logbook) for business trips | Actual total vehicle costs (fuel, insurance, tax, depreciation, repairs, garage) multiplied by (business km / total km). | Yes. Extremely strict logbook (Fahrtenbuch): each trip must record date, departure/arrival location, route, purpose, km reading at start and end. Must be bound or electronic (BMF-approved format). | Only the business-trip proportion. Commute is separately handled by Entfernungspauschale. | EStG Section 4 Abs. 5 Nr. 6 |
| 1% rule (company car / Privatnutzung) | If using the car for both business and personal: add 1% of the car's gross list price per month as taxable benefit. Plus 0.03% x list price x km for commute. | No logbook required. | Simplification: you avoid the logbook but accept a deemed private-use addition. | EStG Section 6 Abs. 1 Nr. 4 Satz 2 |
Australia vehicle expense methods (ITAA 1997 s28-25; ATO rates; ITAA 1997 Div 28; ATO logbook rules)
| Method | Rate/Formula | Log required? | Business use cap | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cents per km method | 88 cents per km (2024-25 income year — verify annually) | No detailed log required. Must be able to show how you calculated business km (reasonable estimate accepted). | Maximum 5,000 business km per vehicle per year = AUD 4,400 max deduction. | ITAA 1997 s28-25; ATO rates |
| Logbook method | Actual total vehicle costs multiplied by business-use percentage (determined by a 12-week representative logbook sample). | Yes. Must keep a 12-week logbook (continuous period). The logbook is valid for 5 years unless circumstances change materially. Must keep all receipts. | No km cap. Business-use percentage from the logbook applies to total costs including depreciation. | ITAA 1997 Div 28; ATO logbook rules |
Canada vehicle expense methods (CRA Motor Vehicle Expenses guide (T4002); Income Tax Regulations s7306; CRA T4002; ITR s7307; Class 10/10.1)
| Method | Rate/Formula | Log required? | Business use cap | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Per-km rate (CRA prescribed) | First 5,000 business km: 70 cents per km. Each additional km: 64 cents per km. (2025 rates — verify annually. Yukon/NWT/Nunavut: add 4c/km.) | Yes. Must maintain a logbook: date, destination, purpose, km driven. | Only business km. Must separate business and personal use with a log. | CRA Motor Vehicle Expenses guide (T4002); Income Tax Regulations s7306 |
| Actual cost method | Total actual costs (fuel, insurance, maintenance, licence, interest on car loan, CCA/depreciation) multiplied by (business km / total km). | Yes. Same logbook. Also keep all receipts. | CCA (capital cost allowance) limits: Class 10 vehicle max cost is CAD 37,000 (2025 — verify). Passenger vehicle interest deduction capped at CAD 300/month. Lease costs capped at CAD 1,050/month. | CRA T4002; ITR s7307; Class 10/10.1 |
Spain vehicle expense methods (LIRPF art. 22; Reglamento IRPF art. 21; LIVA art. 95.Tres.2)
| Method | Rate/Formula | Log required? | Business use cap | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IRPF (income tax) | Vehicle costs are generally NOT deductible for autonomos unless you are in a profession where a vehicle is essential (commercial agents, transport, delivery, taxi, sales representatives). | N/A for most. If eligible: yes, logbook needed. | For most autonomos: 0% deductible for IRPF. | LIRPF art. 22; Reglamento IRPF art. 21 |
| IVA (VAT) | 50% of IVA on vehicle purchase and expenses is deductible (presumed 50% business use). Can claim 100% if you prove 100% business use (very difficult). | Must keep purchase invoices. | 50% IVA deduction cap unless full business use proven. | LIVA art. 95.Tres.2 |
Italy vehicle expense methods (TUIR art. 164 (DPR 917/1986); TUIR art. 164.1.b)
| Method | Rate/Formula | Log required? | Business use cap | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Statutory percentage | Vehicle expenses are deductible at 20% of actual costs for self-employed professionals. Fuel, insurance, repairs, depreciation — all at 20%. | Keep all receipts and invoices. No formal logbook, but recommended. | Depreciation base capped at EUR 18,075.99 for cars. Fuel deductible at 20%. | TUIR art. 164 (DPR 917/1986) |
| Agenti di commercio (commercial agents) | 80% of actual costs deductible. | Same record-keeping. | Depreciation base capped at EUR 25,822.84. | TUIR art. 164.1.b |
Netherlands vehicle expense methods (Wet IB 2001; Belastingdienst km-administratie)
| Method | Rate/Formula | Log required? | Business use cap | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Actual costs only | Total actual costs (fuel, insurance, road tax, depreciation, maintenance, financing costs) minus private-use adjustment. | Yes. Must maintain a logbook (rittenadministratie) if claiming more than incidental business use. | If private use > 500 km/year: must add back a deemed private-use amount (bijtelling) — 22% of catalogue value per year for most cars, 16% for zero-emission. | Wet IB 2001; Belastingdienst km-administratie |
