Business travel is deductible when you travel away from your tax home overnight, primarily for business. You deduct 100% of transportation (airfare, train, rental car) and lodging for business days, but only 50% of meals. Entertainment has not been deductible since the 2018 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. The rules live in IRS Publication 463, and the tightest requirement is substantiation under IRC §274(d): dates, destination, business purpose, and amounts for every trip.
Key takeaways:
- Away-from-home test: you must leave your tax home and stay overnight, or long enough to require rest. Same-day trips are local transportation, not business travel.
- Meals are 50% deductible; lodging and transportation are 100% for business days.
- 2026 mileage rate: 72.5¢/mile for driving your own car on business (IRS Notice 2026-10).
- 2026 high-low per diem (Notice 2025-54): $319/day in high-cost localities ($233 lodging + $86 meals) and $225/day elsewhere ($151 lodging + $74 meals). Only 50% of the meal portion is deductible.
- Primarily-business test: for a U.S. trip, more than half your days must be business days to deduct transportation.
- Entertainment (golf, concerts, sporting events) is 0% deductible since 2018.
To claim business travel deductions, you must meet ALL three requirements established by IRS Publication 463:
✅ 1. Travel Away From Tax Home
- You must leave the general area of your tax home
- Your tax home = your principal place of business (not where you live)
- Must be outside your city limits
- If you live outside a city: must be more than ~40 miles away
✅ 2. Overnight Stay Required
- Must be overnight or long enough to require sleep/rest
- Napping in your car doesn't count
- Same-day trips are "local transportation," not business travel
✅ 3. Business Purpose
- Primary purpose must be business (not vacation)
- Must spend more than 50% of time on business activities
- Need clear business intent before leaving
Legal Citation: IRC § 162(a)(2) - allows deductions for traveling expenses while away from home in pursuit of a trade or business.
Your tax home is not where you live—it's where you do business.
Example 1: Tax Home ≠ Family Home
- Tim is a lobbyist with his office in Washington, D.C.
- His family lives in New York City
- He spends weekdays in D.C., weekends in NYC
- Tax Home: Washington, D.C. (his principal place of business)
- Result: Trips between D.C. and NYC are non-deductible commuting
Example 2: Multiple Work Locations
- Lee is a dentist with an office in Houston and works part-time in Dallas
- Houston: 3 weeks/month, $150,000 income
- Dallas: 1 week/month, $50,000 income
- Tax Home: Houston (more time + more income)
- Result: Trips from Houston to Dallas are deductible business travel
Legal Citation: Rev. Rul. 73-529 - establishes factors for determining tax home.
If you have no principal place of business, you might have no tax home—making you a "transient" for tax purposes.
Warning: Transients cannot deduct ANY travel expenses because they're never considered "away from home."
To avoid transient status, you must meet 2 of 3 factors:
- You perform business at your home and live there
- You have duplicate living expenses (home + travel costs)
- You maintain family at home, work in the area, or haven't abandoned the location
Case Study: Henderson v. Commissioner, 143 F.3d 497 (9th Cir. 1998)
- Stagehand traveled with ice skating show
- Spent 2-3 months/year at parents' home in Boise (rent-free)
- Did no work in Boise
- Court ruling: Transient status—NO travel deductions allowed
- Reason: Failed factors 1 & 2 (no work in Boise, no duplicate expenses)

✅ Deductible transportation costs:
- Airfare, train, or bus tickets
- Car rental fees
- Mileage on your personal car (72.5¢/mile for 2026)
- Uber/Lyft/taxi to/from airport
- Airport parking
- Baggage fees
- Shipping costs for business materials, samples, or displays
Note: These are 100% deductible if your trip is primarily for business. If you drive your own car, the business vehicle deduction guide explains standard mileage vs actual expenses, and the mileage deduction calculator runs the numbers at the 72.5¢ rate.
