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Everything You Need to Know About the Business Travel Tax Deduction

Justin W. Jones, EA, JD

Justin is an IRS Enrolled Agent, allowing him to represent taxpayers before the IRS. He loves helping freelancers and small business owners save on taxes. He is also an attorney and works part-time with the Keeper Tax team.

You don’t have to fly first class and stay at a fancy hotel to claim travel expense tax deductions. Conferences, worksite visits, and even a change of scenery can (sometimes) qualify as business travel.

What counts as business travel?

The IRS does have a few simple guidelines for determining what counts as business travel. Your trip has to be:

  • Mostly business
  • An “ordinary and necessary” expense
  • Someplace far away from your “tax home”

What counts as "mostly business"?

The IRS will measure your time away in days. If you spend more days doing business activities than not, your trip is considered "mostly business". Your travel days are counted as work days.

Special rules for traveling abroad

If you are traveling abroad for business purposes, you trip counts as " entirely for business " as long as you spend less than 25% of your time on personal activities (like vacationing). Your travel days count as work days.

So say you you head off to Zurich for nine days. You've got a seven-day run of conference talks, client meetings, and the travel it takes to get you there. You then tack on two days skiing on the nearby slopes.

Good news: Your trip still counts as "entirely for business." That's because two out of nine days is less than 25%.

What is an “ordinary and necessary” expense?

“Ordinary and necessary” means that the trip:

  • Makes sense given your industry, and
  • Was taken for the purpose of carrying out business activities

If you have a choice between two conferences — one in your hometown, and one in London — the British one wouldn’t be an ordinary and necessary expense.

What is your tax home?

A taxpayer can deduct travel expenses anytime you are traveling away from home but depending on where you work the IRS definition of “home” can get complicated.

Your tax home is often — but not always — where you live with your family (what the IRS calls your "family home"). When it comes to defining it, there are two factors to consider:

  • What's your main place of business, and
  • How large is your tax home

What's your main place of business?

If your main place of business is somewhere other than your family home, your tax home will be the former — where you work, not where your family lives.

For example, say you:

  • Live with your family in Chicago, but
  • Work in Milwaukee during the week (where you stay in hotels and eat in restaurants)

Then your tax home is Milwaukee. That's your main place of business, even if you travel back to your family home every weekend.

How large is your tax home?

In most cases, your tax home is the entire city or general area where your main place of business is located.

The “entire city” is easy to define but “general area” gets a bit tricker. For example, if you live in a rural area, then your general area may span several counties during a regular work week.

Rules for business travel

Want to check if your trip is tax-deductible? Make sure it follows these rules set by the IRS.

1. Your trip should take you away from your home base

A good rule of thumb is 100 miles. That’s about a two hour drive, or any kind of plane ride. To be able to claim all the possible travel deductions, your trip should require you to sleep somewhere that isn’t your home.

2. You should be working regular hours

In general, that means eight hours a day of work-related activity.

It’s fine to take personal time in the evenings, and you can still take weekends off. But you can’t take a half-hour call from Disneyland and call it a business trip.

Here's an example. Let’s say you’re a real estate agent living in Chicago. You travel to an industry conference in Las Vegas. You go to the conference during the day, go out in the evenings, and then stay the weekend. That’s a business trip!

3. The trip should last less than a year

Once you’ve been somewhere for over a year, you’re essentially living there. However, traveling for six months at a time is fine!

For example, say you’re a freelancer on Upwork, living in Seattle. You go down to stay with your sister in San Diego for the winter to expand your client network, and you work regular hours while you’re there. That counts as business travel.

What about digital nomads?

With the rise of remote-first workplaces, many freelancers choose to take their work with them as they travel the globe. There are a couple of requirements these expats have to meet if they want to write off travel costs.

Requirement #1: A tax home

Digital nomads have to be able to claim a particular foreign city as a tax home if they want to write off any travel expenses. You don't have to be there all the time — but it should be your professional home base when you're abroad.

For example, say you've rent a room or a studio apartment in Prague for the year. You regularly call clients and finish projects from there. You still travel a lot, for both work and play. But Prague is your tax home, so you can write off travel expenses.

Requirement #2: Some work-related reason for traveling

As long as you've got a tax home and some work-related reason for traveling, these excursion count as business trips. Plausible reasons include meeting with local clients, or attending a local conference and then extending your stay.

However, if you’re a freelance software developer working from Thailand because you like the weather, that unfortunately doesn't count as business travel.

The travel expenses you can write off

As a rule of thumb, all travel-related expenses on a business trip are tax-deductible. You can also claim meals while traveling, but be careful with entertainment expenses (like going out for drinks!).

Here are some common travel-related write-offs you can take.

🛫 All transportation

Any transportation costs are a travel tax deduction. This includes traveling by airplane, train, bus, or car. Baggage fees are deductible, and so are Uber rides to and from the airport.

Just remember: if a client is comping your airfare, or if you booked your ticket with frequent flier miles, then it isn't deductible since your cost was $0.

If you rent a car to go on a business trip, that rental is tax-deductible. If you drive your own vehicle, you can either take actual costs or use the standard mileage deduction. There's more info on that in our guide to deducting car expenses .

Hotels, motels, Airbnb stays, sublets on Craigslist, even reimbursing a friend for crashing on their couch: all of these are tax-deductible lodging expenses.

🥡 Meals while traveling

If your trip has you staying overnight — or even crashing somewhere for a few hours before you can head back — you can write off food expenses. Grabbing a burger alone or a coffee at your airport terminal counts! Even groceries and takeout are tax-deductible.

One important thing to keep in mind: You can usually deduct 50% of your meal costs. For 2021 and 2022, meals you get at restaurants are 100% tax-deductible. Go to the grocery store, though, and you’re limited to the usual 50%.

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🌐 Wi-Fi and communications

Wi-Fi — on a plane or at your hotel — is completely deductible when you’re traveling for work. This also goes for other communication expenses, like hotspots and international calls.

If you need to ship things as part of your trip — think conference booth materials or extra clothes — those expenses are also tax-deductible.

👔 Dry cleaning

Need to look your best on the trip? You can write off related expenses, like laundry charges.

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Travel expenses you can't deduct

Some travel costs may seem like no-brainers, but they're not actually tax-deductible. Here are a couple of common ones to watch our for.

The cost of bringing your child or spouse

If you bring your child or spouse on a business trip, your travel expense deductions get a little trickier. In general, the cost of bring other people on a business trip is considered personal expense — which means it's not deductible.

You can only deduct travel expenses if your child or spouse:

  • Is an employee,
  • Has a bona fide business purpose for traveling with you, and
  • Would otherwise be allowed to deduct the travel expense on their own

Some hotel bill charges

Staying in a hotel may be required for travel purposes. That's why the room charge and taxes are deductible.

Some additional charges, though, won't qualify. Here are some examples of fees that aren't tax-deductible:

  • Gym or fitness center fees
  • Movie rental fees
  • Game rental fees

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Where to claim travel expenses when filing your taxes

If you are self-employed, you will claim all your income tax deduction on the Schedule C. This is part of the Form 1040 that self-employed people complete ever year.

What happens if your business deductions are disallowed?

If the IRS challenges your business deduction and they are disallowed, there are potential penalties. This can happen if:

  • The deduction was not legitimate and shouldn't have been claimed in the first place, or
  • The deduction was legitimate, but you don't have the documentation to support it

When does the penalty come into play?

The 20% penalty is not automatic. It only applies if it allowed you to pay substantially less taxes than you normally would. In most cases, the IRS considers “substantially less” to mean you paid at least 10% less.

In practice, you would only reach this 10% threshold if the IRS disqualified a significant number of your travel deductions.

How much is the penalty?

The penalty is normally 20% of the difference between what you should have paid and what you actually paid. You also have to make up the original difference.

In total, this means you will be paying 120% of your original tax obligation: your original obligation, plus 20% penalty.

Justin W. Jones, EA, JD

Justin W. Jones, EA, JD

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work travel tax deduction

How to Deduct Travel Expenses (with Examples)

Reviewed by

November 3, 2022

This article is Tax Professional approved

Good news: most of the regular costs of business travel are tax deductible.

Even better news: as long as the trip is primarily for business, you can tack on a few vacation days and still deduct the trip from your taxes (in good conscience).

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Even though we advise against exploiting this deduction, we do want you to understand how to leverage the process to save on your taxes, and get some R&R while you’re at it.

Follow the steps in this guide to exactly what qualifies as a travel expense, and how to not cross the line.

The travel needs to qualify as a “business trip”

Unfortunately, you can’t just jump on the next plane to the Bahamas and write the trip off as one giant business expense. To write off travel expenses, the IRS requires that the primary purpose of the trip needs to be for business purposes.

Here’s how to make sure your travel qualifies as a business trip.

1. You need to leave your tax home

Your tax home is the locale where your business is based. Traveling for work isn’t technically a “business trip” until you leave your tax home for longer than a normal work day, with the intention of doing business in another location.

2. Your trip must consist “mostly” of business

The IRS measures your time away in days. For a getaway to qualify as a business trip, you need to spend the majority of your trip doing business.

For example, say you go away for a week (seven days). You spend five days meeting with clients, and a couple of days lounging on the beach. That qualifies as business trip.

But if you spend three days meeting with clients, and four days on the beach? That’s a vacation. Luckily, the days that you travel to and from your location are counted as work days.

3. The trip needs to be an “ordinary and necessary” expense

“Ordinary and necessary ” is a term used by the IRS to designate expenses that are “ordinary” for a business, given the industry it’s in, and “necessary” for the sake of carrying out business activities.

If there are two virtually identical conferences taking place—one in Honolulu, the other in your hometown—you can’t write off an all-expense-paid trip to Hawaii.

Likewise, if you need to rent a car to get around, you’ll have trouble writing off the cost of a Range Rover if a Toyota Camry will get you there just as fast.

What qualifies as “ordinary and necessary” can seem like a gray area at times, and you may be tempted to fudge it. Our advice: err on the side of caution. if the IRS chooses to investigate and discovers you’ve claimed an expense that wasn’t necessary for conducting business, you could face serious penalties .

4. You need to plan the trip in advance

You can’t show up at Universal Studios , hand out business cards to everyone you meet in line for the roller coaster, call it “networking,” and deduct the cost of the trip from your taxes. A business trip needs to be planned in advance.

Before your trip, plan where you’ll be each day, when, and outline who you’ll spend it with. Document your plans in writing before you leave. If possible, email a copy to someone so it gets a timestamp. This helps prove that there was professional intent behind your trip.

The rules are different when you travel outside the United States

Business travel rules are slightly relaxed when you travel abroad.

If you travel outside the USA for more than a week (seven consecutive days, not counting the day you depart the United States):

You must spend at least 75% of your time outside of the country conducting business for the entire getaway to qualify as a business trip.

