IFTA Recordkeeping
Quarterly IFTA Checklist
Quarterly IFTA prep is mostly a record-matching exercise: miles, gallons, trucks, and jurisdictions.
Before filing
- Export mileage by jurisdiction
- Export fuel purchases
- Check unit numbers
- Investigate missing gallons
- Save the filed return or confirmation
Review notes
If the business changed ELDs, fuel cards, trucks, or base jurisdiction, document the change in the quarter's folder.
No automatic rule here
Use your base jurisdiction's current instructions for filing mechanics and due dates.
How to organize your IFTA folder
A quarter folder should hold everything needed to support the filed return and answer questions in an audit. A useful structure: one subfolder for mileage records (ELD exports, trip sheets, odometer readings by jurisdiction), one for fuel records (receipts, card statements, jurisdiction breakdowns), one for the filed return or filing confirmation, and a notes document explaining anything unusual — a new truck added mid-quarter, a fuel card changed, a jurisdiction that had zero miles but fuel purchased. Keeping the folder organized as you go prevents a last-minute search before the filing deadline.
After you file
- Save the filed return or e-filing confirmation — this is the primary record that you filed on time
- Note any refund due or balance paid — keep payment confirmation with the quarter folder
- Start the next quarter folder immediately — create it before you lose the habit
- Review the previous quarter for anything that needed a correction — amended returns are better filed promptly
- Verify that any new trucks added this quarter are properly reflected in your IFTA account with your base jurisdiction
Helpful Tools
FAQ
Is this quarterly IFTA information tax advice?
No. It is general educational information. Trucking businesses should confirm current rules and discuss their facts with a qualified tax professional.
Where can I find official IRS guidance on quarterly IFTA?
The IRS website (irs.gov) is the authoritative source for federal tax rules and forms. Use the IRS search tool or go directly to the relevant publication, form instructions, or agency page linked in the Sources section of this site.
How often does quarterly IFTA information change?
Tax rules, thresholds, and filing requirements can change annually or when Congress passes new legislation. This site includes a last-reviewed date on each page. Always verify current rules against the most recent IRS guidance or state agency materials before filing.
Sources Used
- International Fuel Tax Association — International Fuel Tax Association; accessed 2026-05-25
- International Fuel Tax Agreement (IFTA) — California Department of Tax and Fee Administration; accessed 2026-05-25
- International Fuel Tax Agreement — Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts; accessed 2026-05-25
- International Fuel Tax Agreement (IFTA) — New York State Department of Taxation and Finance; accessed 2026-05-25
- IFTA Record-Keeping Requirements — Arizona Department of Transportation; accessed 2026-05-26
- IRP/IFTA Record Keeping Requirements — Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles; accessed 2026-05-26
- IFTA Frequently Asked Questions — Michigan Department of Treasury; accessed 2026-05-26
- IFTA Record Keeping Requirements — Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles; accessed 2026-05-26
- IFTA Publications — North Carolina Department of Revenue; accessed 2026-05-26
- Interjurisdictional Carrier's Manual — Ontario Ministry of Finance; accessed 2026-05-26
- Motor Carriers Road Tax/IFTA — Pennsylvania Department of Revenue; accessed 2026-05-26
- IFTA FAQ — Georgia Department of Revenue; accessed 2026-05-26
- Recordkeeping — Internal Revenue Service; accessed 2026-05-25
- TruckTaxHub Editorial Policy — TruckTaxHub; accessed 2026-05-25