Updated March 2026 · 9 min read

Amazon Flex driver tax deductions: complete list (2026)

Amazon Flex drivers are independent contractors who deliver packages using their own vehicles. Like other gig workers, you can deduct the real costs of running your delivery business — and those costs are substantial. Amazon Flex has a unique structure: you're assigned delivery blocks (shifts) and given a route with dozens of packages. The mileage is high, the vehicle wear is real, and the deductions can significantly reduce your tax bill if you track them.

How Amazon Flex pay and taxes work

Amazon Flex pays you per delivery block — typically $18–$25 per hour for standard blocks, sometimes more for surge pricing. Amazon does not withhold any taxes from these payments. At the end of the year, Amazon sends a 1099-NEC if you earned $600 or more.

The income on your 1099-NEC is your gross earnings — every dollar Amazon paid you. You report this on Schedule C, Line 1, then subtract your deductions to arrive at net profit. You owe self-employment tax (15.3%) and federal income tax on that net profit. For the complete filing walkthrough, see our step-by-step freelancer tax filing guide.

Amazon Flex incomeEstimated tax before deductionsEstimated tax after typical deductions
$15,000/year (part-time)~$3,600 (24% effective)~$1,200–$1,800 (8–12% effective)
$30,000/year (moderate)~$7,800 (26% effective)~$3,000–$4,500 (10–15% effective)
$50,000/year (full-time)~$14,000 (28% effective)~$6,000–$8,500 (12–17% effective)

The difference between the "before" and "after" columns is the power of tracking your deductions. A full-time Amazon Flex driver claiming all legitimate deductions can save $5,500–$8,000 per year.

The most important deduction: mileage

Amazon Flex drivers accumulate serious mileage. A typical 3–4 hour block involves driving to the pickup station, loading packages, then driving a route of 20–40 stops across a delivery zone, then driving home. That's 60–120+ miles per block. Five blocks per week adds up fast.

At the 2026 IRS rate of 67 cents per mile, the mileage deduction for Amazon Flex drivers is often the single largest number on their tax return:

Business miles for Amazon Flex include:

Start your mileage tracker before you leave for the station The miles from your home to the Amazon delivery station are a gray area — some tax professionals consider it commuting (not deductible), others argue it's a temporary work location (deductible if you don't go to the same station every day). To be conservative, start tracking from the station. To be aggressive (but defensible), track from home. Either way, track every mile from the station onwards — these are unambiguously deductible. Use Stride (free) or Everlance, not the Amazon Flex app, which doesn't provide detailed mileage data.

All deductible expenses for Amazon Flex drivers

Mileage or vehicle expenses
67¢/mile standard rate, or actual vehicle expenses
The largest deduction for virtually every Flex driver. The standard mileage rate is usually better unless you drive a very expensive vehicle with high depreciation. You must choose one method at the start of using a vehicle for Flex — once you choose actual expenses, you cannot switch to standard mileage for that vehicle in future years.
Phone and data plan
Business-use percentage of monthly bill
The Amazon Flex app requires a smartphone with GPS and data. Deduct the business-use percentage of your plan. If you use your phone 50% for Flex during the months you drive, that's the percentage you claim. A $70/month plan at 50% = $420/year. If you bought a phone primarily for Flex, the business percentage of the phone cost is deductible too (Section 179 or depreciation).
Phone mount and car charger
100% — typically $15–$50
Essential equipment for safe navigation during delivery blocks. A phone mount on the dashboard and a car charger are standard deductible equipment for any delivery driver.
Dolly, hand truck, or wagon
100% — typically $40–$150
Amazon Flex routes frequently include heavy packages — cases of water, pet food, large boxes. A collapsible dolly or hand truck is a common purchase specifically for Flex work. Fully deductible if used exclusively or primarily for deliveries.
Gloves, flashlight, and safety gear
100% — typically $20–$60
Work gloves for handling packages (especially in cold weather), a flashlight or headlamp for evening/early morning deliveries, reflective vest or safety gear for roadside stops, and rain gear. These are ordinary and necessary expenses for the job — deductible in full.
Cargo organizer and trunk liner
Business-use percentage — typically $30–$100
Many Flex drivers buy trunk organizers, cargo nets, or shelf inserts to sort packages by stop number during a block. A trunk liner protects your vehicle from package damage. If used exclusively for Flex, 100% deductible. If also used personally, deduct the business-use percentage.
Tolls and parking
100% when incurred during delivery blocks
Toll charges during delivery routes and parking fees at apartment complexes or delivery locations are deductible. These are separate from and in addition to the standard mileage deduction. Keep receipts or use an electronic toll account that provides statements.
Self-employed health insurance
100% of premiums
If you pay for your own health insurance and aren't eligible for coverage through a spouse's employer plan, the full premium is deductible as an above-the-line adjustment on Form 1040. This is often the second-largest deduction after mileage — typically $3,000–$8,000+ per year. See our health insurance guide.
Retirement contributions
Up to $69,000 (SEP IRA) or $70,000 (Solo 401k)
You can open a SEP IRA or Solo 401(k) and contribute up to 25% of net self-employment income (for SEP) or the annual limit (for Solo 401k). Contributions reduce taxable income dollar for dollar. A Flex driver earning $35,000 net can contribute up to ~$6,500 to a SEP IRA. See our SEP IRA vs Solo 401k comparison.

The Amazon Flex-specific deduction most drivers miss

Returning undeliverable packages. At the end of a block, if you have packages that couldn't be delivered (customer not home, unsafe location, access issues), Amazon requires you to return them to the station. The miles driving back to the station to return packages are business miles — they're not commuting, they're a required business task. Many drivers forget to track this return trip. On a route that ends 15 miles from the station, that's an extra $10 in mileage deduction per return trip.

Amazon Flex vs. other gig platforms: deduction comparison

DeductionAmazon FlexDoorDashUber/Lyft
Avg annual miles20,000–40,00015,000–25,00030,000–50,000
Unique equipmentDolly, cargo organizer, glovesInsulated bags, phone mountDash cam, rider amenities, car washes
Platform fees deductible?N/A (Amazon sets flat rate)Yes — commission deducted from faresYes — service fee deducted from fares
Health insurance deductionYesYesYes
Retirement contributionYesYesYes

The biggest difference: Amazon Flex drivers don't have platform fees deducted from their pay — Amazon pays you a flat rate per block. This means your gross income and your reported 1099 income are the same. DoorDash and Uber/Lyft drivers need to report gross fares and separately deduct platform fees, which adds a step.

Quarterly estimated taxes

Amazon does not withhold taxes. If you earn more than ~$5,000 net from Flex per year, you should make quarterly estimated payments to avoid an underpayment penalty. Set aside 25–30% of every Flex payment into a separate savings account. See our complete quarterly tax guide for due dates and payment instructions.

Multi-app drivers

Many Amazon Flex drivers also deliver for DoorDash, Instacart, or other platforms between blocks. If you work multiple delivery apps, report all gig income on a single Schedule C (or separate ones — either approach works, but a single combined Schedule C is simpler). Your deductions — mileage, phone, equipment — are claimed once against your total delivery business income, not per platform. See our Instacart deductions guide and DoorDash deductions guide for platform-specific details.

The bottom line for Amazon Flex drivers Mileage is your single biggest tax lever. At 25,000 miles per year, the mileage deduction alone is $16,750 — potentially reducing your tax bill by $5,000+. Track every mile from the moment you arrive at the station. Add equipment deductions, phone costs, and health insurance on top of that. The difference between a Flex driver who tracks expenses and one who doesn't is thousands of dollars per year.