| No per-km allowance | The Netherlands does NOT offer a per-km deduction rate for self-employed. | N/A. | N/A. |
India vehicle expense methods (IT Act 1961, Section 37(1); Section 44ADA; IT Act 1961, Section 32; CBDT depreciation table)
| Method | Rate/Formula | Log required? | Business use cap | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Actual costs only | Actual fuel, maintenance, insurance, depreciation costs attributable to business use. | Must keep receipts and demonstrate business nexus. No formal logbook format prescribed. | Must show business nexus. Presumptive scheme (44ADA) does not allow separate vehicle claims. | IT Act 1961, Section 37(1); Section 44ADA |
| Depreciation | Cars: 15% WDV (written-down value) per year. Commercial vehicles: 30% WDV. | Keep asset register. | Depreciation applies only to the business-use portion. | IT Act 1961, Section 32; CBDT depreciation table |
Malta vehicle expense methods (ITA Cap. 123; IRD practice; ITA Cap. 123; subsidiary legislation)
| Method | Rate/Formula | Log required? | Business use cap | Citation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Proportional to business use | Actual fuel, insurance, licence fees, repairs, depreciation — proportioned by business-use percentage. | Must keep fuel receipts and a business-use log or estimate. | Must be proportional. No formal cap, but IRD reviews reasonableness. | ITA Cap. 123; IRD practice |
| Capital allowances | Wear and tear allowance: typically 20% per year on cost (5-year write-off for motor vehicles). | Keep purchase documentation. | Applied to total cost, then proportioned by business-use percentage. | ITA Cap. 123; subsidiary legislation |
Summary comparison table
| Jurisdiction | Per-km/mile rate available? | Rate | Cap on simplified | Logbook required? | Key restriction |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| US | Yes | 70c/mile | No mile cap (but actual expenses may be better) | Yes (strict) | Must choose method; luxury auto depreciation caps |
| UK | Yes | 45p/25p per mile | No cap | Yes | Cannot switch back from actual to simplified |
| Germany | Only for commute (30c/38c per km) | 30c/km commute; Fahrtenbuch for business trips | Commute only; business trips = actual | Yes (extremely strict Fahrtenbuch) | Fahrtenbuch can be rejected entirely for errors |
| Australia | Yes | 88c/km | 5,000 km/year | 12-week sample logbook (for logbook method) | Cents-per-km capped at 5,000 km |
| Canada | Yes | 70c/64c per km | No km cap | Yes | Depreciation/lease caps on expensive vehicles |
| Spain | No | N/A | N/A | N/A | Vehicle generally NOT deductible for IRPF |
| Italy | No | N/A | N/A | Receipts (no logbook) | Statutory 20% cap regardless of actual use |
| Netherlands | No (EUR 0.23/km for employees only) | N/A | N/A | Yes (strict) | No per-km for self-employed; bijtelling for private use |
| India | No | N/A | N/A | Keep receipts | Presumptive scheme (44ADA) covers all expenses |
| Malta | No | N/A | N/A | Fuel receipts required | Must demonstrate business nexus |
Claiming commute as business travel. Home to regular workplace is commuting in every jurisdiction (Germany's Entfernungspauschale is a partial income reduction, not a business expense deduction). Travel from your office to a client IS business travel.
No logbook at all. The US, UK, Canada, Germany, Netherlands, and Australia all require some form of log. Claiming vehicle expenses without a log is the fastest way to lose the deduction on audit. Write it down at the time — do not reconstruct at year-end.
Claiming 100% business use. Unless the vehicle is truly never used personally (very rare for a freelancer), claiming 100% business use is a red flag. A credible business-use percentage for most freelancers is 40-70%.
Ignoring the Spain/Italy restrictions. Many freelancers in Spain and Italy assume vehicle costs are fully deductible (like in the US or UK). They are not. Spain generally disallows IRPF deduction for most autonomos. Italy caps at 20% for professionals.
Using the wrong rate year. Per-km/mile rates change annually. Always verify the rate for the specific tax year you are filing. Using a prior year's rate is an error.
Double-counting parking and tolls. In the US, parking and tolls are deductible ON TOP of the standard mileage rate. In other jurisdictions, they may be included in the actual-cost calculation. Do not claim them twice.
Forgetting the electric vehicle advantages. Many jurisdictions offer more favorable treatment for electric vehicles: Germany's 25% list price for 1% rule, Australia's FBT exemption, UK's 100% first-year allowance, Netherlands' lower bijtelling rate. Check if EV-specific rules apply.