If you travel outside the USA for more than a week, but spend less than 75% of your time doing business, you can still deduct travel costs proportional to how much time you do spend working during the trip.

For example, say you go on an eight-day international trip. If you spend at least six days conducting business, you can deduct the entire cost of the trip as a business expense—because 6 is equivalent to 75% of your time away, which, remember, is the minimum you must spend on business in order for the entire trip to qualify as a deductible business expense.

But if you only spend four days out of the eight-day trip conducting business—or just 50% of your time away—you would only be able to deduct 50% of the cost of your travel expenses, because the trip no longer qualifies as entirely for business.

List of travel expenses

Here are some examples of business travel deductions you can claim:

  • Plane, train, and bus tickets between your home and your business destination
  • Baggage fees
  • Laundry and dry cleaning during your trip
  • Rental car costs
  • Hotel and Airbnb costs
  • 50% of eligible business meals
  • 50% of meals while traveling to and from your destination

On a business trip, you can deduct 100% of the cost of travel to your destination, whether that’s a plane, train, or bus ticket. If you rent a car to get there, and to get around, that cost is deductible, too.

The cost of your lodging is tax deductible. You can also potentially deduct the cost of lodging on the days when you’re not conducting business, but it depends on how you schedule your trip. The trick is to wedge “vacation days” in between work days.

Here’s a sample itinerary to explain how this works:

Thursday: Fly to Durham, NC. Friday: Meet with clients. Saturday: Intermediate line dancing lessons. Sunday: Advanced line dancing lessons. Monday: Meet with clients. Tuesday: Fly home.

Thursday and Tuesday are travel days (remember: travel days on business trips count as work days). And Friday and Monday, you’ll be conducting business.

It wouldn’t make sense to fly home for the weekend (your non-work days), only to fly back into Durham for your business meetings on Monday morning.

So, since you’re technically staying in Durham on Saturday and Sunday, between the days when you’ll be conducting business, the total cost of your lodging on the trip is tax deductible, even if you aren’t actually doing any work on the weekend.

It’s not your fault that your client meetings are happening in Durham—the unofficial line dancing capital of America .

Meals and entertainment during your stay

Even on a business trip, you can only deduct a portion of the meal and entertainment expenses that specifically facilitate business. So, if you’re in Louisiana closing a deal over some alligator nuggets, you can write off 50% of the bill.

Just make sure you make a note on the receipt, or in your expense-tracking app , about the nature of the meeting you conducted—who you met with, when, and what you discussed.

On the other hand, if you’re sampling the local cuisine and there’s no clear business justification for doing so, you’ll have to pay for the meal out of your own pocket.

Meals and entertainment while you travel

While you are traveling to the destination where you’re doing business, the meals you eat along the way can be deducted by 50% as business expenses.

This could be your chance to sample local delicacies and write them off on your tax return. Just make sure your tastes aren’t too extravagant. Just like any deductible business expense, the meals must remain “ordinary and necessary” for conducting business.

How Bench can help

Surprised at the kinds of expenses that are tax-deductible? Travel expenses are just one of many unexpected deductible costs that can reduce your tax bill. But with messy or incomplete financials, you can miss these tax saving expenses and end up with a bigger bill than necessary.

Enter Bench, America’s largest bookkeeping service. With a Bench subscription, your team of bookkeepers imports every transaction from your bank, credit cards, and merchant processors, accurately categorizing each and reviewing for hidden tax deductions. We provide you with complete and up-to-date bookkeeping, guaranteeing that you won’t miss a single opportunity to save.

Want to talk taxes with a professional? With a premium subscription, you get access to unlimited, on-demand consultations with our tax professionals. They can help you identify deductions, find unexpected opportunities for savings, and ensure you’re paying the smallest possible tax bill. Learn more .

Bringing friends & family on a business trip

Don’t feel like spending the vacation portion of your business trip all alone? While you can’t directly deduct the expense of bringing friends and family on business trips, some costs can be offset indirectly.

Driving to your destination

Have three or four empty seats in your car? Feel free to fill them. As long as you’re traveling for business, and renting a vehicle is a “necessary and ordinary” expense, you can still deduct your business mileage or car rental costs even when others join you for the ride.

One exception: If you incur extra mileage or “unnecessary” rental costs because you bring your family along for the ride, the expense is no longer deductible because it isn’t “necessary or ordinary.”

For example, let’s say you had to rent an extra large van to bring your children on a business trip. If you wouldn’t have needed to rent the same vehicle to travel alone, the expense of the extra large van no longer qualifies as a business deduction.

Renting a place to stay

Similar to the driving expense, you can only deduct lodging equivalent to what you would use if you were travelling alone.

However, there is some flexibility. If you pay for lodging to accommodate you and your family, you can deduct the portion of lodging costs that is equivalent to what you would pay only for yourself .

For example, let’s say a hotel room for one person costs $100, but a hotel room that can accommodate your family costs $150. You can rent the $150 option and deduct $100 of the cost as a business expense—because $100 is how much you’d be paying if you were staying there alone.

This deduction has the potential to save you a lot of money on accommodation for your family. Just make sure you hold on to receipts and records that state the prices of different rooms, in case you need to justify the expense to the IRS

Heads up. When it comes to AirBnB, the lines get blurry. It’s easy to compare the cost of a hotel room with one bed to a hotel room with two beds. But when you’re comparing significantly different lodgings, with different owners—a pool house versus a condo, for example—it becomes hard to justify deductions. Sticking to “traditional” lodging like hotels and motels may help you avoid scrutiny during an audit. And when in doubt: ask your tax advisor.

So your trip is technically a vacation? You can still claim any business-related expenses

The moment your getaway crosses the line from “business trip” to “vacation” (e.g. you spend more days toasting your buns than closing deals) you can no longer deduct business travel expenses.

Generally, a “vacation” is:

  • A trip where you don’t spend the majority of your days doing business
  • A business trip you can’t back up with correct documentation

However, you can still deduct regular business-related expenses if you happen to conduct business while you’re on vacay.

For example, say you visit Portland for fun, and one of your clients also lives in that city. You have a lunch meeting with your client while you’re in town. Because the lunch is business related, you can write off 50% of the cost of the meal, the same way you would any other business meal and entertainment expense . Just make sure you keep the receipt.

Meanwhile, the other “vacation” related expenses that made it possible to meet with this client in person—plane tickets to Portland, vehicle rental so you could drive around the city—cannot be deducted; the trip is still a vacation.

If your business travel is with your own vehicle

There are two ways to deduct business travel expenses when you’re using your own vehicle.

  • Actual expenses method
  • Standard mileage rate method

Actual expenses is where you total up the actual cost associated with using your vehicle (gas, insurance, new tires, parking fees, parking tickets while visiting a client etc.) and multiply it by the percentage of time you used it for business. If it was 50% for business during the tax year, you’d multiply your total car costs by 50%, and that’d be the amount you deduct.

Standard mileage is where you keep track of the business miles you drove during the tax year, and then you claim the standard mileage rate .

The cost of breaking the rules

Don’t bother trying to claim a business trip unless you have the paperwork to back it up. Use an app like Expensify to track business expenditure (especially when you travel for work) and master the art of small business recordkeeping .

If you claim eligible write offs and maintain proper documentation, you should have all of the records you need to justify your deductions during a tax audit.

Speaking of which, if your business is flagged to be audited, the IRS will make it a goal to notify you by mail as soon as possible after your filing. Usually, this is within two years of the date for which you’ve filed. However, the IRS reserves the right to go as far back as six years.

Tax penalties for disallowed business expense deductions

If you’re caught claiming a deduction you don’t qualify for, which helped you pay substantially less income tax than you should have, you’ll be penalized. In this case, “substantially less” means the equivalent of a difference of 10% of what you should have paid, or $5,000—whichever amount is higher.

The penalty is typically 20% of the difference between what you should have paid and what you actually paid in income tax. This is on top of making up the difference.

Ultimately, you’re paying back 120% of what you cheated off the IRS.

If you’re slightly confused at this point, don’t stress. Here’s an example to show you how this works:

Suppose you would normally pay $30,000 income tax. But because of a deduction you claimed, you only pay $29,000 income tax.

If the IRS determines that the deduction you claimed is illegitimate, you’ll have to pay the IRS $1200. That’s $1000 to make up the difference, and $200 for the penalty.

Form 8275 can help you avoid tax penalties

If you think a tax deduction may be challenged by the IRS, there’s a way you can file it while avoiding any chance of being penalized.

File Form 8275 along with your tax return. This form gives you the chance to highlight and explain the deduction in detail.

In the event you’re audited and the deduction you’ve listed on Form 8275 turns out to be illegitimate, you’ll still have to pay the difference to make up for what you should have paid in income tax—but you’ll be saved the 20% penalty.

Unfortunately, filing Form 8275 doesn’t reduce your chances of being audited.

Where to claim travel expenses

If you’re self-employed, you’ll claim travel expenses on Schedule C , which is part of Form 1040.

When it comes to taking advantage of the tax write-offs we’ve discussed in this article—or any tax write-offs, for that matter—the support of a professional bookkeeping team and a trusted CPA is essential.

Accurate financial statements will help you understand cash flow and track deductible expenses. And beyond filing your taxes, a CPA can spot deductions you may have overlooked, and represent you during a tax audit.

Learn more about how to find, hire, and work with an accountant . And when you’re ready to outsource your bookkeeping, try Bench .

Join over 140,000 fellow entrepreneurs who receive expert advice for their small business finances

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Trips you can and can't claim

When you can and can't claim deductions for the cost of transport while working and between home and work.

Last updated 24 June 2024

Trips while working and between workplaces

You can claim a tax deduction for the cost of transport on trips to:

  • perform your work duties – for example, if you travel from your regular place of work to meet with a client
  • attend work-related conferences or meetings away from your regular place of work
  • deliver items or collect supplies
  • go between 2 or more separate places of employment, such as if you have more than one job (but not if one of the places is your home)
  • regular place of work to an alternative place of work that isn't a regular place of work (for example, a client's premises) while still on duty, and back to your regular place of work or directly home
  • home to an alternative place of work that isn't a regular place of work to perform your duties, and then to your regular place of work or directly home (this doesn't apply if the alternative place of work has become a regular workplace).

Example: travel between 2 separate workplaces

Aaron works part time at a supermarket and also works part time as a house cleaner. On Tuesdays Aaron drives his car directly from his job at the supermarket to his regular cleaning clients.

As the trip is between 2 separate places of work, neither of which is Aaron's home, he can claim a deduction for the transport expenses he incurs for that trip.

Example: travel to an alternative place of work

Brock works for a large company with 2 offices in Melbourne. He usually works from the city office but occasionally he's required to attend training at the company's office in Box Hill. When Brock travels to the Box Hill office, he catches a tram at his own expense.

Brock can claim a deduction for the cost of the tram between the Melbourne office and Box Hill office as it's an alternative place of work. He can also claim the cost of any trips between the Box Hill office and his home.

