Tax & Legal By Gregor Spielmann

How to Document Business Travel for Tax Purposes: A Practical Guide

If you travel for work and want to claim those expenses -- or simply need to demonstrate that your travel has a legitimate business purpose -- documentation is everything. Tax authorities don't care about your intentions; they care about your records. This guide covers exactly what to document, how to organize it, and the mistakes that cost people money.

What Counts as Business Purpose

Before you can document business travel, you need to understand what qualifies. The definition varies by jurisdiction, but most tax authorities share a similar framework: travel has a business purpose when the primary reason for the trip is to conduct, advance, or maintain your business.

Clearly qualifies:

Gray area:

Generally does not qualify:

The key principle: would you have made this trip if there were no business reason? If the honest answer is yes -- you wanted to go to Barcelona anyway -- then the business deduction is on shaky ground. If the honest answer is that the trip was driven by business needs and you happened to enjoy the location too, you're on solid footing.

Documentation Requirements: What to Keep and How

The standard most tax authorities apply is that you need contemporaneous records -- documentation created at or near the time of the expense, not reconstructed later from memory. Here's the complete list of what to keep:

For each trip:

For business activities during the trip:

For expenses:

The golden rule: if it would take you more than 30 seconds to log an expense or a meeting, your system is too complicated and you'll stop doing it.

Digital Tools for Tracking Everything

You don't need specialized software, but you do need a system you'll actually use. Here's what works:

Travel day log: A Google Sheet with columns for Date, Country, City, and Primary Business Activity. Update it daily -- set a recurring reminder on your phone for 6 PM. This takes 15 seconds per day and creates the backbone record that ties everything else together. I've maintained mine since 2023, and it's been the single most useful document during tax preparation.

Receipt capture: Your phone camera plus a dedicated Google Drive or Dropbox folder, organized by month. When you get a receipt, photograph it, drop it in the folder, done. Some people prefer dedicated apps like Dext (formerly Receipt Bank), Expensify, or Smart Receipts -- these add OCR, categorization, and export features. They're nice but not necessary if a folder system works for you.

Expense tracking: If you use accounting software (Xero, QuickBooks, FreshBooks), log expenses there directly with the receipt attached. If you don't, a spreadsheet works: Date, Description, Amount, Currency, Category, Business Purpose. The "Business Purpose" column is the one that matters most and the one people always skip.

Calendar as evidence: Your Google Calendar or Outlook calendar is powerful passive documentation. Every meeting you schedule, every call you take -- it's all timestamped with participants. Don't delete old calendar events. They're a chronological record of your business activities that an auditor can follow. I export my calendar annually as a backup.

Email archive: Don't delete business correspondence. Emails confirming meetings, travel arrangements, and client interactions are contemporaneous evidence. Gmail's storage is generous enough that archiving everything is the simplest approach.

What I actually use: Google Sheet for the day log, Google Drive folder for receipts (organized as /Receipts/2026/04-April/), Xero for formal expense tracking and invoicing, and my Google Calendar as the meeting evidence backbone. Total daily time investment: about 2-3 minutes.

Common Mistakes That Cost Money

These are the errors I see most frequently -- either from personal experience or from conversations with tax advisors who deal with remote professionals:

Mistake 1: Reconstructing records after the fact. "I'll sort out my receipts at the end of the quarter" means you'll be guessing at amounts, missing receipts, and creating records that are obviously backdated. Tax authorities can tell the difference between contemporaneous records and reconstructed ones. Log as you go.

Mistake 2: Not separating personal and business expenses. If a trip is 60% business and 40% personal (you extended your stay for a weekend of sightseeing), you need to clearly allocate which days and expenses are business and which are personal. Claiming 100% of a mixed trip is a red flag. Being honest about the split is both legally required and strategically smart -- it makes the business portion more credible.

Mistake 3: Claiming expenses without documenting the business purpose. A receipt for a dinner in Barcelona proves you ate dinner in Barcelona. Without a note saying "Client dinner with [Name] from [Company] -- discussed Q3 project scope," it's a personal expense. The business context transforms a receipt into a deductible expense.

Mistake 4: Ignoring the "ordinary and necessary" test. In most jurisdictions, deductible business expenses must be ordinary (common in your line of work) and necessary (helpful and appropriate for your business). A coworking space is ordinary and necessary. A luxury hotel suite is harder to justify unless there's a specific business reason.

Mistake 5: Not keeping records for the required retention period. Most countries require you to keep tax records for 5-10 years. That Airbnb receipt from 2023? You may need it in 2029 if audited. Digital storage is cheap. Keep everything.

Mistake 6: Using a single bank account for personal and business expenses. Co-mingling makes it dramatically harder to separate and document business expenses. Open a dedicated business account (Wise Business is ideal for this) and run all business expenses through it. This single change makes tax preparation 10x easier.

The 'Reasonable Business Purpose' Test

Most tax frameworks ultimately come down to a reasonableness test: would a reasonable person, looking at the evidence, conclude that this travel and these expenses had a legitimate business purpose? If the answer is yes, you're fine. If the answer is "maybe, but it looks like a vacation," you have a problem.

How to pass the test:

The practical reality: tax authorities go after clear abuse and large discrepancies. If you're maintaining honest, organized records and your claims are reasonable, you're in a strong position. The professionals who get audited and penalized are typically those with no records at all, wildly disproportionate claims, or obvious misclassification of personal expenses as business.

The documentation system described in this guide -- a daily travel log, organized receipts, clear business purpose notes, and separated bank accounts -- is exactly what a tax advisor would recommend. It takes minutes per day and gives you confidence during tax season. Start today, even if your records for past travel are incomplete. Going forward with good documentation is always better than retroactively trying to reconstruct the past.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long do I need to keep business travel records?

Most countries require 5-7 years, but some (like Germany) require up to 10 years for certain records. The safest approach: keep everything digitally for 10 years. Cloud storage is cheap, and having records you don't need is infinitely better than needing records you deleted. Set up a simple annual archive folder and move each year's records into it.

Can I deduct coworking space fees as a business travel expense?

Generally yes, if the coworking space is used for legitimate business work during a business trip. It's an ordinary and necessary business expense for a location-independent professional. Keep the receipt and note which client work or business activity you conducted there. If you have a monthly coworking membership in your home base, that's typically deductible as a regular office expense rather than a travel expense.

What if I combine a business trip with a vacation extension?

You can deduct the business portion but not the personal extension. The key: transport costs (flights) may be fully deductible if the primary purpose of the trip was business. Accommodation and daily expenses are only deductible for the business days. Document clearly which days were business and which were personal. If the trip is primarily personal with a minor business component, the entire trip may be treated as personal by tax authorities.