| Category | Annual | Per Mile | Share |
|---|
| Annual Miles | Total Cost | Cost Per Mile |
|---|
How Cost Per Mile Is Calculated
Add up everything you spend to keep a vehicle on the road in a year — fuel, maintenance, tires, insurance, registration, and depreciation — then divide by the miles you drive. The result is your true cost per mile, the number that tells you what each mile actually takes out of your pocket.
Fixed Costs vs Variable Costs
Some costs rise with every mile (fuel, tires, much of your maintenance), while others stay roughly the same whether you drive or not (insurance, registration, and most depreciation). Because those fixed costs are spread across however many miles you drive, the more miles you cover, the lower your cost per mile. The mileage table above shows exactly how that curve flattens out.
The Hidden Cost: Depreciation
Depreciation is usually the single biggest line item, yet it never arrives as a bill. It is the value your vehicle quietly loses over time. If you want the honest cost of ownership, include it; if you only care about out-of-pocket spending, set it to zero and read the operating cost instead.
For Gig and Rideshare Drivers
If you drive for rideshare or delivery, your cost per mile is the break-even line your pay has to clear. Compare it against the IRS standard mileage rate, which is designed to approximate the full per-mile cost of operating a vehicle: earn well above your real cost per mile and you are profitable, slip below it and you are paying to work.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a typical cost per mile?
For an average car it often lands between 50 and 80 cents per mile once fuel, upkeep, insurance, and depreciation are included. Trucks, luxury vehicles, and low-mileage cars run higher.
Should I include depreciation?
For the true cost of ownership, yes — it is usually the largest expense. Leave it at zero if you only want your cash operating cost.
Why does driving more lower my cost per mile?
Fixed costs like insurance and registration do not change with mileage, so spreading them over more miles shrinks their share of each mile.