Once you arrive at your destination, you can deduct:
| Expense Category | Deductibility | Notes |
|---|
| Hotel/lodging | 100% | Business days only |
| Meals | 50% | Business days only |
| Taxi/Uber | 100% | Local transportation |
| Rental car | 100% | Business use |
| Parking & tolls | 100% | Business portion |
| Laundry | 100% | On trips 7+ days |
| Dry cleaning | 100% | On trips 7+ days |
| Tips | 50% (meals) or 100% | Depends on service |
| Internet/phone | 100% | Business use |
| Conference fees | 100% | Registration costs |
❌ Non-deductible expenses:
- Entertainment (concerts, sporting events, golf) - ELIMINATED in 2018 by Tax Cuts and Jobs Act
- Sightseeing tours
- Personal fitness/spa services
- Personal shopping
- Souvenirs
- Family members' travel costs (unless they're employees with genuine business purpose)
Legal Citation: IRC § 274(a)(1)(A) - no deduction for entertainment expenses.
Meals while traveling for business are only 50% deductible.
Example:
- Dinner with client: $100
- Deductible amount: $50
Three ways to calculate meal deductions:
Method 1: Actual Expenses
- Keep all receipts
- Deduct 50% of actual cost
- Best when you have expensive business meals
Method 2: Standard Per Diem Rates
- IRS publishes daily meal allowances by city
- No receipts required
- Deduct 50% of per diem amount
- Best for frequent travelers
Method 3: Simplified Method
- Fixed rate regardless of location
- No receipts required
- Deduct 50% of simplified rate
2026 Per Diem Rates (IRS high-low method, Notice 2025-54, effective October 1, 2025):
- High-cost localities: $319/day total ($233 lodging + $86 meals and incidentals)
- All other localities: $225/day total ($151 lodging + $74 meals and incidentals)
- Deductible meal amount: 50% of the meal portion ($43 in high-cost areas, $37 elsewhere)
- A locality counts as "high-cost" if its federal per diem is $272 or more
Source: IRS Notice 2025-54 sets the high-low per diem rates for October 1, 2025 through September 30, 2026.
General Rule: Meals are only deductible if you stay overnight on a business trip.
Exception: Meals during local business activities (meetings with clients, etc.) are also 50% deductible, even without overnight travel.
For travel within the United States, you can deduct transportation costs if you spend more than half your time on business.
The calculation:
- Count business days vs. personal days
- If business days exceed personal days: 100% of airfare/transportation is deductible
- Lodging and meals: deductible only for business days
Example (mostly business). Tom takes the train from Atlanta to New Orleans for 9 days: 6 business days of meetings and 3 personal days visiting parents in Mobile. His business share is 6/9 = 67%, more than half, so he deducts 100% of the $250 train fare plus $3,000 of lodging and meals for the 6 business days. The $900 spent on personal days is not deductible. Total deduction: $3,250.
Example (mostly personal). Same Atlanta-to-New Orleans train trip, but 2 business days and 7 personal days. Business share is 2/9 = 22%, under half, so the train fare is not deductible. Tom can still deduct $50 he spent mailing business documents while there. Total deduction: $50.
Legal Citation: Treas. Reg. § 1.162-2(b)(2) - establishes the "more than half" rule for U.S. travel.
Travel outside the United States has different rules based on trip length:
Trips 7 Days or Less:
- Deduct 100% of transportation, even if you spend most time on vacation
- Must have at least some business purpose
- Deduct lodging/meals for business days only
Example. Billie flies Portland to Vancouver for 6 days total: 4 sightseeing and 1 meeting suppliers. Because the trip is 7 days or less, she deducts 100% of the airfare, plus lodging and meals for the 1 business day only.
Trips More Than 7 Days with More Than 75% Business:
- Deduct 100% of transportation
- Deduct 100% of lodging/meals for business days
Example. Sean flies Boston to Dublin for 10 days: 9 in business meetings and 1 sightseeing. Business share is 9/10 = 90%, more than 75%, so he deducts 100% of the airfare plus lodging and meals for the 9 business days. The 1 personal day is not deductible.
Trips More Than 7 Days with 51-75% Business:
- Deduct business % of transportation
- Deduct lodging/meals for business days only
Example. Sam flies Las Vegas to London for 10 days: 6 business and 4 sightseeing. Business share is 6/10 = 60%, between 51% and 75%, so he deducts 60% of the round-trip airfare ($3,000 × 60% = $1,800) plus lodging and meals for the 6 business days only.
Trips More Than 7 Days with Less Than 51% Business:
- ❌ $0 transportation deduction
- ✅ Direct business expenses at destination (copying, mailing, etc.)
