TABLE OF CONTENTS



Uber tax information:

  1. Log into partners.uber.com
  2. Click on ‘Tax Summary’
  3. Select the relevant statement

Your Tax Summary document includes:

  • Your total earnings (gross fares)
  • Potential business expenses (service fee, booking fee, mileage etc.)


Reference

https://www.uber.com/au/en/drive/tax-information/

https://www.uber.com/en-AU/blog/tax-summary/?uclick_id=36371518-995d-404a-bd6b-b1da8c789327



Ubereats tax information

If You ONLY Do Delivery – GST Not Required

You may have heard that Uber drivers must register for GST, but that tax law only applies to people who drive passengers, not food. As a delivery driver, normal tax rules apply, and you only need to register for GST if you earn more than $75,000 per year, which most drivers won’t. So generally speaking, GST registration for UberEats is not required. https://www.drivetax.com.au/tax-for-food-delivery-drivers/


If You Do Delivery AND Rideshare – GST Required

This is where things get confusing.

If you drive for UberEats AND UberX, or do any other ridesharing AND food delivery driving, then you must register for GST because of your ridesharing. This is because all rideshare drivers must register for GST from the first dollar they earn.

Here’s the catch: your GST registration applies to ALL your business activities, not just the rideshare driving. This means you’ll be paying GST on your delivery income AS WELL AS your ridesharing income. Of course, to offset this you can claim back the GST on your delivery expenses to reduce your GST bill, but you’re still likely to be paying a portion of your delivery earnings to the ATO in GST. This is an unfortunate side-effect of doing both types of driving at once.

https://www.drivetax.com.au/tax-for-food-delivery-drivers/ 


https://www.uber.com/au/en/deliver/getting-started/tax-information/