However, if Brock works from the city office every Monday to Thursday and from the Box Hill office every Friday as a standard arrangement, then the city office is his regular place of work every Monday to Thursday and the Box Hill office is his regular place of work every Friday. Brock can't claim a deduction for trips between his home and either of his regular places of work.

Trips between home and work

You can't claim trips between your home and place of work, except in limited circumstances .

These trips put you in a position to start work and earn income but are not part of performing your work duties. The cost of these trips is a private expense.

This is the case even if you:

  • live a long way from your regular place of work
  • work outside normal business hours – for example, shift work or overtime
  • do minor work-related tasks on the way to work or the way home – for example, picking up the mail
  • go between your home and regular place of work more than once a day
  • are on call – for example, you are on standby duty and your employer contacts you at home to come into work
  • have no public transport near where you work
  • do some work at home
  • work from your home running your own business and travel directly to a place of work where you work for somebody else.

Example: public transport not available

Tim works at his local cinema. His shift often finishes late into the night. The only available bus doesn't operate past 7:00 pm so Tim has to drive to and from work.

The cost Tim incurs to drive to work is not deductible. This is because Tim incurs the cost to put him in the position to earn his employment income, not in the course of performing his work duties.

Example: working from home and travelling to regular place of work

Ravi works in the accounts department of a large retail chain. At the end of each month, Ravi's workload increases. To keep on top of his work, Ravi does some work at home before he goes into the office or when he gets home from the office in the evening.

Ravi can't claim a deduction for the expenses he incurs when he travels between his home and the office on these occasions.

Ravi works at home for convenience and doesn't incur the cost of travelling from his home to the office in the course of performing his work duties. He incurs the expenses to be in the position to start work. The transport costs are a private expense.

Example: travelling while on standby duty

Nadena is a registered nurse at a hospital. During a typical fortnight, Nadena has 9 shifts and one standby shift. If another nurse calls in sick when Nadena is on standby duty she may be called in to work that shift.

The standby shift may be at night, early morning or during the day, depending on her roster cycle.

Nadena can't claim a deduction for travel between her home and the hospital when she is called into work while she is on standby duty.

She incurs the expense in travelling from her home to the hospital, not in the course of performing her work duties. The transport costs are a private expense. This is the case even if the shift is outside normal business hours or there is no public transport available.

Example: travelling to a distant regular work location

Aldo lives in North Queensland with his family. He is an employee on a long-term project in Sydney. His employment contract states that his place of work is the office on the project site in Sydney.

As Aldo lives in North Queensland and only needs to be physically on site during certain stages of the project, he has an informal agreement with his employer to work from home whenever he's not required on site.

When it's necessary for Aldo to be on site, he's generally at the project site for no longer than 2 weeks at a time. When Aldo needs to be on site, he flies to Sydney at his own expense.

The project site in Sydney is Aldo's regular place of work and he can't claim a deduction for the cost of travelling from North Queensland to Sydney.

Aldo doesn't incur the transport expenses in the course of performing his work duties. He incurs the expenses to put him in the position to start work.

His travel costs to stay in Sydney, such as accommodation and meals, are also private because Aldo chooses to live in North Queensland and work in Sydney.

When you can claim trips between home and work

There are some circumstances where you can claim a deduction for the cost of trips between home and work. You must check that you meet the eligibility conditions:

Home is a base of employment

Transporting bulky tools and equipment, itinerant or shifting places of work.

You may also be able to claim a deduction for a trip that includes an alternative place of work that isn't a regular place of work – see Trips while working and between workplaces .

You can claim a deduction for the cost of a trip from home to your place of work if your home was a base of employment. You must meet all 3 of these conditions:

  • You're required to start your employment duties at home then travel to your regular place of work to complete those particular duties.
  • Undertaking the work in 2 locations is necessary due to the nature of your employment duties.
  • The trip to your regular place of work isn't part of a normal trip to work that would have occurred anyway.

Example: home is base of employment

Tom is the IT Security Director of a data storage company. He's on call 24 hours a day to be notified of a security breach. His employer installs a secure terminal at his home so he can work from home if he receives a call out of hours. Normally, Tom would provide advice over the phone to the staff on site, and sometimes he would log into the secure terminal at his home to correct the issue.

At times, Tom starts working on a security issue from the home terminal but is then required to drive into the office out of hours to resolve the issue. On these occasions the transport expenses he incurs for this journey are deductible, as his home has become a base of employment. However, his regular daily trip into the office is not deductible.

You can claim a deduction for the cost of trips between home and work if you need to carry bulky tools or equipment and all the following conditions are met:    

  • the tools or equipment are essential to perform your work
  • they are awkward to transport because of their size and weight
  • they can only be transported conveniently using a motor vehicle
  • there is no secure storage for such items at the workplace
  • you don't transport the tools or equipment as a matter of choice (for example, if your employer provides secure storage and you choose to take the tools home instead).

If you claim a deduction, you will need to keep a record of:

  • all work items you carry
  • the size and weight of all work items
  • evidence that the items you carry are essential to your work
  • evidence that your employer did not provide secure storage at the workplace.

Media: Transporting bulky tools and equipment https://tv.ato.gov.au/ato-tv/media?v=bd1bdiubx7d1ys External Link ( Duration: 00:52)

Example: carrying bulky equipment is necessary

Masahito is an employee of an orchestra, where he plays double bass.

The orchestra plays in a number of venues and Masahito often travels directly from home to the various venues. He practises regularly at home, this is also the only place available to store his instrument when not being used.

The double bass is over 2 metres tall and 75 cm wide when in its case and is awkward to transport.

Masahito can claim a deduction for the car expenses he incurs when travelling between his home and workplaces. The need to transport his cumbersome double bass by car to the different workplaces means that the trips are not ordinary home to work travel.

Example: carrying bulky tools is unnecessary

Merinda works as a fitter and turner on a mine site. She drives to the mine site each day.

The mine site has a building where staff can store their tools when not on duty. The staff have their own secure tool lockers.

Merinda requires a number of tools to do her job, so her toolkit is large and heavy. Although there is room to store the toolkit in her locker, she takes it home every day.

Merinda's toolkit would be considered bulky, but she has a secure place to store it at work. It is her decision to transport her tools between home and work each day.

As there is no practical need for Merinda to transport the bulky toolkit between home and her regular place of work, her trips remain ordinary private trips. She can't claim a deduction for her car expenses.

If you do itinerant work (you have shifting places of work), you can claim transport expenses you incur for trips between your places of work and your home. The following factors indicate you do itinerant work:

  • You travel because it's a fundamental part of your work, not just because it's convenient to you or your employer.
  • You have a 'web' of workplaces you travel to throughout the day and no fixed place of work.
  • You regularly work at more than one work site before returning home.
  • You are often uncertain of the location of your work site.
  • Your employer pays you a travel allowance because you need to travel continually between work sites, and you use this allowance to pay for your travel.

Example: one work site each day

Chloe is a substitute teacher, who travels to different schools when teachers are away. She sometimes attends a school for just one day, and at other times for a few weeks.

Chloe is not doing itinerant work. While she may not know where she's going to work each day, she will only ever work at one location for the day. She can't claim a deduction for her trips between home and work.

Example: multiple work sites each day

Mitchell is an apprentice roof tiler. He is sent to various sites each day, going to the first site from his home and returning home at the end of the day from the last site.

Mitchell is doing itinerant work because he is regularly working at multiple sites during the day. He can claim deductions for the transport costs of his trips:

  • between home and work each day
  • between each site during the day.

However, if Mitchell routinely goes to only one site and works there for several days until the job is finished, he is not doing itinerant work.

Claiming a trip

To claim a tax deduction for the transport expenses of a work-related trip, you must:

  • have spent the money yourself and weren't reimbursed
  • have records of your expenses.

How you work out your claim amount depends on whether you made the trip:

  • in your car or other motor vehicle
  • by taxi, ride-share or public transport .

If you travel overnight to perform your work duties, you can generally claim a deduction for the cost of your flights and your expenses for accommodation, meals and incidentals.

If your travel is partly private, you can only claim a deduction for the transport expenses you incur in the course of performing your work duties.

Still need to file? An expert can help or do taxes for you with 100% accuracy. Get started

Tax Deductions for Business Travelers

work travel tax deduction

When you are self-employed, you generally can deduct the ordinary and necessary expenses of traveling away from home for business from your income. But before you start listing travel deductions, make sure you understand what the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) means by "home," "business," and "ordinary and necessary expenses."

Ordinary vs. necessary expenses

Business home, not home sweet home, transportation expenses on a business trip are deductible, fees for getting around are deductible, lodging, meals and tips are deductible.

Business traveler on the phone

Key Takeaways

  • Typically, you can deduct travel expenses if they are ordinary (common and accepted in your industry) and necessary (helpful and appropriate for your business).
  • You can deduct business travel expenses when you are away from both your home and the location of your main place of business (tax home).
  • Deductible expenses include transportation, baggage fees, car rentals, taxis and shuttles, lodging, tips, and fees.
  • You can also deduct 50% of either the actual cost of meals or the standard meal allowance, which is based on the federal meals and incidental expense per diem rate.

The IRS defines expense ordinary and necessary expenses this way:

  • An expense is ordinary if it is common and accepted in your industry
  • An expense is necessary if it is helpful and appropriate for your business

You can claim business travel expenses when you're away from home but "home" doesn't always mean where your family lives. You also have a tax home—the city where your main place of business is located—which may not be the same as the location of your family home.

For example, if you live in Petaluma, California but your permanent work location is in San Jose where you stay in hotels and eat out during the work week, you typically can't deduct your expenses in San Jose or your transportation home on weekends.

  • In this situation San Jose is your tax home , so no deductions are permitted for ordinary and necessary expenses there.
  • Your trips to your home in Petaluma are not mandated by business.

Go by plane, train or bus—the actual cost of the ticket to ride is deductible, as well as any baggage fees. If you have to pay top dollar for a last-minute flight, the high-priced ticket is a business expense, but if you use frequent-flyer miles for a free ticket, the deduction is zero.

If you decide to rent a car to go on a business trip, the car rental is deductible. If you drive your own vehicle, you can usually take actual costs or the IRS standard mileage rate. For 2023 the rate is 65.5 cents per mile. You also can add tolls and parking costs onto your deduction. This amount increases to 67 cents per mile for 2024.

TurboTax Tip: Even if you use the federal meals and incidental expense per diem rates to calculate your deductions, be sure to keep receipts from all your meals and incidental expenses.

Fares for taxis or shuttles can be deducted as business travel expenses. For example, you can deduct the fare or other costs to go to:

  • Airport or train station
  • Hotel from the airport or train station
  • Between your hotel and the work location
  • Between clients in the area

If you rent a car when you arrive at your destination, the expense is deductible as long as the car is used exclusively for business. If you use it both for business and personal purposes, you can only deduct the portion of the rental used for business.

