Wag deductions are only useful when your records prove the business purpose of each cost. The main question is not “Can I call this work-related?” but “Can I show how this cost helped me earn pet-care income?”
This guide keeps the competitor deduction structure intact: vehicle costs first, then fees, phone use, pet-care supplies, insurance, home office, marketing, training, tools, health insurance, tracking, claiming, and common mistakes.
If you want the deduction file to stay usable all year, MyCarTracks automatic mileage tracking helps save pet-care driving as it happens, and the official IRS gig economy tax center plus Publication 463 are the main references behind the vehicle and recordkeeping rules.
Mileage tracking and vehicle expenses
Vehicle use is usually the biggest deduction category for caregivers who drive to walks, drop-ins, sittings, or supply runs. That is why Wag Mileage Guide matters so much to the tax file.
Standard mileage rate
The standard mileage method is often the simpler option because you multiply qualifying business miles by the IRS rate. It already accounts for many vehicle costs, but it does not remove the need for a mileage log. Parking and tolls can still matter separately when they are tied to the booking.
Actual expense method
The actual expense method can make sense when the vehicle is expensive to operate, but it demands better records. You need total vehicle miles, business-use percentage, and receipts for costs such as fuel, insurance, repairs, registration, and maintenance.
Expenses you can usually track either way
Even when you use the standard mileage method, you still want separate records for:
- parking fees tied to bookings
- tolls tied to bookings
- route notes for unusual trips
- the reason the trip happened
Platform fees and commissions
If the platform or payment flow creates fees that are clearly tied to earning the income, keep those records with the same care as your payout records. The important part is matching the fee to the service or payment flow it belongs to.
Phone and data plan
Many caregivers use their phone for the app, navigation, messaging, photos, status updates, and support contact. A phone cost is not automatically a full write-off, but the business-use share can matter when the records are clear.
Pet supplies and care items
This category is usually more important for Wag than it is for some other gig apps. Examples can include:
- waste bags
- cleaning wipes
- towels
- backup leashes or collars used for services
- pet-safe water containers
- first-aid or safety items
- weather gear used for services
Use Wag Pet-Care Supplies and Records if you want the recordkeeping side separated out from the tax logic.
Business insurance
If you pay for insurance, bonding, or similar business protection that directly supports your pet-care work, keep the invoices and renewal records. The key is showing the business link clearly.
Home office expenses
This category only works when your facts and local rules support it. If you use a home office for scheduling, bookkeeping, and client administration, keep that file separately and do not assume the deduction applies automatically just because you do admin work at home.
Marketing and business development
Profile-related costs, business cards, ads, or other marketing expenses can matter if they are genuinely part of building your pet-care business. Save the invoice and note the business purpose while it is still obvious.
Education and training
If training is directly tied to maintaining or improving your current pet-care business, it may belong in the file. Keep course names, dates, invoices, and a short note about why the training supports the business.
Subscriptions and tools
Software, bookkeeping tools, route tools, mileage tracking subscriptions, or similar services can matter when they are used for the business. Keep the invoice and describe the work purpose.
Health insurance premiums
This is a specialized area and depends on your filing facts, but it is often worth discussing separately if pet-care work is a meaningful part of your self-employed income.
How to track your tax deductions
The cleanest method is to track deductions in the same rhythm you track pay:
- Tag mileage while you drive.
- Save receipts the day the purchase happens.
- Add a short business-purpose note.
- Review the file weekly or monthly.
- Compare the deduction file against booking and payout records before filing.
How to claim your tax deductions
For many US caregivers, deduction claims sit inside the Schedule C process. The deduction is strongest when each cost category can be matched back to the business activity that created it. That is also why Wag Tax Guide and Wag Tax Forms should be part of the same review.
Common mistakes Wag walkers make
The most common mistakes are:
- mixing personal and business driving
- saving receipts without writing the business reason
- claiming every pet-related purchase without checking whether it supported the work
- waiting until tax season to rebuild the file
- forgetting recurring small costs that add up over the year
US-first market note
United States
For 2026, the IRS business standard mileage rate is 72.5 cents per mile. Publication 463 is still the main source for the car-expense rules and recordkeeping expectations.
Canada
CRA guidance says self-employed people can deduct reasonable business expenses and must split motor vehicle expenses between business and personal use when the vehicle is mixed-use.
Europe
European deduction rules depend on country-specific tax treatment, VAT rules, and local business registration requirements. Use country-level guidance instead of assuming the US deduction structure applies.
MyCarTracks workflow
Use MyCarTracks to tag Wag trips, keep personal driving separate, and export reports that can sit next to your receipts and payout records. If you want the direct setup page, use automatic mileage tracking.
What to read next
- Wag Mileage Guide
- Wag Tax Guide
- Wag Tax Forms
- Wag Pet-Care Supplies and Records
- How to Claim Self-Employed Taxes