Commuter Allowance for Self-Employed in Germany 2026: How to Deduct Trips to Your Business
Self-employed Germans can claim the commuter allowance (Pendlerpauschale) for trips to a regular place of business. Rates, rules and EÜR booking for 2026.
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Many self-employed people in Germany overlook that there are two different ways to deduct travel costs — and confusing them either leaves money on the table or triggers a clarification request from the tax office. The Entfernungspauschale (commuter allowance, often called "Pendlerpauschale") covers the daily route to your regular place of work. Business trips, by contrast, are deducted at the actual kilometer rate. Here's the clean separation — with rates, examples, and how to book it in 2026.
Commuter allowance vs. business travel — the key distinction
The split depends on where the journey is going:
- Commuter allowance: trips between your home and a regular place of business. Only the one-way distance per working day counts — not round trip.
- Business travel costs: trips to clients, sites, conferences, suppliers, or any place without a fixed connection — full kilometer rate for both directions. See business travel expenses for the self-employed.
If you work from an external office or coworking space with a permanent desk, your trips there qualify as commuter allowance. If you spend your day rotating between client locations, you don't have a regular place of business — every trip is a business travel cost.
What's the commuter allowance worth in 2026?
Rates are tiered:
- €0.30 per one-way kilometer for the first 20 km
- €0.38 per one-way kilometer from km 21 onwards
Worked example: you have 35 km one-way to your office and 220 working days. The math: (20 × €0.30) + (15 × €0.38) = €6.00 + €5.70 = €11.70 per day × 220 days = €2,574 deductible as a business expense per year.
There's a €4,500 annual cap if you use anything other than your own car (bike, public transport, carpool). With your own car, the cap doesn't apply.
What counts as a "regular place of business"?
A regular place of business (erste Tätigkeitsstätte in tax law) is established when all three of the following are true:
- You go there long-term (open-ended or longer than 48 months)
- It's a fixed location (your own practice, a rented office, a coworking desk)
- You typically work there at least one day per week, or one-third of your contracted working time
A home workshop or home office does not count as a place of business — meaning pure work-from-home days don't trigger a commuter allowance. If you mostly work from home, look at the rules for the home office deduction in Germany instead.
Which means of transport?
The commuter allowance is mode-neutral — the per-kilometer rate is the same whether you drive, cycle, take the train, or scooter in. Public-transport users may alternatively claim the actual ticket cost if it's higher than the flat rate (for example, an expensive intercity ticket on top of the Deutschland-Ticket).
If you drive a leased company car that's also used privately under the 1 % rule, commuter trips are handled differently: 0.03 % of the gross list price per month per distance-kilometer is added as a taxable benefit, and the commuter allowance is then deducted as a counter-entry on the business side.
How to book commuter costs in the EÜR
In your income surplus calculation (EÜR):
- Commuter allowance: as business expense under "Fahrtkosten Wohnung — Betriebsstätte" (SKR03: 4670, SKR04: 6520).
- Business travel costs: under "Reisekosten Unternehmer" or "Fahrtkosten" for everything else.
You don't strictly need a driver's logbook (Fahrtenbuch) for the commuter allowance — what you need is a record of working days and the one-way distance. A calendar export or a simple spreadsheet with date and destination is enough.
Common mistakes — and how to avoid them
- Counting round trips: The commuter allowance covers only the one-way distance per day — never both directions.
- Claiming pure home-office days: If you spent the whole day in your home office, you have no commute. Use the home-office flat rate (€6/day, max €1,260/year) instead.
- Logging minor errands: Short trips to the post office or the bank don't usually count as travel costs.
- Wrong distance: The shortest road connection is the default — detours are only accepted if they're materially faster (avoiding traffic, fewer signals).
Conclusion
For many self-employed Germans, the commuter allowance is the single biggest line item in the EÜR — claimed correctly, it saves several thousand euros in tax per year. The keys are a clean distinction between commute and business trip, proper documentation of working days, and correct bookkeeping. Norman handles all of it automatically: you enter your business-site address and working days, and the rest flows through the tax return for self-employed.
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