Rideshare Taxes in St. Louis, Missouri
Driving for Uber, Lyft, or DoorDash in St. Louis means navigating local gas prices averaging $2.95 per gallon and traffic on routes like local interstates and state highways. These operating costs directly affect your net profit — and most of them are deductible.
Track surge windows and high-demand areas in your city to maximize net earnings per active hour.
As in any gig market, consistent mileage tracking and monthly tax reserve discipline are the two habits that most protect driver income from unexpected year-end obligations.
State Tax Considerations for Missouri Drivers
In addition to federal taxes, Missouri collects state income tax (up to 5.3%) on net contractor earnings. Your mileage deduction ($0.725/mile for2026) applies to both federal and state returns in most cases, which is why accurate mileage logs are worth the effort. Every dollar of Schedule C deduction reduces both obligations simultaneously.
Top Deductions for St. Louis Drivers (2026)
- Standard Mileage Rate: At $0.725/mile, a St. Louis driver covering 30,000 miles annually can deduct $21,750 from taxable income — lowering both self-employment and income tax significantly.
- Parking & Tolls: Parking and toll costs incurred during business trips are 100% deductible on Schedule C.
- Phone (Business Portion): If you use your phone for navigation and app management, the business-use percentage is deductible. Most active drivers deduct 50–80% of their monthly phone bill.
- City & State Licenses: Any business licenses or permits required by St. Louis or Missouri to operate as a rideshare driver are fully deductible.
- Vehicle Accessories: Phone mount, dashcam, car charger, and delivery bags (if applicable) are deductible as ordinary and necessary business equipment.
Quarterly Tax Planning for St. Louis Drivers
With an estimated over 18,000 gig workers in the St. Louis area, quarterly tax planning is essential to avoid underpayment penalties. Most active drivers owe $1,000+ in federal tax annually, triggering the quarterly payment requirement.
IRS deadlines are April 15, June 15, September 15, and January 15. The safest planning approach: set aside 25% of gross earnings each week into a dedicated savings account. Reconcile monthly using the quarterly tax calculator above to verify your reserve stays aligned with actual tax exposure.
For platform-specific guidance, see our Uber tax calculator or Lyft tax calculator pages.