Is the IRS rate right for every driver?
Compare your reimbursement program against mileage, regional costs, and tax impact.
Get BenchmarkWhat is the 2026 IRS business mileage rate?
The 2026 IRS business mileage rate is 72.5 cents per mile. The rate applies to qualified business use of a car, van, pickup, or panel truck and is commonly used by employers to calculate mileage reimbursement.
The IRS standard mileage rate gives employers a simple national benchmark for reimbursing business mileage. It can also be used by eligible self-employed taxpayers to calculate deductible business vehicle expenses.
| Use case | 2026 IRS rate | Change from 2025 | Employer takeaway |
|---|---|---|---|
| Business | 72.5¢/mile | +2.5¢ | Higher reimbursement cost if paying the IRS rate |
| Medical | 20.5¢/mile | -0.5¢ | Separate from business reimbursement |
| Qualified moving | 20.5¢/mile | -0.5¢ | Limited to specific eligible groups |
| Charitable | 14¢/mile | No change | Set separately by statute |
When does the 2026 IRS mileage rate take effect?
The 2026 IRS mileage rate takes effect on January 1, 2026. Employers using the federal mileage rate should update reimbursement calculations, payroll documentation, reimbursement policies, and mileage tracking workflows before the first reimbursement cycle that includes 2026 business miles.
Policy reminder: If your company reimburses monthly, make sure December 2025 and January 2026 mileage are calculated with the correct rate for each period.
What does the 2026 rate increase mean for employers?
The business mileage rate increased by 2.5 cents per mile from 2025. That may look small, but it adds up quickly for companies with high-mileage drivers.
Example cost impact
A company reimbursing 500,000 business miles per year would spend an additional $12,500 because of the 2.5-cent increase.
$72.50
100 business miles
$725
1,000 business miles
$7,250
10,000 business miles
$29,000
40,000 business miles
How do you calculate 2026 mileage reimbursement?
To calculate reimbursement at the 2026 IRS business mileage rate, multiply qualified business miles by $0.725.
| 2026 business miles | Formula | Reimbursement amount |
|---|---|---|
| 100 miles | 100 × $0.725 | $72.50 |
| 500 miles | 500 × $0.725 | $362.50 |
| 1,000 miles | 1,000 × $0.725 | $725.00 |
| 10,000 miles | 10,000 × $0.725 | $7,250.00 |
| 20,000 miles | 20,000 × $0.725 | $14,500.00 |
| 40,000 miles | 40,000 × $0.725 | $29,000.00 |
IRS business mileage rate history
The IRS business mileage rate has risen steadily since 2021 as vehicle ownership and operating costs have increased. The business rate is based on an annual study of fixed and variable vehicle costs, including fuel, insurance, depreciation, maintenance, and repairs.
| Year | Business mileage rate | Design note |
|---|---|---|
| 2026 | 72.5¢/mile | Highlight as current rate |
| 2025 | 70¢/mile | Show the 2.5¢ increase |
| 2024 | 67¢/mile | Use as historical comparison |
| 2023 | 65.5¢/mile | Shows multi-year trend |
| 2022 July-Dec. | 62.5¢/mile | Mid-year increase year |
| 2022 Jan.-June | 58.5¢/mile | Split rate year |
| 2021 | 56¢/mile | Baseline for increase |
Is the IRS rate increasing your reimbursement spend?
mBurse can help you compare the IRS mileage rate against actual driver mileage, regional vehicle costs, tax impact, and reimbursement alternatives.
Get Your Benchmarking ReportBenchmark what matters
Business mileage volume
Regional fuel and vehicle costs
Tax-free reimbursement options
Overpayment and underpayment risk
Can W-2 employees deduct mileage in 2026?
Most W-2 employees cannot deduct unreimbursed business mileage on their federal tax return. This makes employer reimbursement policy more important because employees generally cannot rely on a personal tax deduction to recover unreimbursed business driving costs.
Unreimbursed employee mileage
Most W-2 employees cannot deduct unreimbursed business mileage. If the company does not reimburse fairly, high-mileage employees may absorb business costs out of pocket.
Accountable reimbursement
Employers can reimburse documented business mileage tax-free when the reimbursement follows accountable plan rules and is supported by accurate mileage records.
When are mileage reimbursements tax-free?
Mileage reimbursements are generally not taxable to employees when they are paid under an accountable plan. The reimbursement should have a business connection, be substantiated with accurate mileage records, and require employees to return any excess amount when applicable.
Business connection
The mileage must be tied to work-related travel, not ordinary commuting or personal driving.
Substantiation
MThe employee should provide mileage records with dates, locations, business purpose, and miles driven.
Excess return
Amounts paid above substantiated expenses should be returned or treated as taxable wages.
IRS mileage rate vs. FAVR: which is better?
The IRS mileage rate is simple, but it is a national average. It does not automatically adjust for each employee’s location, mileage band, vehicle cost, insurance rate, or operating conditions. FAVR can be more precise because it separates fixed ownership costs from variable driving costs.
| Program | How it works | Strength | Potential drawback |
|---|---|---|---|
| IRS mileage rate | Pays one cents-per-mile rate | Simple and familiar | May overpay low-cost/low-mileage drivers and underpay others |
| FAVR | Separates fixed and variable costs | More precise, often tax-free when compliant | Requires more program design and administration |
| Car allowance | Pays a flat monthly amount | Easy for payroll | Usually taxable and often disconnected from actual business use |
Best design opportunity: Use this section to visually move readers from “What is the rate?” to “Is the rate right for our workforce?” That is the conversion bridge.
The importance of accurate mileage tracking
An accurate mileage log is essential for substantiating business mileage and supporting tax-free reimbursement. A defensible log should document the date of each trip, the business purpose, the starting and ending locations, and the total business miles driven.
Trip date
Business purpose
Starting location
Ending location
Total business miles
Approval and audit trail
mBurse mileage tracking can help automate trip capture, streamline approvals, reduce manual errors, and support reimbursement documentation.
Find out if the IRS rate is right for your drivers.
Compare your current reimbursement program against mileage, tax impact, regional costs, and policy design to identify overpayment, underpayment, and tax waste.
Get Your Benchmarking ReportWhat the report can show
Where the IRS rate may overpay or underpay
How reimbursement costs change in 2026
Whether FAVR or another plan may fit better
No pressure. No unnecessary follow-up. Just practical reimbursement insight.
FAQ
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What is the 2026 IRS business mileage rate?
The 2026 IRS business mileage rate is 72.5 cents per mile. -
When does the 2026 IRS mileage rate take effect?
The 2026 IRS mileage rate applies beginning January 1, 2026.
-
How do you calculate mileage reimbursement for 2026?
Multiply qualified business miles by $0.725. For example, 1,000 miles × $0.725 equals $725. -
Are mileage reimbursements taxable?
Mileage reimbursements are generally not taxable when paid under an accountable plan and supported by accurate mileage documentation. -
Can W-2 employees deduct mileage in 2026?
Most W-2 employees cannot deduct unreimbursed employee mileage on their federal tax return, though narrow exceptions may apply. -
When is FAVR better than the IRS mileage rate?
FAVR may be better for employers with high-mileage drivers, employees in different regions, or teams with different vehicle expense profiles.