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Uber & Rideshare Driver Taxes in Vancouver — The Complete Guide for 2026

Driving for Uber, Lyft, or DoorDash in Vancouver comes with tax obligations that most drivers don't fully understand — until they get a surprise bill from the CRA. The good news is that rideshare drivers are also entitled to significant deductions that can dramatically reduce what you owe. This guide covers everything you need to know.

🚗 You Are Self-Employed

As an Uber, Lyft, or DoorDash driver, you are considered self-employed by the CRA — not an employee. This means no tax is withheld from your earnings, you are responsible for reporting all income and paying all tax owing, and you must file a T1 return with a Schedule T2125 (Business Income) attached.

What Income Do You Need to Report?

You must report all income earned from rideshare and delivery platforms including:

  • Gross fares from Uber, Lyft, or other rideshare platforms
  • Delivery fees from DoorDash, Uber Eats, or Skip the Dishes
  • Tips received through the app or in cash
  • Bonuses and incentive payments from the platform
  • Any surge pricing or promotional earnings

⚠️ Report Gross — Not What You Were Paid

Uber and other platforms deduct their service fee before paying you. You must report your gross earnings — the full fare before Uber's cut — not just the amount deposited in your bank account. You then deduct the platform fee as a business expense. Your annual tax summary from Uber shows your gross earnings.

GST/HST — The Biggest Surprise for New Drivers

This is where most Vancouver rideshare drivers get caught off guard. Unlike most self-employed people who only register for GST/HST once they earn $30,000, rideshare drivers must register for GST/HST from the very first dollar they earn — with no small supplier exemption.

Type of Work GST/HST Threshold Registration Required
Most self-employed (freelancers, consultants) $30,000 in revenue Only after threshold
Rideshare drivers (Uber, Lyft) $0 — first dollar Immediately upon starting
Delivery drivers (DoorDash, Uber Eats) $30,000 in revenue Only after threshold

This rule applies specifically to rideshare (passenger transportation). If you only do food delivery, the regular $30,000 threshold applies. If you do both, you must register for GST/HST immediately for the rideshare portion.

📌 The Good News About GST/HST

Once registered, you collect GST/HST on your fares and remit it to the CRA — but you can also claim Input Tax Credits (ITCs) to recover the GST/HST you paid on business expenses like gas, car washes, and phone bills. This reduces your net GST/HST owing significantly.

Tax Deductions for Vancouver Rideshare Drivers

This is where you can save a significant amount of money. As a self-employed driver, you can deduct all reasonable expenses incurred to earn your rideshare income.

Vehicle Expenses

Gas, oil changes, tires, repairs, insurance, and registration — based on the percentage of kilometres driven for business vs personal use.

Vehicle Depreciation (CCA)

You can claim Capital Cost Allowance on your vehicle — depreciating its value over time as a business asset.

Platform Service Fees

The percentage Uber or Lyft takes from each fare is a fully deductible business expense — deduct it from your gross earnings.

Phone & Data Plan

The portion of your phone bill used for driving (the app, navigation, communication) is deductible — typically 50–80% for active drivers.

Car Washes & Cleaning

Keeping your vehicle clean for passengers is a legitimate business expense — fully deductible.

Water & Snacks for Passengers

If you provide amenities to passengers, these costs are deductible as business expenses.

Dash Cam & Accessories

Safety equipment and phone mounts used for your driving business are deductible in the year purchased or depreciated over time.

Accounting & Tax Prep Fees

The cost of having PC Tax Solutions prepare your return and handle your GST/HST filings is fully deductible.

The Mileage Log — Your Most Important Record

Because your vehicle is used for both business and personal purposes, the CRA requires you to keep a mileage log to calculate the business-use percentage of your vehicle expenses.

Your mileage log must record:

  • The date of each trip
  • The starting and ending odometer reading
  • The destination and business purpose
  • Total kilometres driven

For Uber drivers, your app records all trip kilometres while you have a passenger. However, you can also claim kilometres driven while waiting for or driving to pick up a passenger — these are business kilometres too. Keep a record of your total kilometres driven for the year (from your odometer) and your business kilometres (from Uber's annual summary plus your log for dead kilometres).