This file provides general guidance for vehicle expense deductions. Rates, caps, and logbook requirements change annually. Always verify against the relevant tax authority's current publications and rate announcements. This is not tax advice. A qualified professional should review all vehicle expense claims before filing.
This skill and its outputs are provided for informational and computational purposes only and do not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Open Accountants and its contributors accept no liability for any errors, omissions, or outcomes arising from the use of this skill. All outputs must be reviewed and signed off by a qualified professional (such as a CPA, EA, tax attorney, or equivalent licensed practitioner in your jurisdiction) before filing or acting upon.
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Germany vehicle expense methods
| Method | Rate/Formula | Log required? | Business use cap | Citation | |---|---|---|---|---| | **Entfernungspauschale (commute allowance)** | **30 cents per km** for one-way distance (first 20 km). **38 cents per km** from km 21 onward. Only for commute to primary workplace. | No log required for commute — only the distance. | Only counts actual working days. Maximum one trip per working day. | EStG Section 9 Abs. 1 Satz 3 Nr. 4 | | **Fahrtenbuch (logbook) for business trips** | Actual total vehicle costs (fuel, insurance, tax, depreciation, repairs, garage) multiplied by (business km / total km). | Yes. **Extremely strict logbook** (Fahrtenbuch): each trip must record date, departure/arrival location, route, purpose, km reading at start and end. Must be bound or electronic (BMF-approved format). | Only the business-trip proportion. Commute is separately handled by Entfernungspauschale. | EStG Section 4 Abs. 5 Nr. 6 | | **1% rule (company car / Privatnutzung)** | If using the car for both business and personal: add 1% of the car's gross list price per month as taxable benefit. Plus 0.03% x list price x km for commute. | No logbook required. | Simplification: you avoid the logbook but accept a deemed private-use addition. | EStG Section 6 Abs. 1 Nr. 4 Satz 2 |EStG Section 9 Abs. 1 Satz 3 Nr. 4; EStG Section 4 Abs. 5 Nr. 6; EStG Section 6 Abs. 1 Nr. 4 Satz 2
Australia vehicle expense methods
| Method | Rate/Formula | Log required? | Business use cap | Citation | |---|---|---|---|---| | **Cents per km method** | **88 cents per km** (2024-25 income year — verify annually) | No detailed log required. Must be able to show how you calculated business km (reasonable estimate accepted). | Maximum **5,000 business km** per vehicle per year = **AUD 4,400 max deduction**. | ITAA 1997 s28-25; ATO rates | | **Logbook method** | Actual total vehicle costs multiplied by business-use percentage (determined by a 12-week representative logbook sample). | Yes. Must keep a **12-week logbook** (continuous period). The logbook is valid for 5 years unless circumstances change materially. Must keep all receipts. | No km cap. Business-use percentage from the logbook applies to total costs including depreciation. | ITAA 1997 Div 28; ATO logbook rules |ITAA 1997 s28-25; ATO rates; ITAA 1997 Div 28; ATO logbook rules
Canada vehicle expense methods
| Method | Rate/Formula | Log required? | Business use cap | Citation | |---|---|---|---|---| | **Per-km rate (CRA prescribed)** | First 5,000 business km: **70 cents per km**. Each additional km: **64 cents per km**. (2025 rates — verify annually. Yukon/NWT/Nunavut: add 4c/km.) | Yes. Must maintain a logbook: date, destination, purpose, km driven. | Only business km. Must separate business and personal use with a log. | CRA Motor Vehicle Expenses guide (T4002); Income Tax Regulations s7306 | | **Actual cost method** | Total actual costs (fuel, insurance, maintenance, licence, interest on car loan, CCA/depreciation) multiplied by (business km / total km). | Yes. Same logbook. Also keep all receipts. | CCA (capital cost allowance) limits: Class 10 vehicle max cost is **CAD 37,000** (2025 — verify). Passenger vehicle interest deduction capped at **CAD 300/month**. Lease costs capped at **CAD 1,050/month**. | CRA T4002; ITR s7307; Class 10/10.1 |CRA Motor Vehicle Expenses guide (T4002); Income Tax Regulations s7306; CRA T4002; ITR s7307; Class 10/10.1
Spain vehicle expense methods
| Method | Rate/Formula | Log required? | Business use cap | Citation | |---|---|---|---|---| | **IRPF (income tax)** | Vehicle costs are generally **NOT deductible** for autonomos unless you are in a profession where a vehicle is essential (commercial agents, transport, delivery, taxi, sales representatives). | N/A for most. If eligible: yes, logbook needed. | For most autonomos: **0% deductible** for IRPF. | LIRPF art. 22; Reglamento IRPF art. 21 | | **IVA (VAT)** | **50% of IVA** on vehicle purchase and expenses is deductible (presumed 50% business use). Can claim 100% if you prove 100% business use (very difficult). | Must keep purchase invoices. | 50% IVA deduction cap unless full business use proven. | LIVA art. 95.Tres.2 |LIRPF art. 22; Reglamento IRPF art. 21; LIVA art. 95.Tres.2
