Estimated reading time: 6 minutes
Key Takeaways
- Business mileage jumps to 70 cents per mile, a 3-cent rise from 2024.
- Medical and moving mileage stay modest at 21 cents; charitable mileage remains 14 cents.
- Meticulous logs are the key to unlocking every deduction dollar.
- Self-employed drivers can turn everyday trips into substantial tax savings.
- Employers should refresh reimbursement policies to stay compliant with the new IRS guidance.
Table of Contents
Introduction
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has set the standard mileage rate for 2025 at 70 cents per mile for business use. That jump reflects higher fuel prices, maintenance costs, and inflation. Understanding these figures is essential for anyone who intends to deduct mileage or reimburse employees for travel.
Updated Standard Mileage Rate for 2025
For 2025 the IRS has announced three distinct mileage rates:
- Business use: 70 cents per mile
- Medical & moving (military only): 21 cents per mile
- Charitable: 14 cents per mile
Compared with 2024, the business rate rose by 3 cents. The change stems from: fuel volatility, rising repair costs, and overall inflationary pressure.
Business Mileage Deduction
“If it’s ordinary and necessary for work, it may be deductible.” To claim a business mileage deduction:
- Track total business miles driven during 2025.
- Multiply by 0.70.
- The result is your deductible expense.
Example: 5,000 business miles × $0.70 = $3,500 deduction.
Mileage Reimbursement in 2025
Employers may reimburse employees at the IRS reimbursement rate of 70 cents per mile or choose another rate. Reimbursements above 70 cents can become taxable income; below 70 cents leave employees absorbing costs out-of-pocket.
“Clear policies + reliable logs = stress-free audits.”
Federal Mileage Rates Explained
Each mileage rate serves a different purpose:
- Business: day-to-day company travel, client visits, sales calls.
- Medical: trips to appointments, pharmacies, or treatments.
- Moving: relocation travel for active-duty military under orders.
- Charitable: volunteer driving on behalf of qualified organisations.
Tax Deduction Mileage Categories
Below is a quick checklist of who can claim what in 2025:
- Personal vehicle tax deduction: business, medical, moving (military), charitable.
- Self-employed mileage rate: 70 cents per mile for business driving.
- Employee mileage reimbursement: governed by employer policy—track anyway!
- Medical mileage rate: 21 cents per mile for qualified health-care travel.
- Moving mileage rate: 21 cents per mile—only for active-duty military moves.
- Charitable mileage rate: 14 cents per mile for volunteer drivers.
Maximising Your Mileage Deductions
Five proven strategies:
- Use a dedicated mileage tracking app—no more napkin notes.
- Record trip details immediately: date, purpose, start, finish, miles.
- Segregate personal and business driving with separate logs.
- Keep every receipt: fuel, repairs, parking.
- Review logs monthly to catch errors before tax time.
Compliance and Record-Keeping
The IRS loves contemporaneous records. At audit time you should be able to produce:
- Digital or paper mileage log.
- Receipts supporting maintenance and fuel.
- Notes explaining the business purpose of each trip.
Common pitfalls include mixing personal and business miles or relying on end-of-year estimates—both red flags for auditors.
Watch: Mileage Deduction Explained
Conclusion
The 2025 mileage rates provide new opportunities—and new responsibilities. By leveraging the 70-cent business rate, keeping airtight records, and updating reimbursement policies, taxpayers can transform routine drives into tangible tax savings. The road to compliance is paved with accurate logs.
FAQs
Who can claim the 70-cent business mileage rate?
Self-employed individuals, freelancers, gig-economy drivers, and anyone using a personal vehicle for ordinary and necessary business travel may claim the rate.
Can employees deduct unreimbursed mileage?
Under current tax law most employees cannot deduct unreimbursed business mileage, making employer reimbursement policies more important than ever.
Does the medical mileage rate cover pharmacy trips?
Yes. Travel to obtain prescription drugs or medical supplies qualifies at 21 cents per mile.
Are commuting miles deductible?
No. Travel between your home and regular workplace is considered personal commuting and is never deductible.
How long should I keep mileage records?
Keep records for at least three years after filing the return, or longer if you claim depreciation using actual expenses.