
How to Deduct Travel Expenses for Your Rental Properties
Driving to your rental property? Flying to check on an out-of-state investment? Learn the IRS rules for deducting travel expenses, what constitutes 'travel', and how to keep impeccable records to support your claims and maximize your tax savings.
For real estate investors, travel is often a necessary part of doing business. Whether you're driving across town to unclog a drain, meeting a contractor, or flying to another state to inspect a new property, these travel costs can add up. The good news? Nearly all of them are tax-deductible, if you follow the IRS rules.
This guide will break down exactly how you can legally and effectively deduct travel expenses for your rental property business, separating common local travel from long-distance trips.
The "Ordinary and Necessary" Test
Before you deduct anything, your expense must meet the two golden rules for all business deductions. The IRS states that to be deductible, an expense must be both:
- Ordinary: Common and accepted in your trade or business. (Yes, traveling to your rental is ordinary).
- Necessary: Helpful and appropriate for your business. (Yes, inspecting your property is necessary).
Rental property travel clearly passes this test. The real challenge isn't if you can deduct it, but how and how much.
Local Travel vs. Long-Distance Travel: Two Sets of Rules
The IRS splits travel into two main categories, and the rules for them are different.
1. Local Transportation (Your Car)
This covers all your driving in your local "tax home"—the city or general area where your main business is located. This includes trips to:
- Your rental property for inspections, repairs, or maintenance.
- The bank to deposit rent checks.
- The hardware store (like Home Depot or Lowe's) for supplies.
- Meet with tenants, lawyers, accountants, or property managers.
You have two methods to choose from for deducting local car expenses. You must choose one and stick with it for the entire year for that specific vehicle.
Method 1: The Standard Mileage Rate (The Simple Way)
This is the easiest and most popular method. The IRS sets a specific rate per mile driven for business purposes. For 2025, let's hypothetically say the rate is 69 cents per mile (Note: this rate changes, so always check the current year's rate).
- Calculation:
Business Miles Driven x IRS Rate = Your Deduction - Example: You drive 1,500 miles for your rental business in 2025.
1,500 miles * $0.69/mile = $1,035 deduction - What it includes: This rate is designed to cover all the costs of operating your car, including gas, oil changes, insurance, repairs, and depreciation. You cannot deduct these items and take the mileage rate.
- What it doesn't include: You can still deduct parking fees and tolls on top of the mileage rate.
Method 2: The Actual Expense Method (The Detailed Way)
With this method, you track and deduct the actual costs of operating your car for the portion of time you used it for business.
This includes:
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Gas and oil
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Insurance
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Repairs and maintenance
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Vehicle registration fees
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Lease payments (if you lease)
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Depreciation (if you own)
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Calculation: You must track your total miles driven for the year and your business miles.
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Example: You drove 15,000 total miles, and 1,500 of those were for your rental (10% business use). Your total car expenses for the year were $8,000 (gas, insurance, repairs).
$8,000 in actual expenses * 10% business use = $800 deduction -
Note: This method is often more work but can yield a larger deduction if you have a new car with high depreciation or an older car with high repair costs.
2. Long-Distance Travel (Overnight Trips)
This is travel away from your tax home that is long enough to require you to stop for sleep or rest to properly perform your duties. This is where you deduct flights, hotels, and meals.
This applies when you:
- Fly to another state to inspect your property.
- Drive to a real estate conference in another city.
- Go on a "house-hacking" trip to find a new investment.
The "Primary Purpose" Test: The Most Critical Rule
For long-distance travel, your deductions hinge on one question: What was the primary purpose of the trip?
- If the Primary Purpose is Business: Your transportation costs (flights, train tickets, car rental) are 100% deductible. Your lodging and 50% of your meals for the business days are also deductible.
- If the Primary Purpose is Vacation: Your transportation costs are 0% deductible. You can only deduct "incidental" business expenses you incurred while there (e.g., a taxi to meet a property manager).
How does the IRS determine your primary purpose? They look at the facts, especially the number of days spent on business vs. personal activities.
Example: A "Mixed" Trip You fly from Chicago to Florida to check on your condo rental.
- Thursday: Fly in, check into hotel. (Travel Day = Business Day)
- Friday: Meet with property manager, inspect unit, get quotes from contractors. (Business Day)
- Saturday: Go to the beach all day. (Personal Day)
- Sunday: Go to Disney World. (Personal Day)
- Monday: Fly home. (Travel Day = Business Day)
Result:
- Primary Purpose: You spent 3 days on business (Thu, Fri, Mon) and 2 days on personal activities. The primary purpose is business.
- Deduction:
- Flight: 100% deductible.
- Hotel: 100% deductible for Thursday and Friday nights. Saturday and Sunday nights are not deductible.
- Meals: 50% deductible for Thursday, Friday, and Monday.
- Rental Car: You must allocate. 3/5 (60%) of the rental car cost is deductible.
What Travel Expenses Are Deductible?
Here is a checklist of common, deductible travel expenses:
- Airfare, train, or bus tickets
- Car rental
- Using your personal car (see local travel rules)
- Taxis, Uber, and Lyft
- Lodging (hotels, motels, Airbnbs)
- Meals (but typically only 50% of the cost)
- Tips for services related to these expenses
- Baggage fees
- Laundry and dry cleaning (on multi-day trips)
- Parking and tolls
The Golden Rule: Impeccable Record-Keeping
The IRS loves to audit travel and auto expenses because they are so often abused. If you don't have the records, you don't get the deduction.
You MUST have a contemporaneous log. This means you record it at the time it happens, not by trying to remember it all on April 14th.
Your log (whether in an app, spreadsheet, or notebook) MUST show:
- Date: When the trip happened.
- Mileage: Start and end odometer (for local travel) or total miles.
- Destination: Where you went (e.g., "123 Main St. Rental").
- Business Purpose: The specific reason.
- Bad: "Rental"
- Good: "Met with new tenant for lease signing."
- Good: "Repaired leaky faucet in Unit 2B."
- Good: "Purchased smoke detectors at Home Depot."
For long-distance travel, keep all itemized receipts (not just credit card statements) for flights, hotels, and car rentals, along with your log or calendar explaining the business purpose of each day.
Conclusion: Don't Leave Money on the Table
Travel is a real and significant cost of managing rental properties. By understanding the rules and, most importantly, keeping meticulous records, you can turn those expenses into valuable tax deductions. Start your mileage log today—your future self will thank you at tax time.
Internal Link Idea: Want to learn about other powerful deductions? [Check out our guide to MACRS Depreciation to see how you write off your building itself!].