✅ Pro Tip — Download Your Annual Uber Tax Summary

Uber provides an annual tax summary showing your gross earnings, total trips, and online hours. Download this from the Uber Driver app under Account → Tax Information before your tax appointment. Lyft provides a similar summary. This is your primary income document.

What Records to Keep All Year

Rideshare Driver Record-Keeping Checklist

  • Annual tax summary from Uber, Lyft, DoorDash (downloaded from the app)
  • Mileage log — total km and business km for the year
  • Gas receipts (or credit card statements showing fuel purchases)
  • Vehicle insurance documents and receipts
  • Vehicle registration and licence fees
  • Repair and maintenance receipts
  • Car wash receipts
  • Phone bills showing monthly cost
  • GST/HST account registration confirmation
  • GST/HST filing confirmations and payment receipts
  • Any other business expense receipts

How Much Tax Will I Owe?

This depends on your total income from all sources, but here's a simplified example for a Vancouver Uber driver earning $40,000 gross from rideshare:

  • Gross rideshare income: $40,000
  • Less: Uber service fees (25%): -$10,000
  • Less: Vehicle expenses (60% business use on $12,000 total): -$7,200
  • Less: Phone (70% business): -$840
  • Less: Other expenses: -$1,500
  • Net business income: ~$20,460

On $20,460 of net income, your combined federal and BC provincial tax would be approximately $3,000–$4,000 — plus CPP contributions on self-employment income of roughly $2,100. Keeping good records and claiming all eligible deductions makes a real difference.

⚠️ Don't Forget CPP Contributions

Self-employed individuals pay both the employee and employer portions of CPP — approximately 11.9% of net self-employment income in 2025, up to the maximum. This is on top of your income tax. Many new rideshare drivers are surprised by this additional amount owing at tax time.

Common Mistakes Rideshare Drivers Make

  • Not registering for GST/HST immediately — the CRA can assess all uncollected GST/HST back to your first trip
  • Reporting net income instead of gross — always report gross fares, then deduct platform fees separately
  • Not keeping a mileage log — without one, the CRA can disallow your vehicle deductions entirely
  • Forgetting to save for taxes — set aside 25–30% of your net earnings throughout the year
  • Missing the GST/HST filing deadline — separate from your T1 return
  • Not claiming dead kilometres — driving to pick up passengers counts as business use

Rideshare taxes are complicated — we make them simple

PC Tax Solutions works with Uber, Lyft, and DoorDash drivers throughout Vancouver. We handle your T1, your Schedule T2125, and your GST/HST filings — so you can focus on driving. Book a free consultation today.

Book a Free Consultation

Frequently Asked Questions

I just started driving for Uber last month. Do I need to register for GST/HST right away?

Yes — rideshare drivers must register for a GST/HST account before they start driving or as soon as they begin. There is no minimum earnings threshold for rideshare. Contact the CRA or call us and we'll help you get registered quickly.

I drive for both Uber and DoorDash. How does GST/HST work?

Because you do rideshare (Uber), you must be GST/HST registered immediately. Once registered, all your self-employment income — including DoorDash — falls under your GST/HST account. You collect and remit GST/HST on rideshare fares, and claim Input Tax Credits on your business expenses.

Can I deduct my car payment?

Not directly — you cannot deduct loan payments. However, you can deduct the interest on a vehicle loan (proportional to business use) and claim Capital Cost Allowance (CCA) on the vehicle itself. If you lease your vehicle, the lease payments are deductible based on your business-use percentage.

What if I drive full-time for Uber and have no other income?

Your rideshare income is your primary income and is taxed as self-employment income. You'll file a T1 with Schedule T2125, pay income tax on your net earnings, and pay CPP contributions. You may also be eligible for the Canada Workers Benefit if your net income is below the threshold.

Uber sent me a T4A slip — what do I do with it?

Some platforms issue T4A slips showing payments made to you. Include this on your T1 return, but make sure you're reporting the correct gross amount from your annual tax summary — the T4A may show a net amount after platform fees. Bring both documents to your tax appointment.

CH

Catherine Healey — Co-Founder, PC Tax Solutions

Catherine is a registered tax preparer (IRS PTIN holder) and H&R Block certified in Canadian and US federal income tax. PC Tax Solutions works with self-employed Vancouverites including rideshare and delivery drivers. Located at 5839 Prince Edward Street, Vancouver BC. Learn more about our team →