Built for rideshare drivers

Every fare. Every mile. Every dollar.

Multi-app drivers run a self-employed business out of a car. NeighCheck tracks per-app earnings, mileage, vehicle expenses, and self-employment tax — and projects what you actually clear after costs.

The gap between gross fare earnings and what's left after gas, depreciation, maintenance, and self-employment tax is enormous. Most rideshare drivers don't see that gap clearly until tax time. NeighCheck builds the picture in real time so you can decide which apps to drive, which hours to surge, and which weeks to pull back.

Multi-app
Unlimited
per-app earnings + bonuses tracked
Mileage
IRS standard
automatic per-shift tally
SE tax
Built-in
15.3% layer over income tax
What you get

The full feature set, tuned to your job.

Per-app earnings tracking

Uber, Lyft, DoorDash, multi-app shifts. Tag each shift with which apps you drove and the gross from each.

Tips separated from fares

Rideshare tips are taxable but separate from base fare. NeighCheck holds them as their own field.

Quest, surge, and bonus tracking

Promotional earnings tracked separately so you can see whether your weekend quest was worth it after costs.

Real mileage at the IRS standard rate

Per-shift mileage entered manually (or imported), tallied across the year. 65.5¢/mile in 2026 — actually applied to your tax projection.

Vehicle expense tracker

Gas, oil, maintenance, insurance, tires, washes — categorized for Schedule C. Compare standard-mileage vs. actual-expense at year-end.

Net hourly rate, not gross

Gross earnings ÷ hours is a fairy tale. NeighCheck nets out mileage cost (or actual fuel) and shows the real number.

Self-employment tax estimator

15.3% SE tax + federal income tax + state. Quarterly 1040-ES estimates with due-date reminders.

Wage Wire — rideshare feed

Anonymous net hourly averages from other drivers. Filter by city and platform.

Employer Intel — apps rated by drivers

Uber, Lyft, and the smaller platforms rated on pay transparency, support, and deactivation fairness.

FAQ

Common questions.

Do I have to log every ride?
No. Most drivers log per-shift totals: gross earnings, tips, miles, hours, expenses. That's enough to drive the tax dashboard and the insights. Per-ride logging is available for drivers who want it.
Does it import from Uber or Lyft?
Not currently. Both apps gate full earnings data behind their own dashboards. NeighCheck takes a manual end-of-shift entry — typically 30 seconds — that gives you a unified, multi-app view neither company offers.
Standard mileage vs. actual expense — which is better?
Depends on the year and the car. NeighCheck tracks both. At year-end you can see which deduction is larger and use that on your return. Standard mileage is usually higher for newer, more efficient cars; actual expense can win for older or high-cost vehicles. (Talk to a tax preparer for your specific situation.)
How does it handle quarterly taxes?
The Quarterly Payments view estimates what you owe on a rolling basis, including SE tax. Due-date reminders fire automatically. You take the suggested amount and submit it through IRS Direct Pay or your bank.
Download free

Log tonight's shift. See what you actually made.

Free on iOS and Android. Every feature unlocked. No ads, no trial gate.