Driving for Uber or Lyft means you're running your own business โ€” which means you handle your own taxes. No withholding, no W-2, and a tax bill that surprises most new drivers in their first April. This guide covers everything you need to know about rideshare taxes in 2025 so you're never caught off guard.

What tax forms will you receive?

As a rideshare driver, you'll receive one or more 1099 forms from Uber or Lyft each January:

If you earned less than these thresholds, you won't receive a 1099 โ€” but you're still legally required to report all income. The IRS expects you to track and report every dollar regardless of whether you get a form.

โš ๏ธ Important: The 1099-K shows gross ride earnings โ€” before Uber or Lyft takes their cut. The platform commission (typically 25โ€“30%) is a deductible business expense. Keep your annual earnings summary from the app to calculate the actual net income you received.

What taxes do rideshare drivers pay?

You'll owe two types of federal tax on your rideshare income:

Self-employment tax (15.3%)

Because you're self-employed, you pay both the employee and employer halves of Social Security and Medicare. The combined rate is 15.3%, applied to 92.35% of your net earnings. For most drivers, this is the single biggest tax โ€” and the one that catches people off guard if they've only ever been W-2 employees.

Federal income tax

On top of SE tax, you pay ordinary income tax on your net rideshare profit. The rate depends on your total income from all sources. The good news: you can deduct half of your SE tax from your gross income, which softens the income tax hit somewhat.

Calculate your exact tax billEnter your earnings and see what you owe in SE tax, what to set aside monthly, and your take-home rate.
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The biggest deduction: mileage

Mileage is the most valuable deduction available to rideshare drivers โ€” and the one most drivers underuse by not tracking carefully. In 2025, the IRS standard mileage rate is $0.70 per mile. Every business mile you drive reduces your taxable income by 70 cents.

What miles count?

Miles driven with the app off โ€” commuting to your "starting area" or driving home at the end of the night โ€” generally don't count.

The math: If you drive 25,000 business miles in a year, your mileage deduction is $17,500. At a combined tax rate of 28%, that saves you roughly $4,900 in actual taxes. This is real money โ€” track every mile.
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Other deductions rideshare drivers can claim

DeductionWhat qualifiesNotes
MileageAll business miles at $0.70/mileUsually the biggest deduction
PhoneBusiness portion of your phone billIf you use your phone 80% for work, deduct 80%
Phone mountHolder for navigationFully deductible
Car washesCleaning to maintain passenger comfortKeep receipts
Water/snacks for passengersAmenities you provideFully deductible business expense
Platform feesUber/Lyft commission on each rideDeduct from gross 1099 income
TollsTolls paid during ridesTrack separately from mileage
ParkingBusiness parking feesNot commuting-related parking
Health insurancePremiums if self-employedAbove-the-line deduction

Quarterly estimated tax payments

Rideshare drivers must pay taxes four times a year โ€” not just in April. If you expect to owe $1,000 or more in federal taxes for the year, the IRS requires quarterly estimated payments. Skipping these triggers an underpayment penalty even if you pay everything by April 15.

QuarterIncome coveredDue date
Q1Jan 1 โ€“ Mar 31April 15, 2025
Q2Apr 1 โ€“ May 31June 16, 2025
Q3Jun 1 โ€“ Aug 31September 15, 2025
Q4Sep 1 โ€“ Dec 31January 15, 2026
Never miss a quarterly paymentCalculate exactly what to pay each quarter based on your Uber/Lyft earnings.
Estimate payments โ†’
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How much should you set aside?

A practical rule for rideshare drivers: set aside 25โ€“30% of every payment into a separate savings account labeled "taxes." Move it immediately when the money hits your account โ€” before you spend it on anything else.

The exact percentage depends on your total income from all sources, your deductions, and your filing status. For most drivers earning $30,000โ€“$70,000 from rideshare, 25โ€“28% covers federal taxes comfortably. Add your state income tax rate on top if applicable.

How to file your rideshare taxes

You'll file your rideshare income on Schedule C (business income and expenses) attached to your Form 1040. Your self-employment tax is calculated on Schedule SE. Most tax software handles both automatically once you enter your 1099 income and deductions.

At minimum, you'll need: your annual earnings summary from the Uber or Lyft driver app, your 1099 forms, your mileage log for the year, and receipts for any expenses you're deducting.

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The most common rideshare tax mistakes

Rideshare driver tax checklist