The IRS allows business travelers to deduct business-related meals and hotel costs, as long as they are reasonable considering the circumstances—not lavish or extravagant.

You would have to eat if you were home, so this might explain why the IRS limits meal deductions to 50% of either the:

  • Actual cost of the meal
  • Standard meal allowance

This allowance is based on the federal meals and incidental expense per diem rate that depends on where and when you travel.

Generally, you can deduct 50% of the cost of meals. Alternatively, if you do not incur any meal expenses nor claim the standard meal allowance, you can deduct the amount of $5 per day for incidental expenses. You can also deduct incidental expenses, such as:

  • Fees and tips given to hotel staff
  • Fees for porters and baggage carriers

But don't forget to keep track of the actual costs.

Let a local tax expert matched to your unique situation get your taxes done 100% right with TurboTax Live Full Service . Your expert will uncover industry-specific deductions for more tax breaks and file your taxes for you. Backed by our Full Service Guarantee . You can also file taxes on your own with TurboTax Premium . We’ll search over 500 deductions and credits so you don’t miss a thing.

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The above article is intended to provide generalized financial information designed to educate a broad segment of the public; it does not give personalized tax, investment, legal, or other business and professional advice. Before taking any action, you should always seek the assistance of a professional who knows your particular situation for advice on taxes, your investments, the law, or any other business and professional matters that affect you and/or your business.

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  • Credits and deductions
  • Business expenses

Can I deduct travel expenses?

By turbotax • 570 • updated 9 months ago.

If you’re self-employed or own a business , you can deduct work-related travel expenses, including vehicles, airfare, lodging, and meals. The expenses must be ordinary and necessary.

For vehicle expenses, you can choose between the standard mileage rate or the actual cost method where you track what you paid for gas and maintenance.

You can generally only claim 50% of the cost of your meals while on business-related travel away from your tax home, provided your trip requires an overnight stay. You can also deduct 50% of the cost of meals for entertaining clients (regardless of location), but due to the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 (TCJA), you can no longer deduct entertainment expenses in tax years 2018 through 2025. In 2021 and 2022, the law allows a deduction for 100% of your cost of food and beverages that are provided by a restaurant, instead of the usual 50% deduction.

On the other hand, employees can no longer deduct out-of-pocket travel costs in tax years 2018 through 2025 per the TCJA (this does not apply to Armed Forces reservists, qualified performing artists, fee-basis state or local government officials, and employees with impairment-related work expenses). Prior to the tax rule change, employees could claim 50% of the cost of unreimbursed meals while on business-related travel away from their tax home if the trip required an overnight stay, as well as other unreimbursed job-related travel costs. These expenses were handled as a 2% miscellaneous itemized deduction.

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10 tax deductions for travel expenses (2023 tax year).

deductions for travel expenses

Tax season can be stressful, especially if you’re unaware of the tax deductions available to you. If you’ve traveled for work throughout the year, there are a number of deductions for travel expenses that can help reduce your taxable income in 2024 and save you money.

Read on for 10 tax deductions for travel expenses in the 2023 tax year.

Are business travel expenses tax deductible?

Business travel expenses incurred while away from your home and principal place of business are tax deductible. These expenses may include transportation costs, baggage fees, car rentals, taxis, shuttles, lodging, tips, and fees.

It is important to keep receipts and records of the actual expenses for tax purposes and deduct the actual cost.

What kinds of travel expenses are tax deductible?

To deduct business travel expenses, they must meet certain criteria set by the IRS.

The following are the primary requirements that a travel expense must meet in order to be eligible for a tax deduction:

  • Ordinary and necessary expenses: The expense must be common and accepted in the trade or business and be helpful and appropriate for the business.
  • Directly related to trade or business: The expense must be directly related to the trade or business and not of a personal nature.
  • Away from home overnight: The expense must have been incurred while away from both the taxpayer’s home and the location of their main place of business (tax home) overnight.
  • Proper documentation: The taxpayer must keep proper documentation, such as receipts and records, of the expenses incurred.

Eligible Business Travel Tax Deductions

Business travel expenses can quickly add up. Fortunately, many of these expenses are tax deductible for businesses and business owners.

Here is an overview of the types of business travel expenses that are eligible for tax deductions in the United States:

Accommodation Expenses

Accommodation expenses can be claimed as tax deductions on business trips. This includes lodging at hotels, rental costs of vacation homes, and other lodgings while traveling.

Meal Expenses

Food and beverage expenses incurred on a business trip may be deducted from taxes. This includes meals while traveling and meals during meetings with clients or contractors.

Transportation Expenses

Deducting business travel expenses incurred while on a business trip may also be claimed.

This includes flights, train tickets, car rentals, gas for personal vehicles used for the business trip, toll fees, parking fees, taxi rides to and from the airport or train station, and more.

Expenses of operating and maintaining a car

Expenses of operating and maintaining a car used for business travel may also be claimed as tax deductions.

This includes fuel, insurance, registration costs, actual costs of repairs, and maintenance fees. Fees paid to hire a chauffeur or driver may also be deducted.

Operating and maintaining house-trailers

Operating and maintaining house trailers for business travel may be eligible for tax deductions, provided that the use of such trailers is considered “ordinary” and “necessary” for your business.

This includes any costs associated with renting or owning a trailer, such as fuel costs, repair and maintenance fees, insurance, and registration charges.

Internet and phone expenses

Internet and phone expenses associated with business travel can also be claimed as tax deductions. This includes the cost of any internet service, such as Wi-Fi or data plans, and phone services, such as roaming charges or international calls.

Any communication devices purchased for business use, such as smartphones and laptops, may also be eligible for tax deductions.

Computer rental fees

Rental fees for computers and other computing devices used during business travel may also be deducted from taxes. This includes any applicable charges for purchasing, leasing, or renting a computer, as well as the related costs of connecting to the Internet and other digital services.

All such expenses must be necessary for the success of the business trip in order to qualify for a tax deduction.

Travel supplies

Travel supplies, such as suitcases and other bags, are also eligible for tax deductions when used for business travel. Any costs associated with keeping the items protected, such as locks and tracking devices, can also be claimed as tax deductions.

Other necessary supplies, such as office equipment or reference materials, may also be eligible for deductions.

Conference fees and events

Conference fees and events related to business travel may also be eligible for tax deductions. This includes fees associated with attending a conference, such as registration, accommodation, and meals.

Any costs related to the organization of business events, such as venue hire and catering, may also be claimed as tax deductions.

Cleaning and laundry expenses

Business travel expenses associated with cleaning and laundry may also be claimed as tax deductions. This includes a portion of the cost of hotel and motel services, such as cleaning fees charged for laundering clothing, as well as any other reasonable expenses related to keeping clean clothes while traveling away from home.

Ineligible Travel Expenses Deductions

When it comes to business expenses and taxes, not all travel expenses are created equal. Some expenses are considered “Ineligible Travel Expenses Deductions” and cannot be claimed as deductions on your income taxes.

Here is a list of common travel expenses that cannot be deducted, with a brief explanation of each:

  • Personal Vacations: Expenses incurred during a personal vacation are not deductible, even if you conduct some business while on the trip. In addition, expenses related to personal pleasure or recreation activities are also not eligible for deductions.
  • Gifts: Gifts purchased for business reasons during travel are not deductible, even if the gifts are intended to benefit the business in some way.
  • Commuting: The cost of commuting between your home and regular place of business is not considered a deductible expense.
  • Meals: Meals consumed while traveling on business can only be partially deducted, with certain limits on the amount.
  • Lodging: The cost of lodging is a deductible expense, but only if it is deemed reasonable and necessary for the business trip.
  • Entertainment: Entertainment expenses, such as tickets to a show or sporting event, are not deductible, even if they are associated with a business trip.

How to Deduct Travel Expenses

To deduct travel expenses from income taxes, the expenses must be considered ordinary and necessary for the operation of the business. This means the expenses must be common and accepted business activities in your industry, and they must be helpful, appropriate, and for business purposes.

In order to claim travel expenses as a deduction, they must be itemized on Form 2106 for employees or Schedule C for self-employed individuals.

How much can you deduct for travel expenses?

While on a business trip, the full cost of transportation to your destination, whether it’s by plane, train, or bus, is eligible for deduction.

Similarly, if you rent a car for transportation to and around your destination, the cost of the rental is also deductible. For food expenses incurred during a business trip, only 50% of the cost is eligible for a write-off.

How do you prove your tax deductions for travel expenses?

To prove your tax deductions for travel expenses, you should maintain accurate records such as receipts, invoices, and any other supporting documentation that shows the amount and purpose of the expenses.

Some of the documentation you may need to provide include receipts for transportation, lodging, and meals, a detailed itinerary or schedule of the trip, an explanation of the bona fide business purpose of the trip, or proof of payment for all expenses.

What are the penalties for deducting a disallowed business expense?

Deducting a disallowed business expense can result in accuracy-related penalties of 20% of the underpayment, interest charges, re-assessment of the tax return, and in severe cases, fines and imprisonment for tax fraud. To avoid these penalties, it’s important to understand expense deduction rules and keep accurate records.

Can you deduct travel expenses when you bring family or friends on a business trip?

It is not usually possible to deduct the expenses of taking family or friends on a business trip. However, if these individuals provided value to the company, it may be possible. It’s advisable to speak with an accountant or financial expert before claiming any deductions related to bringing family and friends on a business trip.

Can you deduct business-related expenses incurred while on vacation?

Expenses incurred while on a personal vacation are not deductible, even if some business is conducted during the trip. To be eligible for a deduction, the primary purpose of the trip must be for business and the expenses must be directly related to conducting that business.

Can you claim a travel expenses tax deduction for employees?

Employers can deduct employee travel expenses if they are ordinary, necessary, and adequately documented. The expenses must also be reported as taxable income on the employee’s W-2.

What are the limits on deducting the cost of meals during business travel?

The IRS permits a 50% deduction of meal and hotel expenses for business travelers that are reasonable and not lavish. If no meal expenses are incurred, $5.00 daily can be deducted for incidental expenses. The federal meals and incidental expense per diem rate is what determines the standard meal allowance.

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What Are Travel Expenses?

Understanding travel expenses, the bottom line.

  • Deductions & Credits
  • Tax Deductions

Travel Expenses Definition and Tax Deductible Categories

Michelle P. Scott is a New York attorney with extensive experience in tax, corporate, financial, and nonprofit law, and public policy. As General Counsel, private practitioner, and Congressional counsel, she has advised financial institutions, businesses, charities, individuals, and public officials, and written and lectured extensively.

work travel tax deduction

For tax purposes, travel expenses are costs associated with traveling to conduct business-related activities. Reasonable travel expenses can generally be deducted from taxable income by a company when its employees incur costs while traveling away from home specifically for business. That business can include conferences or meetings.

