Thumbtack mileage tracking belongs in the same file as your lead fees, supply runs, helper payments, and repeat visits. This guide shows how to track those service expenses together so you can see what a Thumbtack job really costs before tax season and before you buy more leads.
To keep those records organized early, MyCarTracks automatic mileage tracking helps you save estimate and job trips alongside receipts, and Thumbtack’s Pro Basics page confirms that pros can set budgets and pay when customers choose to contact them directly.
Why these expenses matter
Thumbtack uses a paid-lead model. That means your first business expense often happens before you have a paying customer. If the lead does not book, the cost still happened. If the job books, the lead fee becomes part of the customer-acquisition cost for that job.
The same logic applies to other service expenses. A profitable invoice can become a weak job after you add:
- estimate mileage
- parking and tolls
- parts and materials
- disposal or cleanup costs
- helper pay
- warranty or follow-up visits
Common Thumbtack expense categories
Start with categories that show the real cost of customer acquisition and job delivery:
- Thumbtack lead fees and related platform charges
- mileage or vehicle costs for estimates, jobs, and supply runs
- parking, tolls, dump fees, and travel-related costs
- tools, rentals, repairs, and replacement equipment
- materials, parts, cleaning supplies, and job consumables
- phone, scheduling software, bookkeeping tools, and cloud storage
- insurance, licenses, permits, and bond costs
- payment-processing fees and bank charges
- helper, subcontractor, or contract-labor payments
Mileage tracking and travel costs
Travel often starts before revenue. That is why business mileage and your mileage log belong in the same file as lead fees.
Track:
- estimate visits
- consultations
- booked job travel
- supply runs
- disposal or return trips
- follow-up work
For the deduction side, use the Thumbtack Mileage Guide. For the business side, compare travel cost against the service category and close rate.
Supplies and materials
Materials usually need more detail than one credit-card line item. Save the receipt and note which job or customer used the purchase.
Examples include:
- cleaning supplies
- paint and patch materials
- replacement parts
- event materials
- props and print products
- pet-care supplies
- packaging, tape, and protective materials
If a customer reimburses you, keep both the receipt and the reimbursement record so the paper trail is complete.
Tools and equipment
Some purchases are small recurring tools. Others are larger pieces of equipment that last longer than one job. Keep the purchase date, vendor, amount, and the business purpose of the item.
Useful examples:
- power tools
- ladders
- cameras
- vacuums
- tablets or laptops
- storage equipment
- rented specialty equipment
Phone, software, and service tools
Thumbtack pros often use their phones to handle messaging, photos, maps, scheduling, and payment follow-up. The same goes for software that supports estimates, bookkeeping, invoicing, and route planning.
Track these separately so you can see whether admin costs are rising with lead volume.
Advertising and lead costs
Lead fees belong here, even if they are charged automatically. Save:
- the date
- service category
- amount charged
- whether the lead booked
- whether a refund or credit was issued
This is one of the most important categories for a Thumbtack business because it tells you what it costs to start a customer conversation.
Insurance, licenses, and permits
These are operating costs, not side notes. If your category depends on liability coverage, local licensing, permits, or bonds, those records should sit near your other service expenses.
Use the Thumbtack Licenses and Local Requirements guide if you need a cleaner compliance workflow.
Helpers and contract labor
If another person helps with the job, save:
- the agreement or message
- invoice or payment record
- amount paid
- proof of transfer
- any tax form or worker record required later
Do not bury helper cost inside “miscellaneous supplies.” It changes the real margin of the job.
Interest, payment, and bank fees
Card-processing fees, business-account fees, and interest tied to business purchases can also matter. These smaller recurring costs are easy to miss because they do not look like job materials, but they still reduce net earnings.
How to stay ready all year
The cleanest routine is a short weekly review:
- export or record every lead fee
- mark whether the lead booked, stalled, or was a poor fit
- add mileage for estimates, jobs, and supply runs
- attach receipts for materials, parking, tolls, and helper pay
- match the final invoice or payment
- review profit by service category
By month-end, you should be able to answer which jobs are worth buying again.
Lead-cost review questions
At the end of each month, ask:
- which service categories produced the best close rate?
- which categories created the highest lead cost per booked job?
- which jobs looked large but lost money after travel and materials?
- which customers became repeat clients and reduced future acquisition cost?
Those questions matter more than total monthly revenue by itself.
Market notes
United States
US Thumbtack workflows are the strongest direct source set for this article. Use your own state and city rules for sales tax, contractor registration, and expense documentation where those rules apply.
Canada and Europe
If you run a local service business outside the US, the same recordkeeping logic still helps, but your actual filing rules may follow CRA, VAT, or country-level business-expense systems instead of a Thumbtack-specific workflow.
MyCarTracks workflow
MyCarTracks is most useful here when you use it as the trip layer inside your lead-cost review. Tag estimate miles separately from paid job miles, then compare the monthly export with your lead records, invoices, and receipts. The automatic mileage tracking setup makes that monthly comparison much easier.
Related guides
- Thumbtack Pro Guide
- Thumbtack Earnings Guide
- Thumbtack Licenses and Local Requirements
- Thumbtack Mileage Guide
- Thumbtack Tax Guide
- Thumbtack Tax Deductions
- Thumbtack Tax Forms
For a broader self-employed comparison, see the Airbnb Host Expense Records, Walmart Spark Tax Deductions, or Doordash Tax Deductions.