New York Gig Driver Pay Calculator (2026)

The app shows gross pay. This shows what a New York driver actually keeps after the car, the IRS, and Albany.

Gross hourly
Vehicle cost (72.5¢/mi)
Self-employment tax
Est. federal income tax
Est. NY state tax
Your TRUE hourly pay

Tracking every mile is worth real money

At 72.5¢/mi, a driver logging 15,000 miles/year deducts $10,875 from taxable income. A mileage tracking app does it automatically. Compare mileage trackers →

How this calculator works

Your true hourly pay is what's left after costs the apps never show. We subtract vehicle cost at the 2026 IRS standard mileage rate of 72.5¢ per mile, then self-employment tax (15.3% on 92.35% of profit), federal income tax, and New York state income tax at the rate you pick (most drivers fall in the 4%–6.85% brackets). New York City residents also owe city income tax of roughly 3–3.9% — pick the combined option to approximate it.

NYC minimum pay rules — who they cover

Inside New York City, app delivery workers must be paid a minimum rate per active hour (about $21 in 2025, adjusted annually), and rideshare drivers are covered by TLC per-trip minimums. Two catches: the rules apply only inside NYC — there is no minimum upstate or on Long Island — and "active time" excludes waiting, so whole-shift hourly pay still depends on how busy you stay. Apps have also responded with scheduling and lock-in changes, so measure your own real numbers above rather than assuming the floor.

Tolls and congestion

Bridge and tunnel tolls plus Manhattan congestion pricing can take a real bite out of a driving day. Business tolls are deductible on top of the mileage rate — log them.

Also see: mileage deduction calculator and quarterly tax calculator.

FAQ

How much do gig drivers really make in New York?

Gross pay in NYC is among the highest in the country thanks to minimum pay rules, but after vehicle costs (72.5¢/mi), self-employment tax, federal tax, NY state tax, and — for city residents — NYC city tax, realistic net is often $12–18/hour in the city and lower upstate.

What is the NYC minimum pay for delivery workers?

New York City requires delivery apps to pay a minimum rate per active hour — about $21 in 2025, adjusted annually. It only covers time on a trip, only applies inside NYC, and apps have adjusted scheduling in response, so measure your whole-shift pay rather than assuming the floor.

Do New York gig drivers pay state income tax?

Yes. Gig profit is taxed by New York State at your regular bracket (4%–10.9%; most drivers 4–6.85%), and New York City residents owe an additional city income tax of roughly 3–3.9%. Mileage deductions reduce federal, state, and city taxable income.

Other states: California · Texas · Florida · Washington · all calculators

Estimates for educational purposes only — not tax, legal, or financial advice. State rules and rates change; consult a tax professional about your situation.