Italy vehicle expense methods
| Method | Rate/Formula | Log required? | Business use cap | Citation | |---|---|---|---|---| | **Statutory percentage** | Vehicle expenses are deductible at **20% of actual costs** for self-employed professionals. Fuel, insurance, repairs, depreciation — all at 20%. | Keep all receipts and invoices. No formal logbook, but recommended. | Depreciation base capped at **EUR 18,075.99** for cars. Fuel deductible at 20%. | TUIR art. 164 (DPR 917/1986) | | **Agenti di commercio (commercial agents)** | **80% of actual costs** deductible. | Same record-keeping. | Depreciation base capped at **EUR 25,822.84**. | TUIR art. 164.1.b |TUIR art. 164 (DPR 917/1986); TUIR art. 164.1.b
Netherlands vehicle expense methods
| Method | Rate/Formula | Log required? | Business use cap | Citation | |---|---|---|---|---| | **Actual costs only** | Total actual costs (fuel, insurance, road tax, depreciation, maintenance, financing costs) minus private-use adjustment. | Yes. Must maintain a logbook (rittenadministratie) if claiming more than incidental business use. | If private use > 500 km/year: must add back a deemed private-use amount (bijtelling) — 22% of catalogue value per year for most cars, 16% for zero-emission. | Wet IB 2001; Belastingdienst km-administratie | | **No per-km allowance** | The Netherlands does NOT offer a per-km deduction rate for self-employed. | N/A. | N/A. | |Wet IB 2001; Belastingdienst km-administratie
India vehicle expense methods
| Method | Rate/Formula | Log required? | Business use cap | Citation | |---|---|---|---|---| | **Actual costs only** | Actual fuel, maintenance, insurance, depreciation costs attributable to business use. | Must keep receipts and demonstrate business nexus. No formal logbook format prescribed. | Must show business nexus. Presumptive scheme (44ADA) does not allow separate vehicle claims. | IT Act 1961, Section 37(1); Section 44ADA | | **Depreciation** | Cars: 15% WDV (written-down value) per year. Commercial vehicles: 30% WDV. | Keep asset register. | Depreciation applies only to the business-use portion. | IT Act 1961, Section 32; CBDT depreciation table |IT Act 1961, Section 37(1); Section 44ADA; IT Act 1961, Section 32; CBDT depreciation table
Malta vehicle expense methods
| Method | Rate/Formula | Log required? | Business use cap | Citation | |---|---|---|---|---| | **Proportional to business use** | Actual fuel, insurance, licence fees, repairs, depreciation — proportioned by business-use percentage. | Must keep fuel receipts and a business-use log or estimate. | Must be proportional. No formal cap, but IRD reviews reasonableness. | ITA Cap. 123; IRD practice | | **Capital allowances** | Wear and tear allowance: typically 20% per year on cost (5-year write-off for motor vehicles). | Keep purchase documentation. | Applied to total cost, then proportioned by business-use percentage. | ITA Cap. 123; subsidiary legislation |ITA Cap. 123; IRD practice; ITA Cap. 123; subsidiary legislation
Summary comparison table
| Jurisdiction | Per-km/mile rate available? | Rate | Cap on simplified | Logbook required? | Key restriction | |---|---|---|---|---|---| | **US** | Yes | 70c/mile | No mile cap (but actual expenses may be better) | Yes (strict) | Must choose method; luxury auto depreciation caps | | **UK** | Yes | 45p/25p per mile | No cap | Yes | Cannot switch back from actual to simplified | | **Germany** | Only for commute (30c/38c per km) | 30c/km commute; Fahrtenbuch for business trips | Commute only; business trips = actual | Yes (extremely strict Fahrtenbuch) | Fahrtenbuch can be rejected entirely for errors | | **Australia** | Yes | 88c/km | 5,000 km/year | 12-week sample logbook (for logbook method) | Cents-per-km capped at 5,000 km | | **Canada** | Yes | 70c/64c per km | No km cap | Yes | Depreciation/lease caps on expensive vehicles | | **Spain** | No | N/A | N/A | N/A | Vehicle generally NOT deductible for IRPF | | **Italy** | No | N/A | N/A | Receipts (no logbook) | Statutory 20% cap regardless of actual use | | **Netherlands** | No (EUR 0.23/km for employees only) | N/A | N/A | Yes (strict) | No per-km for self-employed; bijtelling for private use | | **India** | No | N/A | N/A | Keep receipts | Presumptive scheme (44ADA) covers all expenses | | **Malta** | No | N/A | N/A | Fuel receipts required | Must demonstrate business nexus |
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