This Article is for:
This article is written only for sole proprietors and single-member LLCs taxed as disregarded entities where the vehicle is owned personally by the business owner. If your business is taxed as an S corporation or the vehicle is titled in the company’s name, different rules apply and are covered in later articles.
Because the business and owner are legally the same, the vehicle is treated as a personal asset for tax purposes. That classification controls everything that follows. This includes, but is not limited to:
- Real estate agents and property managers
- Creatives and other self-employed professionals
- Freelancers and consultants
- Gig workers and independent contractors
- Rideshare and delivery drivers (Uber, Lyft, DoorDash, Instacart, Amazon Flex, etc.)
- Home service providers
Business Use vs. Personal Use: The Foundation
Vehicle deductions depend on separating business miles from personal miles. Business miles generally include travel to client meetings, job sites, and supply purchases. Personal miles include commuting, errands, and general life travel.
The IRS requires mileage records that clearly support this allocation. The fact that a vehicle is necessary for business does not convert personal driving into deductible mileage. Running errands after a client meeting doesn’t make the entire trip a business expense even if the car “never rests.”
How to Legitimately Reach 100% Business Use
For sole proprietors and single-member LLC owners, 100% business use is possible, when personal use is eliminated entirely. The most defensible structure looks like this:
- The vehicle is driven only for business purposes
- A separate personal vehicle is owned or otherwise available
- Mileage logs reflect zero personal miles
- The vehicle is not used for commuting or personal errands
In practice, this usually means one car for work and one car for life. The IRS is comfortable with that story because it makes sense and sense matters more than creativity.
Choosing a Deduction Method
Once business use is established, vehicle costs may be deducted using one of two methods.
Standard Mileage Method
Under the standard mileage method, the deduction equals business miles multiplied by the IRS mileage rate for the year. This rate is designed to cover fuel, maintenance, insurance, depreciation, and operating costs.
This method often works best when business use is moderate or when simplicity and clean substantiation are priorities. Think of it as the “less paperwork, fewer headaches” approach.
Actual Expense Method
Under the actual expense method, the taxpayer deducts the business-use percentage of total vehicle costs, including: fuel and oil, maintenance and repairs, insurance, registration fees, and depreciation. If the business use is 70%, then 70% of the vehicle costs are deductible. Personal miles should be excluded, even if the car feels like it works overtime.
Section 179: Accelerated, Not Unlimited
Section 179 expense is an actual expense option; allows accelerated depreciation of qualifying vehicles, but it does not override business-use rules. To qualify:
- business use must exceed 50%
- deductions are limited to the business-use percentage
- recapture applies if business use later drops below 50%
Section 179 speeds up depreciation, it doesn’t erase personal use. It’s fast-forward, not a time machine.
Key Takeaways for LLC Owners, Sole Proprietors & Gig Workers
If your car could testify, the IRS would ask where it went, not how busy it looked.
- The vehicle is a personal asset, not a business asset
- Personal use must always be excluded
- 100% business use requires no personal driving at all
- Section 179 does not eliminate business use and personal use allocation

