If you own a business in Nevada and spend time driving to meet clients, visit job sites, attend networking events, or travel between business locations, the IRS mileage rate increase for 2026 is good news.

The IRS recently announced that the standard mileage rate for business use has increased to 72.5 cents per mile for 2026, up from 70 cents per mile in 2025. While a 2.5-cent increase may not sound significant, the additional deduction can add up quickly over the course of a year.

For many Las Vegas, Henderson, and Reno business owners, driving is simply part of doing business. Contractors travel between job sites, real estate professionals spend their days showing properties, consultants meet clients throughout the valley, and service businesses often spend hours on the road every week. Every qualifying business mile driven in 2026 is now worth a larger deduction than it was last year.

Let’s look at a simple example. If your business drives 15,000 qualifying business miles during 2026, the standard mileage deduction would be $10,875. Under the 2025 rate, that same mileage would have produced a deduction of $10,500. That’s an additional $375 deduction without driving a single extra mile. For businesses that routinely travel throughout Southern Nevada, those savings can become meaningful.

One of the biggest misconceptions I encounter is what actually qualifies as business mileage. Driving from your home to your regular office is generally considered commuting and is not deductible. However, driving from your office to a client meeting, traveling between job sites, visiting suppliers, attending business events, or traveling to temporary work locations may qualify as deductible business mileage.

Another common mistake is failing to keep adequate records. Many business owners attempt to estimate their mileage at tax time, but the IRS expects documentation that supports the deduction. Maintaining a mileage log that includes the date, destination, business purpose, and miles driven can help protect your deduction if questions ever arise. Fortunately, there are numerous mobile apps available today that make mileage tracking much easier than it used to be.

The IRS also allows taxpayers to choose between the standard mileage method and the actual expense method in many situations. The actual expense method allows you to deduct a percentage of your vehicle expenses, including fuel, insurance, repairs, maintenance, registration fees, and depreciation. Depending on the vehicle and how it is used, one method may produce a larger deduction than the other.

What many business owners don’t realize is that choosing a vehicle deduction method can have long-term consequences. The decision should be evaluated carefully because certain depreciation methods and elections can affect your ability to use the standard mileage rate in future years. That’s why it is important to review your options before simply assuming one method is better than the other.

The increase in the 2026 mileage rate reflects the continuing costs associated with operating a vehicle, including fuel, insurance, maintenance, repairs, and depreciation. The IRS reviews these expenses annually and adjusts the rate accordingly. The new rate applies to gasoline, diesel, hybrid, and fully electric vehicles.

For Nevada business owners, vehicle deductions often represent one of the most valuable tax-saving opportunities available. The key is understanding the rules, keeping accurate records, and choosing the deduction method that provides the greatest benefit for your specific situation.

At TaxPointe, we help Nevada business owners identify legitimate deductions, improve recordkeeping, and develop tax strategies designed to minimize tax liability while remaining fully compliant with IRS requirements. If you’re unsure whether you’re maximizing your vehicle deductions, now is a great time to review your tax strategy before more miles accumulate.