According to IRS Publication 463, the following count as business days:
✅ 1. Days working - Any day you work 4+ hours on business
✅ 2. Travel days - Days spent traveling to/from destination
✅ 3. Weekends between business days - The "Sandwich Day Rule"
✅ 4. Holidays between business days
✅ 5. Standby days - Days waiting for meetings that couldn't be avoided
✅ 6. Days where business was intended but circumstances prevented it (illness, strikes, etc.)
✅ 7. Days attending required conventions/conferences
✅ 8. Days working from hotel/temporary office (even if you don't meet anyone)
This is a powerful strategy: Weekends and holidays "sandwiched" between business days count as business days, even if you do nothing business-related.
Example. You have business meetings in Las Vegas Monday through Friday, a personal weekend, then a Monday meeting before flying home. The Saturday and Sunday are sandwiched between business days, so all 8 days count as business days: 8 days of lodging plus 50% of meals are deductible.
Strategy: Schedule business meetings on Friday and Monday to convert the weekend into deductible business days.
General Rule: You CANNOT deduct expenses for family members traveling with you.
Exception: You CAN deduct if your family member:
- Is your employee
- Has a genuine business reason for the trip
- Would be allowed to deduct the expenses themselves
What doesn't qualify:
- Typing notes
- Social entertaining
- "Moral support"
What CAN qualify:
- Sales calls by an employee-child
- Business negotiations by an employee-spouse
- Essential business tasks
Good News: You can still deduct YOUR expenses at the single-person rate, even if your family comes along.
Example. Yamiko travels New Orleans to Sydney for business and brings her husband and son. Of the $2,500 in airfare, only her own $1,000 ticket is deductible; the family's $1,500 is not. For lodging, she deducts the $250/night single-room rate, not the $500/night two-bedroom suite.
General Rules:
- Conference must be related to your trade or business
- Agenda must show business connection
- Location must be reasonable for the conference topic
- Can't claim conventions purely for investment advice or political purposes
Special Rule for Cruises:
- Maximum deduction: $2,000 per year
- Ship must be U.S.-registered
- All ports must be in U.S. or U.S. possessions
- Must file special form with W-2s from speakers
- Very restrictive—most cruise conventions don't qualify
Legal Citation: IRC § 274(h) - establishes convention deduction limits.
If you work at a location away from home temporarily (expected to last 1 year or less), your travel there is deductible.
Example. Sadie, a computer trainer based at a downtown office, is hired to train Acme Corp employees for 3 months at a site 50 miles away. Because the assignment is temporary (1 year or less), her travel is deductible: 100 daily round-trip miles × 72.5¢ = $72.50/day, 50% of meals on training days, and a hotel near Acme if she stays over.
Warning: If the assignment is expected to last more than 1 year, that location becomes your new tax home and travel is NOT deductible.
Travel expenses face heightened documentation requirements under IRC § 274(d). Travel is one line on a longer list; the small business tax prep checklist and business expense categories guide cover the rest of what to track. You must prove:
1. Amount:
- Receipts for lodging and all expenses $75+
- Credit card statements acceptable for expenses under $75
2. Time:
- Dates of departure and return
- Number of business days
- Number of personal days
3. Place:
- Name of city/destination
- Hotels where you stayed
- Business locations visited
4. Business Purpose:
- Reason for travel
- Nature of business conducted
- Expected business benefit
- People you met with (names, business relationships)
✅ Do This:
- Take photos of receipts immediately
- Use travel expense tracking apps (Expensify, Concur, Jupid)
- Create trip reports within 24 hours of return
- Calendar all business meetings before you go
- Save flight confirmations and itineraries
- Keep conference agendas and materials
- Document business purpose in writing before departure
❌ Don't Do This:
- Recreate records months later from memory
- Claim personal vacation days as business days
- Deduct entertainment costs (not allowed since 2018)
- Take family "business trips" without legitimate business purpose
- Fail to separate business and personal days
Case Law: Sanford v. Commissioner, T.C. Memo 1983-729 - Taxpayer's entire travel deduction disallowed due to failure to substantiate business purpose, despite having receipts.
Schedule business activities on Friday and Monday to make the intervening weekend deductible.
Before: Monday–Wednesday business in San Francisco is 3 deductible days, or 12 across 4 trips a year.
After: shifting to Friday–Monday makes the weekend deductible via the sandwich rule, so each trip is 4 days, or 16 across the year, a 33% increase.
