Gig Tax Guide
Lyft Driver Taxes: The Complete Breakdown
Lyft treats drivers as independent contractors and withholds no taxes, so you're responsible for your own income and self-employment taxes — and you'll likely receive more than one tax form. Here's how to read them and keep your bill as low as legally possible.
How Lyft taxes work
You're an independent contractor
No taxes are withheld from your pay. You owe federal and state income tax plus self-employment tax on your net earnings.
Self-employment tax is 15.3%
That's 12.4% Social Security + 2.9% Medicare on your net earnings — on top of regular income tax. It funds the benefits an employer would normally split with you.
Deductions lower your taxable income
Mileage, phone, and supplies reduce the net earnings you're taxed on. Tracked properly, they often save more than any other single move.
You pay as you go, quarterly
Instead of one April bill, the IRS expects estimated payments four times a year. Paying quarterly avoids an underpayment penalty.
1099-K vs 1099-NEC: which one does Lyft send?
Lyft may issue two forms. A 1099-K reports the gross amount riders paid for your rides (processed through Lyft as a third-party platform). A 1099-NEC reports other income like bonuses, referrals, and incentives.
Form thresholds change from year to year, so you might not receive a 1099-K in a low-volume year. Either way, your Lyft Annual Summary lists your gross earnings, Lyft's fees, and online miles — and you must report all of it regardless of which forms arrive.
What Lyft drivers can deduct
Business mileage
Every mile driven while online or on a delivery, at the IRS standard mileage rate. Usually the single largest deduction.
Phone & data
The business-use percentage of your phone bill — you cannot work without it.
Tolls & parking
Tolls and parking paid while working are fully deductible (commuting tolls are not).
Hot bags & equipment
Insulated bags, phone mounts, chargers, and other gear bought for the work.
Lyft service fees & commissions
Fees Lyft deducts from each fare are a business expense — your Annual Summary breaks them out.
Water, mints & rider amenities
Reasonable amenities you provide for passengers are deductible.
You can deduct the IRS standard mileage rate or your actual vehicle expenses — not both. For most drivers the standard mileage rate is simpler and larger. Keep a contemporaneous mileage log either way.
Frequently asked questions
Does Lyft withhold taxes from my pay?
No. Lyft drivers are independent contractors, so no tax is withheld. You set aside and pay your own income tax plus the 15.3% self-employment tax.
What's the difference between the 1099-K and 1099-NEC from Lyft?
The 1099-K reports the gross fares riders paid for your rides. The 1099-NEC reports non-ride income such as bonuses, referrals, and incentives. Your Lyft Annual Summary reconciles both with your actual take-home.
How much should I set aside for Lyft taxes?
A common rule of thumb is to set aside 25–30% of your net earnings (what's left after mileage and other deductions) to cover self-employment tax (15.3%) plus federal and state income tax. Your exact rate depends on your total household income and state. Use the Tax Set-Aside calculator to get a number for your situation.
What can Lyft drivers deduct?
Business mileage at the IRS standard mileage rate is usually the largest deduction — and because Lyft reports only your online miles, your real deductible mileage (including miles between rides) is often higher. You can also deduct Lyft's service fees, the business-use share of your phone, tolls, parking, and rider amenities.
Do Lyft drivers have to pay quarterly taxes?
If you expect to owe $1,000 or more for the year, the IRS generally expects quarterly estimated payments — around April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15 — to avoid an underpayment penalty.
Authoritative IRS resources
Free calculators for Lyft drivers
Stop guessing what you owe
UnifyOne tracks your rideshare earnings, mileage, and tax set-aside automatically — so quarterly taxes are never a surprise.
This guide is educational information, not tax advice. Tax rules, thresholds, and the IRS standard mileage rate change yearly — confirm current figures with the IRS or a qualified tax professional for your situation.