Turo Tax Calculator — District of Columbia 2026
Free Turo host tax calculator for District of Columbia (DC). Includes the 8.95% District of Columbia state income tax plus federal SE tax (15.3%). No signup required.
Turo hosts in District of Columbia earning $50,000 net owe approximately $11,565 total — $7,065 self-employment tax (15.3%) + $4,500 federal income tax + 8.95% District of Columbia state income tax. Quarterly estimated payment: ~$2,891. Top deductions: vehicle depreciation, insurance, Turo fees, mileage at 72.5¢/mile.
Key Takeaways
- Turo hosts are independent contractors — Turo withholds zero taxes
- On $50,000 net income: ~$7,065 SE tax + ~$4,500 federal = ~$11,565 total in District of Columbia
- Quarterly payments due Apr 15, Jun 16, Sep 15, Jan 15 — ~$2,891 each
- Vehicle depreciation is the largest deduction — up to $12,400/year
- Deduct Turo service fees (25-35% of revenue), insurance, cleaning, repairs
- File Schedule C — report all Turo income on your federal tax return
Interactive Tax Calculator
How Much Tax Do Turo Hosts Pay in District of Columbia?
District of Columbia has a 8.95% state income tax rate. Turo hosts in District of Columbia must make both federal and state quarterly estimated tax payments.
Car-sharing income is generally self-employment income subject to Schedule C reporting and self-employment tax. — IRS Self-Employed Tax Center
| Annual Net Income | SE Tax | State Tax | Federal Tax | Total Est. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $10,000 | $1,413 | $895 | $1,227 | $3,535 |
| $25,000 | $3,532 | $2,238 | $3,067 | $8,837 |
| $50,000 | $7,065 | $4,475 | $6,134 | $17,674 |
| $75,000 | $10,597 | $6,713 | $9,201 | $26,511 |
| $100,000 | $14,130 | $8,950 | $12,267 | $35,347 |
Top Turo Deductions in District of Columbia
- Vehicle maintenance
- Insurance premiums
- Depreciation
- Car cleaning & detailing
- Parking costs
- Turo platform fees
- Phone (business use)
- Home office
FAQ — Turo Taxes in District of Columbia 2026
Turo Tax in Other States
Writes about self-employment tax, gig economy income, and 1099 deductions for US freelancers and independent contractors.