June 14 2017
The IRS wants you to keep a "contemporaneous" mileage log. But what does that actually mean? Let's go over a recent court case to see what records you need to keep.
The Tax Court has reminded all business owners that you can't wait until you're audited to create records of your business mileage. Sam Kilpatrick, a CPA who should have known better, claimed that he drove 8,867 miles for his business during 2009. Therefore, he said he was entitled to a $4,477 mileage deduction.
Kilpatrick never kept a mileage log to record his business driving. When he was audited in 2011, he provided the IRS with a calendar with the dates he claimed to have driven for business circled and printouts from MapQuest.
The Tax Court found that these weren't adequate records to substantiate his mileage deduction. It said that this "mileage log" was created over two years after the driving was supposed to have occurred. To pass muster with the IRS, a mileage log must be "made at or near the time" that the driving occurred.
The IRS wants you to keep a contemporaneous mileage log. Records kept daily are best, but they should at least be kept weekly. (Kilpatrick v. Comm'r, TC Memo 2016-166.)
Editor's Note: An automatic mileage tracking app like MileIQ qualifies as a contemporaneous mileage log and records have been accepted by the IRS.
The IRS wants you to record:
Learn more about the IRS requirements for a mileage log here. The IRS does accept mileage logs created by apps like MileIQ. Some find it much easier to rely on a mileage tracking app like MileIQ because it's automatically logging your trips for you.
To view the original article, visit the MileIQ blog.