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2008-2009 mileage rate deduction amounts
Each year the Internal Revenue Service determines how much drivers can write off for various types of travel. Any changes are based on an annual study of the fixed and variable costs of operating a vehicle.
In 2008, rising fuel costs prompted the IRS to issue
new rates in the middle of the year. In calculating
your deductions on your 2008 return, you'll
need to be careful to use the figures applicable
to the date on which you drove.
Gasoline prices abated a bit
toward the end of the year, so in 2009 the standard
mileage rates are reduced from the amounts allowable
during the last half of 2008.
While the reimbursement rate for
business mileage, as well as
qualified moving and medical travel, is adjusted
annually for inflation, the rate allowed for
miles driven in aid of a charity is set by statute
at 14 cents per mile. In times of extraordinary
disaster, Congress has increased the standard
mileage rate for miles driven in connection
with a specific charitable cause, such as was
the case following Hurricane Katrina. However,
such changes are temporary.
Below are the per-mile amounts you can claim for different types of tax-deductible travel in 2008, as well as 2009 rates for your planning purposes.
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| Mileage rate deductions |
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2008 per-mile rates
Jan. 1 through June 30 |
50.5 cents |
19 cents |
19 cents |
14 cents |
2008 per-mile rates
July 1 through Dec. 31 |
58.5 cents |
27 cents |
27 cents |
14 cents |
| 2009 per-mile rates |
55 cents |
24 cents |
24 cents |
14 cents |
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