Key Takeaways

  • Travel expenses are tax-deductible only if they were incurred to conduct business-related activities.
  • Only ordinary and necessary travel expenses are deductible; expenses that are deemed unreasonable, lavish, or extravagant are not deductible.
  • The IRS considers employees to be traveling if their business obligations require them to be away from their "tax home” substantially longer than an ordinary day's work.
  • Examples of deductible travel expenses include airfare, lodging, transportation services, meals and tips, and the use of communications devices.

Travel expenses incurred while on an indefinite work assignment that lasts more than one year are not deductible for tax purposes.

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) considers employees to be traveling if their business obligations require them to be away from their "tax home" (the area where their main place of business is located) for substantially longer than an ordinary workday, and they need to get sleep or rest to meet the demands of their work while away.

Well-organized records—such as receipts, canceled checks, and other documents that support a deduction—can help you get reimbursed by your employer and can help your employer prepare tax returns. Examples of travel expenses can include:

  • Airfare and lodging for the express purpose of conducting business away from home
  • Transportation services such as taxis, buses, or trains to the airport or to and around the travel destination
  • The cost of meals and tips, dry cleaning service for clothes, and the cost of business calls during business travel
  • The cost of computer rental and other communications devices while on the business trip

Travel expenses do not include regular commuting costs.

Individual wage earners can no longer deduct unreimbursed business expenses. That deduction was one of many eliminated by the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017.

While many travel expenses can be deducted by businesses, those that are deemed unreasonable, lavish, or extravagant, or expenditures for personal purposes, may be excluded.

Types of Travel Expenses

Types of travel expenses can include:

  • Personal vehicle expenses
  • Taxi or rideshare expenses
  • Airfare, train fare, or ferry fees
  • Laundry and dry cleaning
  • Business meals
  • Business calls
  • Shipment costs for work-related materials
  • Some equipment rentals, such as computers or trailers

The use of a personal vehicle in conjunction with a business trip, including actual mileage, tolls, and parking fees, can be included as a travel expense. The cost of using rental vehicles can also be counted as a travel expense, though only for the business-use portion of the trip. For instance, if in the course of a business trip, you visited a family member or acquaintance, the cost of driving from the hotel to visit them would not qualify for travel expense deductions .

The IRS allows other types of ordinary and necessary expenses to be treated as related to business travel for deduction purposes. Such expenses can include transport to and from a business meal, the hiring of a public stenographer, payment for computer rental fees related to the trip, and the shipment of luggage and display materials used for business presentations.

Travel expenses can also include operating and maintaining a house trailer as part of the business trip.

Can I Deduct My Business Travel Expenses?

Business travel expenses can no longer be deducted by individuals.

If you are self-employed or operate your own business, you can deduct those "ordinary and necessary" business expenses from your return.

If you work for a company and are reimbursed for the costs of your business travel , your employer will deduct those costs at tax time.

Do I Need Receipts for Travel Expenses?

Yes. Whether you're an employee claiming reimbursement from an employer or a business owner claiming a tax deduction, you need to prepare to prove your expenditures. Keep a running log of your expenses and file away the receipts as backup.

What Are Reasonable Travel Expenses?

Reasonable travel expenses, from the viewpoint of an employer or the IRS, would include transportation to and from the business destination, accommodation costs, and meal costs. Certainly, business supplies and equipment necessary to do the job away from home are reasonable. Taxis or Ubers taken during the business trip are reasonable.

Unreasonable is a judgment call. The boss or the IRS might well frown upon a bill for a hotel suite instead of a room, or a sports car rental instead of a sedan.

Individual taxpayers need no longer fret over recordkeeping for unreimbursed travel expenses. They're no longer tax deductible by individuals, at least until 2025 when the provisions in the latest tax reform package are due to expire or be extended.

If you are self-employed or own your own business, you should keep records of your business travel expenses so that you can deduct them properly.

Internal Revenue Service. " Topic No. 511, Business Travel Expenses ."

Internal Revenue Service. " Publication 463, Travel, Gift, and Car Expenses ," Page 13.

Internal Revenue Service. " Publication 5307, Tax Reform Basics for Individuals and Families ," Page 7.

Internal Revenue Service. " Publication 463, Travel, Gift, and Car Expenses ," Pages 6-7, 13-14.

Internal Revenue Service. " Publication 463, Travel, Gift, and Car Expenses ," Page 4.

Internal Revenue Service. " Publication 5307, Tax Reform Basics for Individuals and Families ," Pages 5, 7.

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Accounting | How To

Determining Tax Deductions for Travel Expenses + List of Deductions

Published August 15, 2023

Published Aug 15, 2023

Tim Yoder, Ph.D., CPA

WRITTEN BY: Tim Yoder, Ph.D., CPA

This article is part of a larger series on Accounting Software .

  • 1. Determine Your Trip Meets the Requirements of a Business Trip
  • 2. Check the List of Business Expenses That Qualify for Deductions
  • 3. (For Those Mixing Business & Personal Travel): Allocate Expenses

Bottom Line

The IRS considers deductible travel expenses to be any ordinary and necessary expenses you incur while traveling away from home on business. To get tax deductions for travel expenses, the trip must have a business purpose and be temporary (less than one year) and you must be away from your tax home for a length of time that exceeds your usual work day or be away overnight to get sleep to fulfill the demands of your job while away.

Key Takeaways

  • A qualifying business trip must take you away from home overnight long enough to require rest.
  • Most expenses incurred during a qualifying business trip are deductible, including meals on days off.
  • Partnerships, limited liability companies (LLCs), and corporations can directly pay or reimburse employees for business travel expenses and deduct them from their business returns.
  • Self-employed business owners will deduct their travel expenses on Schedule C, while farmers will use Schedule F.
  • Purely personal expenses on business trips, such as sightseeing, are nondeductible.

Step 1: Determine Your Trip Meets the Requirements of a Business Trip

A business trip for tax purposes is one that meets the following criteria:

  • There must be a business purposes for the travel
  • You are required to be away from your tax home
  • The trip lasts overnight or a period long enough to require rest
  • The trip is temporary

Business Purpose

Your trip must be an ordinary and necessary part of conducting your business for your expenses to be deductible. Below are some reasons you may decide to travel for business:

  • Meeting with clients or customers: If you travel overnight to meet with clients or customers for business purposes, such as negotiating contracts, discussing projects, or providing consultations.
  • Attending business conferences or seminars: If you travel to attend conferences, seminars, or trade shows that are relevant to your business activities, including acquiring new industry knowledge or networking with other professionals.
  • Training or professional developmen t : If you travel to attend training programs, workshops, or courses directly related to your business or profession.
  • Conducting in-person meetings or negotiations: If you need to travel to have face-to-face meetings or negotiations with business partners, suppliers, or other stakeholders.

Your tax home is not your residence but rather your principal place of business activity including the entire city or general location of your business. So, your business trip cannot be in the general vicinity of your principal place of business for you to be away from home.

  • Amount of time you spend at each location
  • Degree of business activity in each area
  • Relative significance of the financial return from each area
  • No regular place of business: If, by the nature of the work, there is no regular or principal place of business, then your tax home will be the place where you regularly live and where you travel to different job sites to perform your service.

For example, a self-employed repair person may not have a regular place of business because they spend each workday at a different customer’s location.

Overnight Stay

Overnight stays for travel purposes do not specifically mean staying from evening to the next morning. Instead, overnight means that the trip is longer than a typical day’s work and long enough for you to require rest. Resting in your car is generally not enough, but if you have to get a hotel room, then the trip will qualify as overnight regardless of when you sleep.

Transportation vs travel expenses: Local transportation at your tax home can be deductible without an overnight stay—if there is a business reason for the transportation, such as driving from your office to visit a client. On a tangent, when you travel overnight, your transportation is deductible, and so are things like lodging, meals, and incidental expenses.

Temporary Travel

For purposes of business travel, a temporary stay is one that is expected to last for less than one year. Open-ended trips are not temporary.

However, say you initially anticipate that your trip will last less than one year, but it later becomes apparent that it will last more than one year. The trip is a deductible business trip up until the point in time it becomes apparent it will last more than one year.

The IRS will also consider a series of assignments to the same location, all for short periods, that together cover a long period to be an indefinite assignment. Any expenses you incur from this type of trip will not be deductible.

Step 2: Check the List of Business Expenses That Qualify for Deductions

Your travel expenses must be business-related—unless an exception applies—to qualify for a deduction. However, if you incur expenses that are purely for personal pleasure, they are nondeductible.

Here is a list of business travel expenses that can be deducted.

Round-trip Transportation To-and-From the Destination

Transportation for a round trip to and from your temporary work location is deductible—and it could be anything that gets you to the location, including via your personal car. If you use your personal car, your costs are calculated using either the actual expenses or the standard mileage rate .

In addition, you can deduct additional round trips to return to home when you are not working.

However, the deduction for the additional round trips is limited to the cost you would have incurred if you stayed at the temporary location. Those costs could include meals and lodging.

  • The business purpose of the meals is your business trip and are thus deductible—even if you eat alone.
  • Meals on days off qualify.
  • Travel to and from meals is deductible—even on your days off.
  • The meals do not have to have a specific business purpose, such as meeting with a client.
  • For longer trips, lodging can include monthly rentals.
  • If you return home on your days off but keep the lodging at your travel location, then the lodging is still deductible if it is ordinary and necessary. For instance, the monthly rent of an apartment at your travel location would be deductible even if you return home on the weekends.

Transportation at the Destination

Once you arrive at your destination, you may need additional transportation to get around town—and these costs are deductible. The only exception would be if you travel to the destination for a purely personal reason like sightseeing on your day off.

Incidentals

Incidental expenses are minor expenditures associated with business travel. You can deduct the actual cost of any one of the following expenses:

  • Shipping of baggage and sample or display material between your regular and temporary work locations
  • Business seminar and registration fees
  • Dry cleaning and laundry
  • Business calls include business communications by fax machine and other communication devices
  • Tips you pay for services related to any of these expenses
  • Parking, tolls, and fees
  • Any other similar ordinary and necessary expenses related to your business travel

Step 3 (For Those Mixing Business & Personal Travel): Allocate Expenses

When trips are both business and personal, the allocation of expenses varies based on the primary purpose of the trip. Determining the primary purpose of your journey requires you to evaluate the time spent on business vs personal activities.

Primarily Business Domestic Trips

If your trip is primarily for business purposes, then the round-trip transportation is 100% deductible and does not need to be allocated to the personal portion of your trip. However, all other expenses, like lodging and meals, must be allocated to personal expenses for days where there was no business reason for staying.

For example, if your seminar ends on Friday and you stay until Sunday, then the lodging and meals for Saturday and Sunday are nondeductible.

Primarily Personal Domestic Trips

If the primary purpose of your trip is personal, then none of the round-trip expenses are deductible. However, you can deduct the business portion of meals, lodging, and local transportation that was incurred for a business purpose.

