A Logo Is Not a Mileage Log
This article applies to all business owner types. A vehicle wrap markets your business; it does not turn personal miles into business miles. Advertising increases visibility, not deductibility.
The Only Way Advertising Supports 100% Business Use
Advertising supports 100% business use only when the vehicle is already business-only. That means:
- no personal errands
- no commuting
- a separate personal vehicle exists
- mileage logs reflect exclusive business travel
In this context, the wrap reinforces business purpose. It does not create it.
LLC Owners and Sole Proprietors
When the vehicle is personally owned, mileage must still be allocated unless personal use is eliminated entirely. Section 179 remains subject to business-use thresholds and allocation rules.
Driving a wrapped car to dinner does not make the dinner deductible. The tacos remain personal.
S Corporation Shareholders
For personally owned vehicles, advertising does not increase reimbursable mileage under an accountable plan. Only actual business trips qualify.
For S corp-owned vehicles, advertising does not eliminate personal-use reporting. Personal miles still trigger compensation or fringe benefit treatment.
Branding does not turn weekend errands into board meetings.
What Advertising Can Be Deducted
Advertising-related costs may be deductible as marketing expenses, including:
- design
- printing
- installation
There is no IRS authority or court precedent supporting the claim that advertising alone substantiates 100% business vehicle use.
When Advertising Supports 100% Business Use (and When It Doesn’t)
Advertising alone does not create business use, but it can support a 100% business-use position when the underlying facts already support it.
Advertising aligns with 100% business use only when:
- The vehicle is already restricted to business-only driving
- Personal use is eliminated, not reclassified
- The owner maintains a separate personal vehicle
- Mileage logs reflect exclusive business travel
In this context, the wrap supports the business purpose of the vehicle, BUT it does not redefine it.
If a vehicle is wrapped, but still used for personal travel, the advertising expense may be deductible, but vehicle use must still be allocated between business and personal miles.

