not unless your home is your place of employment and you travel to other places (IE sales calls). If you are traveling from home to an office everyday, then it is deemed commuting and therefore non-deductible
2007-01-09 05:55:17
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answer #1
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answered by extra_37 4
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No. Travel to and from your job is not deductible.
If you are using your car for business purposes on behalf of the company (for example a traveling salesman, or are required to use your own vehicle for deliveries, etc.) then those miles are deductible. The IRS has a standard mileage rate to use. You still cannot deduct the car itself.
2007-01-09 13:13:45
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answer #2
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answered by blondie172 2
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You can not deduct your car at all on your taxes, only the mileage. You can only claim mileage for traveling from your place of work (i.e the office or warehouse, or wherever it is you report to for the day) to the job site. Driving to and from work, regardless of how far it is, is not deductible.
2007-01-11 16:24:40
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Commuting between your home and your employer is not a deductible item. It is considered a personal expense. The mileage involved does not change the answer.
2007-01-09 13:13:20
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answer #4
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answered by zudmelrose 4
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No. Traveling to and from work is not deductible. Commuting expenses are considered to be personal expenses.
2007-01-09 13:23:17
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answer #5
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answered by Judy 7
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if you use the long tax form and itemize all expenses (make sure you saved gas receipts) you actually can deduct gas and part of what you paid for insurance on the vehicle,can also claim dry cleaning for work clothes,if you pay toll and lots of other stuff, the company that does my taxes has been doing it for years.
2007-01-09 13:48:23
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answer #6
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answered by goldengirl 1
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Nope...
2007-01-09 13:34:28
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answer #7
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answered by dapixelator 6
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NO!!!!
2007-01-09 13:11:50
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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