Let’s say you stay a couple of days after your family vacation to meet with a client. The lodging and meals for those extra days are deductible.

Business Foreign Trips

The allocation of travel expenses on foreign trips is slightly different from the rules above. Round-trip transportation for foreign trips must be allocated to business and personal based on the number of business vs personal days on the trip. This is different from the “all or nothing” rule for the cost of domestic round-trip travel.

If your spouse joins you on a business trip, you usually cannot deduct any of their expenses. However, if your spouse’s trip satisfies a business purpose, then expenses must be otherwise deductible by the spouse.

Generally, for the travel costs of a spouse, dependent, or any other person to be tax-deductible, they must work for the business or be a co-owner.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Are travel expenses tax deductible for business.

Yes, roundtrip travel is 100% tax deductible as long as the primary purpose of the trip is business. Once at your destination, expenses must be allocated between business and personal. However, all meals are deductible as long as the reason for your continued stay is business.

Can I deduct travel expenses for my employees?

Yes, you can generally deduct travel expenses for your employees as long as the expenses are ordinary and necessary, directly related to your business, and properly substantiated.

Is there a limit to the amount of travel expenses I can deduct?

Yes, there are some such as business travel on a cruise ship, where the expense is limited to $2,000 per year. Also, your expenses are limited to the non-lavish or extravagant cost of the trip, so you may want to be careful before booking a 5-star hotel.

Travel expenses are ordinary and necessary expenses you incur while you are temporarily away from home, so these expenses cannot be lavish in nature. To determine if a travel expense is deductible, it must be directly related to your trade or business.

When it comes to travel expenses, having well-organized records makes it much simpler to complete your tax return. Keep track of any records that may be used to substantiate a deduction, such as receipts, canceled checks, and other documentation.

About the Author

Tim Yoder, Ph.D., CPA

Find Timothy On LinkedIn

Tim Yoder, Ph.D., CPA

Tim worked as a tax professional for BKD, LLP before returning to school and receiving his Ph.D. from Penn State. He then taught tax and accounting to undergraduate and graduate students as an assistant professor at both the University of Nebraska-Omaha and Mississippi State University. Tim is a Certified QuickBooks ProAdvisor as well as a CPA with 28 years of experience. He spent two years as the accountant at a commercial roofing company utilizing QuickBooks Desktop to compile financials, job cost, and run payroll. Tim has spent the past 4 years writing and reviewing content for Fit Small Business on accounting software, taxation, and bookkeeping.

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Everything You Need to Know About Claiming a Mileage Tax Deduction

Do you drive for business, charity or medical appointments? Here are the details about claiming mileage on taxes.

work travel tax deduction

About Claiming Mileage Tax Deductions

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While other options may benefit taxpayers more, deducting mileage is often the go-to as it's the easiest to calculate.

Key Takeaways:

  • Mileage deductions can add up to significant savings for taxpayers.
  • Self-employed workers and business owners are eligible for the largest tax-deductible mileage rate.
  • Mileage can be deducted for volunteer work and medical care, but IRS restrictions limit the amount you can claim.
  • The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 eliminated the ability of employees to deduct mileage for unreimbursed job-related travel.
  • Only active-duty military members are eligible to deduct mileage related to moving and only when their move occurs because of new orders.

Claiming a tax deduction for mileage can be a good way to reduce how much you owe Uncle Sam, but not everyone is eligible to write off their driving costs.

In the past, taxpayers had more options to deduct mileage and could claim unreimbursed travel while on the job.

“That’s not deductible anymore,” says Michelle Brown, managing director in the Kansas City, Missouri, office of accounting firm CBIZ.

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 eliminated itemized deductions for unreimbursed mileage and also significantly narrowed the mileage tax deduction for moving expenses. The latter can now only be claimed by active-duty military members who are relocating because of new orders.

Still, a mileage deduction exists for the following situations:

  • Business mileage for the self-employed.
  • Mileage related to medical appointments.
  • Mileage incurred while volunteering for a nonprofit.

You need to know the rules for claiming mileage on your taxes and, more importantly, you need to keep careful records. Here's a breakdown of everything you need to know about how to claim mileage on your taxes.

Current Tax Deductible Mileage Rates

How much you can deduct for mileage depends on the type of driving you did. Business mileage is most common, but you can also deduct mileage accrued for charitable purposes or for receiving medical care.

“Those are itemized deductions,” says Nicole Davis, a CPA and member of the FreshBooks Accounting Partner Program. “That mileage rate is a lot lower than the business mileage rate.”

For the 2023 tax year, the IRS approved the following standard mileage rates:

  • Self-employed/Business:  65.5 cents per mile.
  • Charity:  14 cents per mile.
  • Medical and Moving:  22 cents per mile.

For the 2024 tax year, standard mileage rates are:

  • Self-employed/Business:  67 cents per mile.
  • Medical and Moving:  21 cents per mile.

Mileage rates for business, medical care and moving are typically adjusted once at the start of each year. However, on rare occasions, the IRS might adjust rates mid-year to account for inflation or other economic factors. This most recently happened in 2022 and 2011. However, the standard mileage rate for charity is set by statute so the IRS can't adjust it.

Self-Employed Workers: What Mileage Is Deductible

When it comes to mileage tax deductions, the self-employed mileage deduction is the largest one available. It can be valuable to anyone with their own business, but especially for those working in the gig economy as delivery drivers, says Duke Alexander Moore, an enrolled agent and the CEO and founder of Duke Tax in Dallas, Texas, which specializes in tax services for content creators and entrepreneurs.

You can also rack up deductible business miles from meeting with clients, traveling to secondary work sites or running errands to pick up supplies. If a person drives for both business and personal purposes, only the miles related to the business are deductible. Business miles are considered only those driven from a person's principal place of business.

“We never want to confuse a commute as business travel,” Moore says.

Driving from home to a principal place of business is considered a commute, even for those who are self-employed or small business owners. Only those who have a home office as their principal place of business can deduct mileage when driving to and from home for business-related purposes.

How to Claim Mileage on Taxes

Self-employed workers can claim their mileage deduction on their Schedule C form, rather than the Schedule A form for itemized deductions. Mileage for self-employed workers isn't subject to any threshold requirements. In other words, all miles are deductible regardless of how much a person drives for work.

Is mileage considered an office expense? No, it doesn’t get lumped in with office expenses on a Schedule C. Instead, mileage can be claimed on line 9 for car and truck expenses.

Alternatively, people can claim their actual vehicle expenses for maintenance, repairs and fuel. Workers who use a vehicle for personal travel as well can deduct only a prorated percentage of expenses based on business use.

Taxpayers may want to calculate which option will result in the higher deduction, but for most, deducting mileage is easier and will result in greater tax savings.

“The standard mileage deduction is the gift that keeps giving,” Davis says.

Regardless of which method you use – standard mileage rates or actual expenses – plan to stick with it for the duration of the time you own a vehicle. Switching from mileage to actual costs could be difficult since you may need to factor in calculations for depreciation.

The IRS states that taxpayers who want to use standard mileage for their deductions must do so in the first year the vehicle is available for business use. Meanwhile, those who operate a fleet of vehicles – five or more – can deduct only actual expenses.

Itemize Your Deductions to Claim Medical and Charitable Mileage

Self-employed people aren't the only ones who can take advantage of mileage tax deductions, but everyone else will need to file a Schedule A form and itemize their deductions if they want to get in on the tax savings. Those who itemize may be able to deduct mileage for medical care and charity work.

But be aware that these deductions are not nearly as lucrative as those for self-employed workers. That’s because the reimbursement rates for medical and charitable mileage are considerably lower than what's offered for business travel. What’s more, there are thresholds and other limits on these deductions.

“Typically, you won’t see most people taking advantage of these,” Moore says.

Mileage accrued when driving to and from doctor visits, the pharmacy and the hospital can all count toward a medical deduction . But there's a catch: Only medical expenses – both mileage and other bills combined – in excess of 7.5% of your adjusted gross income can be deducted.

While it can be difficult to exceed the income threshold, if you had significant medical bills last year, it can be worthwhile to add up your annual mileage for doctor visits to boost your deduction amount.

If you drive to volunteer at your favorite nonprofit, that mileage is deductible as part of your charitable donations. The IRS allows volunteers to claim 14 cents per mile, but you have to be doing the volunteering yourself. You can't, for example, be driving a child to a volunteer activity. There is no threshold requirement for claiming these miles.

“In order to take advantage (of these deductions), you need to be itemizing,” Brown says.

With the standard deduction for married couples filing jointly set at $27,700 in 2023, Brown says few people are able to claim charity and medical mileage deductions because they get a greater benefit from taking the standard deduction than they do from itemizing.

The IRS Will Want to See Your Records

While deducting mileage can save tax dollars, think twice before claiming travel time you can't document. If you're audited , the IRS will want to see a log that includes dates, destinations and the reasons for travel. These travel logs should record exact mileage amounts.

“It’s something called substantiation,” Moore says. What’s more, the log is supposed to be updated throughout the year as a person drives.

“It could be handwritten; it could be an Excel spreadsheet; it could be an app,” Brown says.

MileIQ, TripLog and Everlance are a few of the apps available that automatically detect travel and log every trip. Users can then categorize their drives by purpose and run reports to document deductions. If you didn't track your travel in real time, Davis suggests looking back at your calendar to create a log before you claiming the deduction on your tax return.

During an audit, taxpayers will need to provide evidence of when they traveled and why. You may be able to piece that together based on bank records of purchases, calendar events and even your phone’s GPS tools.

Still, there is no guarantee the IRS will accept documentation compiled after the fact. It's better to keep a log right from the start rather than risk a deduction being disallowed during an audit.

What Happens During an IRS Tax Audit

Kimberly Lankford March 14, 2023

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  • Tax Planning

What Are Travel Expenses for Tax Purposes?

How travel expenses work, how to calculate and file travel expenses, what tax-deductible travel costs mean for individuals, frequently asked questions (faqs).

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Travel expenses are certain travel-related business costs that you can deduct for tax purposes.

Key Takeaways

  • Travel expenses are tax-deductible costs associated with traveling for business, away from your main workplace.
  • Travel expenses eligible for tax deduction need to be “ordinary and necessary” and have a business purpose
  • You generally can’t deduct costs such as those incurred for a personal vacation.
  • Only businesses, including self-employed individuals, can typically deduct travel expenses.

When filing taxes, your travel expenses are the costs associated with travel that a business can generally deduct. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) defines these costs as “ordinary and necessary expenses of traveling away from home for your business, profession, or job.”

For example, a business owner might drive to a client’s office a few hours away and stay at a hotel overnight before driving home the next day. In that case, the business owner can often deduct travel expenses such as gas (or they might use the standard mileage rate rather than adding up actual car expenses ) and lodging.