For trips abroad longer than 7 days, ensure you hit the 75% business threshold to deduct 100% of airfare.
Example:
- 10-day trip to London
- Need 8 business days for 80% (more than 75%)
- Can have 2 personal days and still get 100% airfare deduction
Visit multiple clients or attend conferences in the same trip to strengthen your business purpose documentation.
Example, a 5-day Los Angeles trip: Day 1 client meeting, Day 2 industry conference, Day 3 second client meeting, Day 4 supplier visit, Day 5 competitor facility tour. All 5 are clear business days, so 100% of transportation and lodging is deductible.
If you travel often, use per diem rates instead of tracking actual meal costs.
Benefits:
- No meal receipts required
- Simpler record-keeping
- Often results in larger deduction than actual expenses
Smart Play: If airfare is the same (or less) for staying through the weekend, do it.
Example. A Thursday–Friday meeting in Miami. Option A (fly Thursday, return Friday) is 2 business days with $800 weekend airfare. Option B (return Monday) is 4 business days via the sandwich rule with $600 weekday airfare. You get lower airfare and more deductible days.
Red flag example: a "10-day business trip to Hawaii" with 2 business meetings and 8 days at a beach resort.
IRS response: This will be challenged. You'll need extraordinary documentation to prove this wasn't primarily a vacation.
Entertainment has been non-deductible since 2018 (Tax Cuts and Jobs Act).
❌ Not deductible:
- Ball games with clients
- Golf outings
- Concert tickets
- Nightclub expenses
✅ Still deductible:
- 50% of meals during entertainment events (if separately stated on bill)
Simply writing "business meeting" isn't enough. You need:
- WHO you met with (name, company, title)
- WHAT you discussed (specific business topics)
- EXPECTED OUTCOME (new sales, partnerships, etc.)
Unless your spouse is an employee with genuine business duties, their expenses aren't deductible—even if they attend dinners with you.
You MUST track which days were business and which were personal. Claiming "all business" on a 10-day Hawaii trip will not survive IRS scrutiny.
Airfare, hotels, rideshares, and conference fees hit your bank account as a jumble of charges, and each has a different deduction rule. Jupid is an AI accountant that connects to your bank and automatically categorizes those transactions with 95.9% accuracy, so travel spending is sorted as you go instead of the week before filing. Ask "is my hotel deductible if I stayed the weekend?" over WhatsApp or iMessage and get an answer based on your real transactions. You end up with clean, categorized records to back up the business purpose IRC §274(d) requires.
Try Jupid
| Expense Type | Deduction Limit | Notes |
|---|
| Airfare/transportation | 100% or business % | Depends on business days |
| Hotel/lodging | 100% | Business days only |
| Meals | 50% | Business days only |
| Rental car | 100% or business % | Track business vs. personal miles |
| Parking/tolls | 100% | Business portion only |
| Tips | 50% (meals) or 100% | Follows underlying expense |
| Laundry/dry cleaning | 100% | Trips 7+ days |
| Conference fees | 100% | Must be business-related |
| Internet/phone | 100% | Business use only |
| Entertainment | 0% | Not deductible since 2018 |
Business travel deductions can save thousands of dollars annually—but only if you understand the rules and maintain proper documentation.
The three keys to maximizing your business travel deductions:
- Ensure your trip is primarily for business (more than 50% business days)
- Document everything (receipts + business purpose)
- Use strategies like the sandwich day rule and per diem rates
Remember: The IRS scrutinizes travel deductions closely because of past abuses. Having a legitimate business purpose and contemporaneous records isn't just smart—it's required by law under IRC § 274(d).
Sources and Additional Reading:
- IRS Publication 463, "Travel, Gift, and Car Expenses"
- IRC § 162(a)(2), "Trade or Business Expenses - Travel"
- IRC § 274(d), "Substantiation Requirements"
- IRC § 274(a), "Entertainment Disallowance"
- IRC § 274(h), "Convention Expense Limitations"
- IRS Notice 2025-54, "Per Diem Rates for 2025-2026"
- Treas. Reg. § 1.162-2, "Traveling Expenses"
Disclaimer: This article provides general tax information and should not be considered legal or tax advice. Tax laws change frequently, and individual circumstances vary. Consult with a qualified tax professional or use Jupid's AI-powered platform for personalized guidance.