Trucker Per Diem Calculator (2026)

Days on the road in, tax deduction out. Uses the 2026 IRS transportation rate — $80 full days, 75% for departure/return days, 80% deductible rule applied.

Your days away
Your per diem deduction
$0
Total per diem (before 80% rule)$0
Full days$0
Partial days (75%)$0
Estimated tax savings$0

How this calculator works

Total per diem = full days × daily rate + partial days × 75% of the rate.

Deduction = total × 80% — the IRS cap for DOT drivers. Estimated savings = deduction × your combined tax rate.

The 2026 rate ($80/day CONUS, $86 outside) applies to travel from October 1, 2025 through September 30, 2026. If your tax year straddles the change, your accountant may prorate — this tool gives the planning number.

Estimates for planning only. Per diem rules have real edge cases (tax home, restart weeks, local runs) — confirm your return with a tax professional who knows trucking.

Frequently asked questions

What is the trucker per diem rate for 2026?

For travel from October 1, 2025 the IRS special transportation industry rate is $80 per full day in the continental U.S. and $86 per day outside it (Canada/Mexico runs). Partial days — the day you leave and the day you get home — count at 75% of the rate.

Why is only 80% of my per diem deductible?

Per diem is legally a meal allowance, and the tax code caps meal deductions for transportation workers at 80%. This calculator applies the 80% automatically, so the deduction figure is what actually lands on your return.

Who can claim trucker per diem?

Owner-operators and self-employed drivers who spend nights away from their tax home under DOT hours-of-service rules. Company drivers cannot deduct per diem on their own return since 2018 — but many carriers run per diem pay programs instead.

What records do I need to keep?

Proof of the days: logbook or ELD records showing you were away overnight. You do not need meal receipts when using the standard per diem rate — that is the point of it.

How much tax does per diem actually save me?

The deduction reduces taxable income, so savings = deduction × your combined tax rate (federal bracket + ~15.3% self-employment tax on that income). At 300 full days, the 2026 rate produces a $19,200 deduction — roughly $7,100 saved for a driver in the 22% bracket paying SE tax.