However, not all travel costs are tax-deductible travel expenses. For one, traveling to and from your home to your main office wouldn’t count as travel, because that would just be commuting, which isn’t deductible. Also, tax-deductible travel expenses can’t be “lavish or extravagant,” per the IRS.

While these terms can be somewhat subjective, it helps to refer back to the “ordinary and necessary” guidelines. If your business is centered around blogging about luxury resorts, then perhaps staying at some higher-end hotels could be considered an ordinary part of doing your job. Yet, if you’re a self-employed graphic designer and you travel to another city to see a client, it might not be considered ordinary to stay at a $1,000-per-night hotel when plenty of other reasonable options exist at around a $200 price point.

In addition to being ordinary and necessary, travel expenses also need to be for business use to be deductible, rather than personal use. So you generally can’t deduct the cost of a family vacation as travel expenses just because you’re a business owner.

Travel expenses are reported by businesses on relevant forms when filing taxes, which can reduce taxable income. For example, a self-employed individual often uses Schedule C to report their business income and business expenses , with travel being a line item within the “Expenses” section.

Adding up travel costs can differ a bit based on the taxpayer’s preferences. For example, when it comes to accounting for travel expenses related to driving, you can use either the standard mileage rate (58.5 cents per mile for tax year 2022) or add up actual costs, such as gas, depreciation, insurance, etc. Also keep in mind that someone who has a vehicle that they drive for both business and personal use can only deduct the portion used for business.

Other nuances include the cost of meals while traveling. Generally, only 50% of business meals can be deducted, although certain exceptions apply. However, business owners might decide instead to take the standard meal allowance , which is a daily amount that covers food and incidental expenses, with the exact amount depending on where the travel takes place.

By taking generalized deductions such as the standard meal allowance when counting up travel expenses, a business owner doesn’t necessarily need to save receipts from every food purchase while on the road.

You still need to keep records to prove the business travel took place. Otherwise, if your business gets audited and has insufficient records to justify travel expenses, you could potentially face penalties.

Understanding travel expenses can be helpful for individuals who have their own businesses, including those who freelance or do gig work, thus filling out tax forms such as Schedule C . By accounting for these costs, you can reduce your taxable income, meaning you pay less in taxes than you would if you didn’t deduct these expenses. Consulting with a tax professional or other relevant expert could help you fully and accurately take advantage of these tax-saving opportunities.

However, individuals who do not have business income, such as those who are W-2 employees, generally can’t take any travel expenses on their personal returns. So, even if your employer doesn’t pay you back for business travel, you typically can’t deduct these expenses.

Which business travel expenses are tax deductible?

Expenses incurred when you travel away from your home for your job may be tax deductible. These expenses include costs of travel by airplane, train, bus or car. Transportation fare between hotel and work on the trip and cost of baggage. Eligible expenses may also include lodging, meals, drying cleaning, laundry, cost of business communication and any tips paid out while on the business trip.

What percentage of business travel expenses are tax deductible?

You can deduct 100% of your business travel expenses if they meet certain criteria. The expenses should be "ordinary and necessary" expenses incurred while traveling away form home for your job and must not be "lavish or extravagant." You cannot deduct expenses incurred in your commute to work as travel expenses. If you drive a car for both personal and business trips, only the business part of the usage is deductible. You may also be able to deduct up to 50% of your meals while traveling as business expense.

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Deductions For Business Travel Expenses

If you travel away from home overnight on business, you can deduct these travel expenses:

  • Airline, train, or bus fares — This includes first-class.
  • Actual expenses or standard mileage rate
  • Business-related tolls and parking

You might rent a car while you’re away from home on business. If you do, you can deduct only the business-use portion of the expenses. To learn more, see the Car and Truck Expenses tax tip.

  • To and from the airport or station
  • From one customer to another
  • From one place of business to another
  • Transportation from your temporary lodging to your temporary work assignment
  • Baggage charges and transportation costs for sample and display materials
  • Your own meal
  • Another person’s meal

To learn more, see the Meals and Entertainment tax tip.

  • Dry cleaning and laundry expenses
  • Phone, fax, and Internet expenses
  • Tips relating to deductible travel expenses
  • Other expenses, like public stenographer’s fees or computer rental fees

You can’t deduct expenses if they’re lavish or extravagant.

If your trip is mainly for business but includes some personal activities, you can deduct these expenses:

  • Travel expenses to and from the business destination
  • Food and lodging during the business portion of the stay

However, if the trip is mainly for personal reasons, you can’t deduct those expenses. This is true even if you conduct some business at the destination. You can deduct business expenses you incur at the destination, regardless of the purpose of the trip.

If you attend a convention that benefits or advances your business, you can also deduct appropriate expenses. These include:

  • Round-trip travel
  • Meals and lodging
  • Display costs

Travel outside the United States

You can deduct the cost of travel outside the United States if your entire trip is devoted to business activities. You could take a trip mainly for business, but engage in some personal activities there. If so, you have to prorate travel costs between your business and personal activities. Prorated costs include meals and lodging en route.

You can’t deduct expenses for travel as a form of education. Ex: If you’re a professor of Asian history, you can’t deduct the cost of a tour of Japan, even though the trip will enhance your lectures.

Special rules apply for conventions held outside the North American area and on cruise ships.

To learn more, see Publication 463: Travel, Entertainment, Gift, and Car Expenses at www.irs.gov.

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Can You Deduct Your Vacation From Your Taxes? Experts Weigh In

Know what’s deductible and what’s not when it comes to submitting travel expenses on your taxes..

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If there’s a certain amount of work involved, you may be able to claim travel costs on your taxes.

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People are traveling like crazy these days. The Sunday after Thanksgiving 2023 was the biggest single travel day in U.S. aviation history, with TSA screening more than 2.9 million passengers on November 26.

If you’re one of those travelers racking up frequent flier miles as quickly as you can fasten your seat belt, you may be looking for ways to recoup some of the cost. Can you legally write off your trip? If you’re self-employed (for example, if you’re an entrepreneur, freelancer, or consultant, or have an online business) and you did some work while on the road, there’s a good chance you can.

Here’s what it takes to get two thumbs up from the IRS.

Pass these four tests

For starters, your trip must have a business purpose, meaning it must include activities such as client meetings, attending a conference, being a guest speaker at a conference, doing research and development for the business, or holding a board meeting or annual shareholders’ meeting. The activity should have the potential to generate revenue.

“Don’t think you can take a personal trip, talk business for an hour and then try and deduct the whole amount of your trip. The intent of the trip needs to be business,” says Caitlynn Eldridge, founder and CEO of Eldridge CPA .

The second and third requirements deem that the trip must be both “ordinary and necessary,” according to IRS guidelines on business travel expenses . “An ordinary expense means it’s typical in your business, both [in terms of] amount [as well as in] frequency and purpose. Necessary means it actually helps you increase your profits or expand your business,” explains Tom Wheelwright, a certified public accountant and author of the book Tax-Free Wealth (BZK Press, 2018).

Lastly, every expense must be properly documented. To get a deduction for travel, Wheelwright said that you must spend more than half your time during the business day doing business and have everything documented. “So, if you spend four and a half hours a day doing business, it becomes deductible. You also must have documentation, which includes receipts, of what you did, and a log of your expenses,” says Wheelwright.

On receipts, write the name of the client who you had the meal with for further proof. “Save the emailed confirmation and receipt from the hotel reservation or conference ticket payment that show the dates, times, and name of the events as well as the receipts from the travel it took to get there and back [such as for gas or flights],” says Ben Watson, founder of Fiscal Fluency , a personal finance and business coaching company.

Note that for 2024, the IRS mileage reimbursement rate is 67 cents for employees or a self-employed individual traveling for work, up from 65.5 cents in 2023.

Know, too, that you must be away from home overnight—the IRS requires an overnight stay for the trip to qualify as business travel, Wheelwright says.

Domestic travel versus travel abroad

There’s a big difference between how you calculate deductions if the work trip was taken in the United States versus abroad. According to Wheelwright, “It’s an all-or-nothing test in the U.S., so either you spent more than 50 percent of your time on business, and it’s all deductible, or you spent 50 percent or less and none of it’s deductible.”

For international business travel, the deductions work differently. He explained that when you travel to another country, the deduction is proportionate. “For example, if you spent 40 percent of your time doing business in Italy, then 40 percent is deductible,” says Wheelwright.

Stick to the rules

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If you normally stay in more modest hotels, trying to deduct a luxe property stay could raise red flags.

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It has to be a legitimate business trip. “You can’t simply do some work while on the beach and call it a business trip,” says Watson. But if you make it a “bleisure trip” by adding a couple days at the beach onto your preplanned business trip to the coast, you could still write off at least some of your lodging fees, he explained. If you do extend your trip for vacation, you can only deduct the expenses that were directly related to work and took place on the days that you conducted business. If you are traveling to multiple cities, keep in mind that each must have a business purpose.

You do have to work. If you are at a conference, make sure you fully participate, which means not just attending one or two sessions. If you only attend a small number of the business-related events, the entire purpose of the trip would be considered a personal trip with “incidental” business activities, Watson points out. Remember you need a log of what you did, and if it’s thin on details, it could prove problematic. “You don’t want to lose the ability to deduct transportation, lodging, meals, and other expenses,” says Watson.

If it’s a business trip of your own making, be sure it includes meetings with clients or participating in some work-related activity. “To demonstrate evidence of these events, it’s wise to put calendar appointments down in your phone in advance and hold onto receipts when the time comes to file your tax return and claim your deductions. Remember, the primary purpose of this trip is [supposed to be] for work,” says Riley Adams, a CPA and CEO and founder of WealthUp , a financial literacy website.

Don’t try to bend what “ordinary and necessary” means. “If you have the ability to accomplish the same business tasks while staying at a modest hotel as you would at the Four Seasons, you’ll have a hard time justifying the extra cost if you’re ever audited,” Watson cautions.

Stay at a place that is similar to places you normally stay on a business trip, so your expenses are considered “ordinary.” Wheelwright explains that if you usually stay at five-star hotels for your business trips, then the Four Seasons would fall into the same category. However, if you usually stay at hotels like the Comfort Inn, and suddenly switch to a luxury hotel, the high-end venue could raise red flags with the IRS. He says that it doesn’t matter whether you stay at a hotel or a vacation rental, the quality level and price tag should be similar to what is typical for your business trips.

When traveling with non–business companions, such as a spouse or family members, you may only deduct the cost of the lodging you would have paid if you were traveling alone—for example, if a single room costs $150 per night, and you paid $200 for a double room, you could only deduct at the $150 rate.

What can you deduct?

One woman in dress and two men in suits at dining table with salads, bread, and wine

You can deduct 50 percent of the cost of business meals.

Photo by Rawpixel.com/Shutterstock

Personal meals are not deductible, but half the cost of food expenses related to business can be deducted. Expenses for your family’s meals and entertainment cannot be deducted unless they are actively engaged in the business and you can show that their expense is both ordinary and necessary.

