The single most expensive mistake I made my first year driving Uber on a rental wasn't picking the wrong car or the wrong city — it was not paying quarterly estimated taxes. April rolled around and I owed $7,840 in self-employment tax I didn't have. Cleaned out the savings account, made it work, but I'll never make that mistake again.
If you're driving Uber or Lyft with a rental from RideshareRenter, the IRS treats you as a self-employed sole proprietor. That means quarterly estimated taxes. Here's how I do mine in 2026, and what I wish someone had told me when I started.
When you're a W-2 employee, your employer withholds taxes from each paycheck. Rideshare drivers are 1099 contractors — Uber and Lyft pay you the full gross, you owe the IRS yourself. The IRS doesn't want to wait until April for that money. Pay them four times a year or get penalized.
The four 2026 due dates:
The quarters are not even months — note Q2 is only two months. That's a real trap. I missed June 15 once because I was tracking on a normal calendar quarter.
Two layers of tax:
Self-employment tax: 15.3% on your net rideshare income. That's the Social Security and Medicare you'd normally split with an employer — except you don't have an employer, so you pay both halves.
Federal income tax on top of that, at your marginal bracket. For most full-time rideshare drivers grossing $60K-$90K with a rental, that's 12% to 22%.
Add state income tax (varies — Florida, Texas, Tennessee, Washington, and Nevada have no state income tax; California is 9-10%).
Practical rule of thumb I use after three years of doing this: set aside 27% of net rideshare income (after rental, gas, and other expenses) in no-state-tax states, and 32-35% in California, New York, or Oregon.
Let me walk through what this looks like with real Q1 numbers from a driver friend in Atlanta last year.
| Item | Q1 2025 (Jan-Mar) |
|---|---|
| Gross Uber + Lyft pay | $23,400 |
| RideshareRenter rental ($360/wk x 13) | -$4,680 |
| Gas | -$2,180 |
| Phone, supplies, washes | -$310 |
| Tolls reimbursed by Uber (net zero) | $0 |
| Net taxable income | $16,230 |
| Self-employment tax (15.3%) | $2,483 |
| Federal income tax (12% bracket, after std deduction) | ~$870 |
| Georgia state tax (~5.4%) | $876 |
| Q1 estimated tax to pay April 15 | ~$4,229 |
That's 26% of net income. Sets aside cleanly if you bucket it weekly.
This is the system I use now. Boring but it works.
Every Monday I look at last week's net Uber + Lyft payouts. I take 27% (I'm in Florida — no state tax) and move it from my checking to a high-yield savings account dedicated to taxes only. The savings account doesn't have a debit card. I can't accidentally spend it on a slow week.
On the four estimated tax due dates, I pay from that account. Whatever's left at year-end is buffer for the April balance — and there's usually a small surplus because I tend to over-estimate.
If you can't trust yourself with the willpower, open a SEP-IRA or Solo 401(k). Contributions reduce taxable income and the money's locked up. You're paying yourself instead of the IRS — but you have to actually do it before the deadline.
The rental itself is fully deductible. That's the big one. Every dollar you pay RideshareRenter for the car is a business expense.
The other deductions that drivers leave on the table:
Gas: Fully deductible if you take actual-expense method on a rental. You can't take the standard mileage rate on a rented vehicle in most cases — actual expense is the route.
Car washes and detailing: $15-$25/week if you wash regularly. Add it up.
Phone bill: The portion used for rideshare. I deduct 70% of my $90/month plan because I use it for navigation and the apps almost constantly while driving.
Snacks, water, mints for passengers: Deductible. Keep receipts.
Dashcam: Deductible. Best $130 you'll ever spend, and it pays for itself on the first fake claim.
Health insurance premiums: If you're self-employed and not covered by a spouse's plan, premiums are deductible above the line. That's not a small number — could be $400-$700/month.
Tax prep software or accountant: Deductible against next year's return.
Easiest way: IRS Direct Pay at irs.gov/directpay. Free, takes 5 minutes, debits straight from your checking account. Save the confirmation number.
You can also pay via the IRS2Go app, EFTPS (set this up in advance — it takes a week to get the PIN in the mail), or by mailing Form 1040-ES with a check. Direct Pay is the fastest.
State estimated taxes: each state has its own portal. California uses FTB Web Pay, New York uses NY Online Services, etc. Search "[your state] estimated tax payment online."
The IRS charges an underpayment penalty. It's not the end of the world — currently around 8% annualized on the unpaid amount — but it stacks up.
You can avoid the penalty entirely if either:
(a) You pay at least 90% of your current year's total tax through quarterly estimates and withholding, OR
(b) You pay 100% of last year's tax (110% if last year's AGI was over $150K) — this is the safe harbor.
If your prior year was a low-earning year (just started driving, or did W-2 work for part of it), the safe harbor strategy is great. Pay last year's total tax in four equal installments, and the IRS can't charge a penalty regardless of how much you actually earn this year.
"I'll just deduct mileage on a rental." No, you usually can't take the standard mileage rate on a vehicle you don't own. Use the actual expense method — rental cost, gas, washes, supplies.
"My net was zero so I don't have to file." Wrong. Self-employment income over $400 requires filing, even if you owe no income tax, because you still owe SE tax.
"Uber and Lyft will withhold for me." No, they won't. The 1099-K and 1099-NEC they send you in January are informational — you owe the tax yourself.
"Cash tips don't count." They do. The IRS expects you to report all income. Practically, if you take cash tips, log them weekly.
"I can just pay it all in April." You can, but you'll owe the underpayment penalty, and you'll be writing a check for an amount that probably wipes out your savings.
How much should I set aside per week from my Uber and Lyft pay? Take your weekly net (after rental, gas, expenses) and set aside 25-30% if you're in a no-state-tax state, 30-35% if you're in a higher-tax state. Move it to a separate savings account immediately.
Do I have to pay quarterly if I just started driving in May? If you'll owe less than $1,000 in tax for the year, no. Most full-time rideshare drivers cross that threshold by their second month, though.
Can I deduct my RideshareRenter weekly payment? Yes, 100%. It's a direct business expense. Keep your payment records or transaction history as documentation.
What if I miss a quarterly deadline? Pay as soon as you can. The penalty accrues daily, so the sooner you pay, the smaller the hit. The penalty is calculated on Form 2210 when you file your annual return.
Should I form an LLC? Probably not for tax reasons alone — an LLC doesn't change how you're taxed unless you elect S-corp. It can help with liability separation, especially if you own a rental car you're listing on RideshareRenter. Talk to a CPA before you commit.
What if I drove part of the year as a renter and part with my own car? You'll deduct rental costs for the rental period and actual or standard mileage for the period you owned. Keep a clean log of when you switched.
If this hit you with the realization that you've been ignoring quarterly taxes, here's what to do this week. Open a separate high-yield savings account. Move 27% of last month's net rideshare income into it. Sign up for IRS Direct Pay. Mark the four 2026 deadlines on your phone calendar. Done.
Driving: Browse rideshare-ready rentals on RideshareRenter. Your weekly rental cost is fully tax-deductible, which softens the bill come April.
Owners: Renting out your car to rideshare drivers through RideshareRenter is also business income — and like driving, the expenses (depreciation, maintenance, insurance) are deductible. List your car and ask your CPA whether to take Section 179 or bonus depreciation in year one.


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