The one mental shift: you're taxed on profit, not pay
DoorDash doesn't withhold anything from your pay. Come tax time you owe tax on your net profit — what you earned minus your business expenses. For most Dashers the giant expense is the car: in 2026 the IRS lets you deduct 72.5¢ for every business mile. Drive 10,000 miles and that's $7,250 off your taxable income before you deduct anything else. This is why tracking miles is the single highest-paying habit in gig work — run yours through the mileage deduction calculator to see what your miles are worth.
The two taxes you actually pay
Self-employment tax — 15.3%. This covers Social Security and Medicare (the part an employer would normally split with you). It applies to 92.35% of your net profit and kicks in once profit hits $400 for the year. There's no standard deduction against it — it bites from the first dollar of profit.
Federal income tax — your bracket. Layered on top, after deducting half your SE tax and your standard deduction. Many part-time Dashers owe little or no income tax but still owe the full 15.3% SE tax — that's the number that surprises people in April. State income tax may apply too; see how it changes your real hourly rate in California, New York, Texas, Florida, or Washington.
What changed for 2026 — № 1: the $2,000 1099 threshold
Starting with 2026 payments, companies only have to issue a 1099-NEC once they've paid you more than $2,000 in the year (it was $600). The 1099-K threshold for payment apps also went back up to $20,000 and 200 transactions. Two things to understand:
First, no form ≠ no taxes. Every dollar is taxable whether or not a 1099 shows up — the IRS expects you to report it all, and SE tax starts at $400 of profit. Second, with fewer forms arriving, your own records become the source of truth. Keep a simple weekly record of earnings and miles — the free weekly log does this on your device, no account needed.
What changed for 2026 — № 2: the tips deduction
Under the 2025 tax law, workers in tipped occupations can deduct up to $25,000 per year of qualified tips from their federal taxable income (tax years 2025–2028). Delivery drivers appear on the IRS tipped-occupation list, so in-app DoorDash tips are generally expected to qualify. The fine print that headlines skip:
It reduces income tax only — you still pay the full 15.3% SE tax on tips. It phases out above $150,000 of income ($300,000 joint). And for self-employed workers the deduction can't push your business below zero, so high-mileage Dashers with big deductions may not be able to use all of it. Still: if a third of your DoorDash income is tips, this is a meaningful cut to your income-tax bill. Platforms are now required to report your tip totals separately, which is what you'll use to claim it when you file.
Quarterly payments: the four dates
Because nothing is withheld, the IRS wants tax through the year if you'll owe $1,000+: April 15 · June 15 · September 15, 2026 · January 15, 2027, paid online at IRS Direct Pay. Underpaying can mean penalties — though paying 100% of last year's total tax (110% for high earners) is a safe harbor. Have a W-2 job too? You can raise your W-2 withholding instead of paying quarterly. Get your number from the quarterly tax calculator.
The 15-minute system that handles all of this
Track every dash mile from the moment you accept your first order (an app or a notes file — anything beats memory). Log each week's earnings and miles in the weekly log. Move 25–30% of profit into a separate account as you earn it. Pay quarterly from that account. And once a month, check your true hourly pay — or compare apps — to make sure the work still beats the alternatives after the car and the IRS take their cut.