Tax 101

Claiming vehicle expenses

If you use a vehicle for work, vehicle costs can be one of the most valuable deductions in your return. The key is separating work use from private use, then using the right method and records to support your claim.

Which vehicle costs are generally deductible?

If you use your vehicle for income-earning work, many running costs may be deductible. The amount you can claim depends on your vehicle type and the method you use.

Typical deductible costs include:

  • fuel
  • servicing and repairs
  • road user charges
  • tolls and parking for eligible work trips
  • insurance
  • registration and required inspections
  • decline in value (depreciation), where applicable

 

Non-deductible costs: fines, infringement notices, and towing penalties are not deductible.

Only the work-related portion is claimable. Private trips are not deductible.

A trip may be deductible when it has a clear connection to your income-earning activities.

A key rule: travel between home and your regular workplace is generally private travel and usually not deductible — unless you qualify as operating from a genuine home-based business and the trip itself is work-related.

Work-related use

Vehicle travel may be deductible when you:

  • travel from your normal work location to another work site during the day
  • travel from home to an irregular work location for a specific task (if that location does not become your regular workplace)
  • deliver goods or collect work materials
  • attend work-related meetings, conferences, or events away from your usual location
  • travel between separate job locations, including where you hold multiple roles

Work-related use for genuine home-based businesses

The ATO applies strict criteria before home-to-work trips can be treated as deductible.

You generally need a clearly identifiable business area at home that is not readily used for private purposes. A temporary setup in a shared household area is usually insufficient.

You may qualify as home-based where your workspace is:

  • clearly identifiable as a place of business
  • not readily adaptable for private/domestic use
  • used exclusively or almost exclusively for business
  • used regularly for client visits (where relevant)

 

If these conditions are met, travel from home to other work destinations may be deductible where the trip is work-related.

Examples of potentially deductible trips for eligible home-based businesses:

  • visiting a client to perform work or deliver documents
  • purchasing tools, stock, or business supplies
  • attending the bank for business transactions
  • visiting the post office for business mail
  • attending appointments with your accountant or BAS agent

 

Private errands remain non-deductible.

Which vehicles can be claimed?

All vehicle types can potentially give rise to deductible expenses, but claim rules differ by classification.

The ATO broadly treats vehicles as either:

  • cars, or
  • other vehicles
 
Cars

For tax purposes, a car is generally a vehicle that cannot carry:

  • more than 1 tonne, and
  • more than 8 passengers excluding the driver

 

Motorcycles and similar vehicles are not treated as cars.

You normally need to own or lease the car to claim car expenses. If you use a relative’s vehicle under a private arrangement, running costs may still be claimable using the actual costs approach (subject to eligibility and records).

 
Other vehicles

Examples include:

  • motorcycles
  • scooters and similar vehicles
  • vehicles with payload capacity above 1 tonne (such as larger utes/trucks)
  • vehicles designed for 9 or more occupants including the driver (such as some vans/minibuses)

How to claim car and other vehicle expenses

The method you can use depends on vehicle type.

For cars, you can generally use either:

  1. cents per kilometre method, or
  2. logbook method

 

For other vehicles (or certain non-owned arrangements), you generally use:

    3. actual costs method

If you use cents per kilometre for a car, you cannot separately claim depreciation for that same car expense pool.

1) Cents per kilometre method (car only)

Under this method, you multiply eligible business kilometres by the ATO rate for the relevant year.

For 2024/25 and 2025/26, the referenced rate is $0.88 per kilometre, capped at 5,000 business kilometres per car (maximum $4,400).

Key points:

  • the rate is designed to cover car running costs
  • you cannot add separate car running claims on top (including fuel and depreciation)
  • a full logbook is not required
  • you should still keep evidence of ownership/use and how business kilometres were calculated (for example, diary-style records)

 

The ATO may ask how you arrived at your business kilometre figure.

2) Logbook method (car only)

This method uses a representative logbook period to determine your business-use percentage, then applies that percentage to eligible car expenses.

Your logbook should:

  • cover at least 12 consecutive weeks
  • reflect typical use for the year
  • include trip purpose and destination
  • include odometer readings at the start and end of each trip
  • include total kilometres travelled in the period
  • include odometer readings at the start and end of the logbook period

 

After the logbook period, calculate:

  1. total kilometres travelled
  2. business kilometres travelled
  3. business-use percentage = (business kilometres ÷ total kilometres) × 100
  4. total eligible vehicle costs for the claim period
  5. claimable amount = business-use percentage of eligible costs

 

Even if you believe business use is 100%, records are still needed to support the claim.

You should also retain:

  • fuel/oil receipts (or a reasonable estimate supported by odometer records)
  • receipts for registration, insurance, lease costs, servicing, tyres, repairs, and interest (where relevant)
  • purchase details and depreciation working papers

3) Actual costs method (all other vehicles)

If your vehicle is not classified as a car, or the car methods do not apply, claims are generally made under the actual costs method.

You generally need to:

  • calculate actual expenses for work-related travel
  • claim them as work-related travel expenses in your return (not as work-related car expenses)

 

While a formal logbook may not be mandatory here, logbook-style records are strongly recommended to support business-use percentages and calculations.

How to claim the cost of buying your vehicle

If you are using cents per kilometre for car claims, you cannot also claim the vehicle purchase separately through that same method.

Vehicle purchase cost is generally claimed via one of two pathways:

  • instant asset write-off (where eligible), or
  • depreciation over time

 

As with running costs, only the work-related use percentage is claimable, supported by records (including logbook evidence where relevant).

 

Instant asset write-off

Where eligibility criteria are met, eligible assets below the relevant threshold can be immediately deducted to the extent of business use.

Based on the source settings you provided:

  • purchase window referenced: 1 July 2024 to 30 June 2025
  • threshold referenced for 2025/26 context: $20,000

 

If eligible, you can generally claim the business-use percentage of the cost in that year.

 

Car depreciation cap

For 2025/26, the referenced car cost limit for depreciation purposes is $69,674 (car-specific context).

Because these rules are technical and change over time, it is sensible to get tailored tax advice before lodging.

General information only

Tax outcomes depend on personal circumstances. For advice tailored to your situation, speak with a registered tax professional and confirm current rules with the ATO.

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