Travel expenses are only deductible on the days in which the work-related event occurs. “For example, a taxi ride to the meeting, train to a conference, or plane ride to the event [are deductible],” says Adams. “Lodging, much like travel expenses, is deductible on the days in which business is set to occur.”

Understand too, that if you’re provided with a plane ticket paid for by your company, or you’re riding free because you’re redeeming frequent flier miles, your cost is zero, so you can’t deduct it.

But there are a couple of things you may not be aware of. For example, if you have to ship your baggage, you can deduct that cost; you also can deduct for tips for services, such as a tip to the waiter during a meal with a client.

Be strategic

It’s best to put your “vacation” days in the middle of the business days, advises CPA Greg O’Brien. “For example, if [a] business owner took a seven-day trip to Florida and spent five days meeting with clients or prospects and two days relaxing on the beach, this would still qualify as a deductible business trip. The trick is to stick the ‘vacation’ days in the middle of the business days,” he says.

By placing the vacation days in the middle, the travel days to and from are still considered business related, rather than personal.

Watson offers another tip: “Laundry, dry-cleaning and shoe-shine expenses are perfectly acceptable expenses if incurred shortly after returning home.”

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IRS Tax Tip 2023-76, June 6, 2023

Many people travel for their job — some for an occasional conference and some travel year-round. Whatever their time on the road, business travelers should know how and when to deduct business travel expenses .

What to know about tax deductions for business travel

Business travel deductions are available for certain people who travel away from their home or main place of work for business reasons. A taxpayer is traveling away from home if they are away for longer than an ordinary day's work and they need to sleep in a location other than their home to meet the demands of their work while away.

Travel expenses must be ordinary and necessary. They can't be lavish, extravagant or for personal purposes.

Employers can deduct travel expenses paid or incurred during a temporary work assignment if the assignment is less than one year.

Travel expenses for conventions are deductible if attending them benefits the business. There are special rules for conventions held outside of North America.

Deductible travel expenses include:

  • Travel by plane, train, bus or car between home and a business destination
  • Fares for taxis or other types of transportation between an airport or train station and a hotel, or from a hotel to a work location
  • Shipping of baggage and sample or display material between regular and temporary work locations
  • Using a personally owned car for business
  • Lodging and meals
  • Dry cleaning and laundry
  • Business calls and communication
  • Tips paid for services related to any of these expenses
  • Other similar ordinary and necessary expenses related to the business travel

Taxpayers can find more about the rules for travel deductions with   Publication 463, Travel, Gift, and Car Expenses.  

Self-employed individuals or farmers with travel deductions

  • Self-employed people can deduct travel expenses on  Schedule C (Form 1040), Profit or Loss From Business (Sole Proprietorship) .
  • Farmers can deduct travel expenses on  Schedule F (Form 1040), Profit or Loss From Farming .

Travel deductions for Armed Forces reservists

Members of a reserve component of the Armed Forces of the United States can claim a deduction for unreimbursed travel expenses paid during the performance of their duty. These travel expenses must be for travel more than 100 miles away from their home.

Recordkeeping is important

It's easier to prepare a tax return with organized records . Taxpayers should keep records such as receipts, canceled checks and other documents that support a deduction.

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  6. How to Write Off Your Vacation as a Tax Deduction

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  1. Understanding business travel deductions

    Tax Tip 2023-15, February 7, 2023 — Whether someone travels for work once a year or once a month, figuring out travel expense tax write-offs might seem confusing. The IRS has information to help all business travelers properly claim these valuable deductions.

  2. Topic no. 511, Business travel expenses

    Topic no. 511, Business travel expenses. Travel expenses are the ordinary and necessary expenses of traveling away from home for your business, profession, or job. You can't deduct expenses that are lavish or extravagant, or that are for personal purposes. You're traveling away from home if your duties require you to be away from the general ...

  3. Publication 463 (2023), Travel, Gift, and Car Expenses

    If you satisfy only one factor, you are an itinerant; your tax home is wherever you work and you can't deduct travel expenses. Example 1. You are single and live in Boston in an apartment you rent. You have worked for your employer in Boston for a number of years. ... Limit on the amount of the section 179 deduction. For tax years beginning ...

  4. How to Deduct Business Travel Expenses: Do's, Don'ts, Examples

    To be able to claim all the possible travel deductions, your trip should require you to sleep somewhere that isn't your home. 2. You should be working regular hours. In general, that means eight hours a day of work-related activity. It's fine to take personal time in the evenings, and you can still take weekends off.

  5. 7 Rules You Should Know About Deducting Business Travel Expenses

    The IRS has a specific definition for business travel when it comes to determining whether these expenses are tax deductible. The agency says business travel is travel that takes you away from your tax home and is "substantially longer than an ordinary day's work." It requires that you sleep or rest while you're away from home, and that you do so.

  6. How to Deduct Travel Expenses (with Examples)

    Travel. On a business trip, you can deduct 100% of the cost of travel to your destination, whether that's a plane, train, or bus ticket. If you rent a car to get there, and to get around, that cost is deductible, too. Lodging. The cost of your lodging is tax deductible.

  7. Claiming a tax deduction for business travel expenses

    Expenses you can claim. Your business can claim a deduction for travel expenses related to your business, whether the travel is taken within a day, overnight, or for many nights. Expenses you can claim include: airfares. train, tram, bus, taxi, or ride-sourcing fares. car hire fees and the costs you incur (such as fuel, tolls and car parking ...

  8. Trips you can and can't claim

    You can claim a tax deduction for the cost of transport on trips to: perform your work duties - for example, if you travel from your regular place of work to meet with a client ... He incurs the expenses to put him in the position to start work. His travel costs to stay in Sydney, such as accommodation and meals, are also private because Aldo ...

  9. PDF THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO DEDUCTING BUSINESS TRAVEL EXPENSES

    Take a vacation, add on some business activities and get a tax-deductible vacation. Of course, it doesn't quite work like that. Can a taxpayer deduct expenses for business travel even if the trip includes personal activities? It depends. It is clear that taxpayers can deduct regular travel expenses when the trip is entirely business related.

  10. Tax Deductions for Business Travelers

    You can deduct business travel expenses when you are away from both your home and the location of your main place of business (tax home). Deductible expenses include transportation, baggage fees, car rentals, taxis and shuttles, lodging, tips, and fees. You can also deduct 50% of either the actual cost of meals or the standard meal allowance ...

  11. Is Your Working Vacation Tax Deductible?

    If your trip is primarily for business reasons and the stay is long enough to require sleep to continue business activities, transportation expenses are generally fully deductible. On the days where you conduct business, you are able to deduct 50% of your business-related food and entertainment costs and fully deduct other ordinary and ...

  12. Can I deduct travel expenses?

    by TurboTax•570• Updated 9 months ago. If you're self-employed or own a business, you can deduct work-related travel expenses, including vehicles, airfare, lodging, and meals. The expenses must be ordinary and necessary. For vehicle expenses, you can choose between the standard mileage rate or the actual cost method where you track what ...

  13. 10 Tax Deductions for Travel Expenses (2023 Tax Year)

    The IRS permits a 50% deduction of meal and hotel expenses for business travelers that are reasonable and not lavish. If no meal expenses are incurred, $5.00 daily can be deducted for incidental expenses. The federal meals and incidental expense per diem rate is what determines the standard meal allowance.

  14. Travel Expenses Definition and Tax Deductible Categories

    For tax purposes, travel expenses are costs associated with traveling to conduct business-related activities. Reasonable travel expenses can generally be deducted from taxable income by a company ...

  15. How to write off travel expenses

    For self-employed travel expenses, you will list travel write-offs on Schedule C Form 1040. Businesses must claim travel expenses on Form 2106 and report them on Form 1040 or Form 1040-SR as an adjustment to their total income. While there's no annual travel deduction limit, the IRS scrutinizes higher write-offs.

  16. Determining Tax Deductions for Travel Expenses + List of Deductions

    The IRS considers deductible travel expenses to be any ordinary and necessary expenses you incur while traveling away from home on business. To get tax deductions for travel expenses, the trip must have a business purpose and be temporary (less than one year) and you must be away from your tax home for a length of time that exceeds your usual work day or be away overnight to get sleep to ...

  17. Everything You Need to Know About Claiming a Mileage Tax Deduction

    For the 2024 tax year, standard mileage rates are: Self-employed/Business: 67 cents per mile. Charity: 14 cents per mile. Medical and Moving: 21 cents per mile. Mileage rates for business, medical ...

  18. Here's what taxpayers need to know about business related travel deductions

    Business travel deductions are available when employees must travel away from their tax home or main place of work for business reasons. The travel period must be substantially longer than an ordinary day's work and a need for sleep or rest to meet the demands the work while away. Travel expenses must be ordinary and necessary. They can't be ...

  19. What Are Travel Expenses for Tax Purposes?

    What Tax-Deductible Travel Costs Mean for Individuals . Understanding travel expenses can be helpful for individuals who have their own businesses, including those who freelance or do gig work, thus filling out tax forms such as Schedule C.By accounting for these costs, you can reduce your taxable income, meaning you pay less in taxes than you would if you didn't deduct these expenses.

  20. When can I deduct travel expenses on my federal tax return?

    A fee-basis state or local government official may deduct some unreimbursed work-related expenses, including travel expenses. A qualifying performing artist may also deduct work-related expenses, including travel. A qualifying performing artist has an Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) of less than $16,000 before deducting expenses and has to have ...

  21. Deductions For Business Travel Expenses

    If you travel away from home overnight on business, you can deduct these travel expenses: Airline, train, or bus fares — This includes first-class. You might rent a car while you're away from home on business. If you do, you can deduct only the business-use portion of the expenses. To learn more, see the Car and Truck Expenses tax tip.

  22. Can You Deduct Your Vacation From Your Taxes? Experts Weigh In

    Note that for 2024, the IRS mileage reimbursement rate is 67 cents for employees or a self-employed individual traveling for work, up from 65.5 cents in 2023. Know, too, that you must be away from home overnight—the IRS requires an overnight stay for the trip to qualify as business travel, Wheelwright says.

  23. Business travelers should check out these deductions before hitting the

    What to know about tax deductions for business travel. Business travel deductions are available for certain people who travel away from their home or main place of work for business reasons. A taxpayer is traveling away from home if they are away for longer than an ordinary day's work and they need to sleep in a location other than their home ...

  24. Here's who qualifies for the home office deduction on this year's taxes

    If you worked remotely in 2023, you may be curious about the home office deduction. Here's who qualifies for the tax break this season, according to experts.

  25. Inland Revenue Board`s Kalkulator PCB

    Purchase of breastfeeding equipment for personal use for children aged 2 years and below (Deduction allowed once every 2 years of assessment) [limited to RM1000 per year] 14) Fees paid to Child Care Centre and Kindergartens [ limited to RM2000 per year ]