Australia · Free guide

Tax deductions for rideshare & delivery drivers

As a rideshare or delivery driver you can generally claim the work portion of your car running costs, your phone and data, and app or platform fees.

Driving is a business, and the ATO treats it that way — including a GST twist most new drivers don’t expect. Here’s what to track.

The three rules for any claim

  • You paid for it yourself and weren’t reimbursed.
  • It directly relates to earning your income.
  • You have a record — a receipt, invoice or bank statement.

What you can usually claim

Car expenses

The business-use portion of fuel, servicing, insurance, registration and depreciation — via a logbook (usually the better result for high kilometres) or cents-per-kilometre. Tracking your work vs private split is the whole game here.

Phone, data and accessories

The work-use portion of your phone plan and data, plus mounts, chargers and other accessories used for the driving.

Platform and running costs

Commissions and service fees charged by the platform, cleaning of the vehicle, tolls incurred while working, and water or amenities you provide to passengers.

General information, not personal tax advice. What you can claim depends on your circumstances — check with the ATO or a registered tax agent, and keep records for every claim.

Keep in mind

  • The private portion of your car use.
  • Fines and parking tickets.
  • Normal meals while driving (unless travelling away overnight for work).

Rideshare & delivery drivers — common questions

Do I need to register for GST as a rideshare driver?

Rideshare (ride-sourcing) drivers in Australia generally must register for GST regardless of turnover — the usual $75,000 threshold doesn’t apply to ride-sourcing. Food-delivery-only drivers may be treated differently. Check your situation with the ATO or a tax agent. This is general information, not personal tax advice — what you can claim depends on your circumstances, so check with the ATO or a registered tax agent, and keep records to back up every claim.

Logbook or cents-per-kilometre?

A 12-week logbook captures your real business-use percentage and usually gives a bigger claim if you drive a lot; cents-per-kilometre is simpler for lighter use. You can work out which suits you and switch approaches between years. This is general information, not personal tax advice — what you can claim depends on your circumstances, so check with the ATO or a registered tax agent, and keep records to back up every claim.

Can I claim my phone?

Yes — the work-related portion of your phone and data is generally claimable, based on a reasonable work-use percentage. This is general information, not personal tax advice — what you can claim depends on your circumstances, so check with the ATO or a registered tax agent, and keep records to back up every claim.

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