2026 tax year · US · Updated May 19, 2026
Gig Earnings Calculator
What do you actually make on Uber, DoorDash, Etsy, or Airbnb after platform fees, mileage, and self-employment tax? Most gig workers have no idea their real hourly rate. Enter your numbers below and find out in seconds.
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Your real 2026 take-home
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Gig worker deductions checklist
Every IRS-approved write-off for Uber, DoorDash, Etsy, Fiverr, and Airbnb workers — on one page. Plus 2026 quarterly due dates and the mileage tracking apps that won't lose your data.
- Platform-by-platform deduction list
- Mileage tracking apps that actually work
- 2026 quarterly tax due dates
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Why your “earnings” aren’t your take-home
Every gig platform shows you a number — DoorDash’s Dasher pay, Uber’s weekly summary, Etsy’s sales total. None of those numbers are what you’ll actually keep. Three things eat into them, in order:
- Platform fees — Etsy, Fiverr, TaskRabbit, and Airbnb take a cut visibly. Uber and DoorDash already took theirs before you saw the number.
- Business expenses — the big one is mileage. The IRS lets you deduct $0.725 per business mile in 2026 (Notice 2026-10, up 2.5 cents from 2025), which is usually more than what gas + maintenance actually cost you, so it lowers your taxable income substantially.
- Self-employment + income tax— what’s left gets hit with 15.3% SE tax (Social Security + Medicare) plus your federal income tax bracket. For most gig workers that’s 12% or 22% on top.
Worked example: DoorDash, 1,250 hours, 20,000 miles
Say you Dashed $25,000 last year, drove 20,000 business miles, and worked 25 hours a week for 50 weeks. You have no W-2 income and you’re single. Here’s what actually happens:
- Mileage deduction: 20,000 × $0.725 = $14,500
- Net self-employment income: $25,000 − $14,500 = $10,500
- SE tax: $10,500 × 0.9235 × 15.3% ≈ $1,484
- Federal income tax: $0 (after the half-SE-tax deduction and $15,750 standard deduction, taxable income is below the threshold)
- True take-home: ~$9,016
- True hourly rate: $9,016 ÷ 1,250 hours = ~$7.21/hr
The gross looked like $20/hr. The truth is closer to minimum wage once you account for the car you’re putting miles on and the taxes you owe.
Track your mileage from day one
The mileage deduction is the biggest single thing standing between a gig worker and a tax bill. If you don’t track miles, you can’t deduct them. Stride, Everlance, and MileIQ all log miles automatically via GPS — set it up once and forget it.
If you only Dash on weekends, only the miles driven during active orders (and from the moment you go online until you go offline, in most cases) qualify as business miles. Commuting from home to your first delivery is generally not deductible.
Pair this with quarterly tax planning
Once you know your real take-home, divide your expected tax bill by four and pay it quarterly to avoid penalties. We have a deeper guide here: How to pay quarterly self-employment tax. You can also see the pure SE tax breakdown with our Self-Employment Tax Calculator.
These are estimates, not tax advice. State income tax is not included. If your situation is unusual (multiple businesses, W-2 plus 1099, S-Corp election), talk to a CPA.