Rhode Island IFTA Filing — Rates, Portal & Deadlines

Everything an owner-operator needs to file IFTA in Rhode Island — current quarterly rates, the base-state portal, surcharge handling, and the common mistakes that lead to penalties.

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Rhode Island IFTA at a glance

IFTA jurisdictionYes
Administering agencyRhode Island Division of Taxation
Filing frequencyQuarterly (Apr 30, Jul 31, Oct 31, Jan 31)
SurchargeNo
E-file requiredYes (since 2024)
Late penalty$50 or 10% of tax due, whichever is greater
Record retention4 years (fuel receipts, mileage records, ELD logs)

What's specific to Rhode Island

Rhode Island moved to electronic-only IFTA filing in April 2024 — paper returns are no longer accepted. Small state, but still files quarterly even with low miles.

How to file IFTA in Rhode Island

  1. Compile your quarterly mileage by jurisdiction — including deadhead and detour miles. ELD reports (Samsara, KeepTruckin / Motive, Geotab) export this directly.
  2. Compile your fuel purchases by jurisdiction. Fleet-card CSVs from EFS, Comdata, WEX, or RTS produce this in one click; if you're paying by personal card, you'll be reconciling receipts manually.
  3. Calculate fleet MPG (total miles ÷ total gallons), then taxable gallons per state (state miles ÷ fleet MPG). Use the free IFTA calculator if you'd rather not do this by hand.
  4. Apply the current quarterly rate for Rhode Island, then net it against fuel tax already paid at the pump in Rhode Island.
  5. File through the Rhode Island Division of Taxation IFTA portal by the quarterly deadline.
  6. Retain receipts, mileage records, and ELD reports for at least 4 years in case of audit.

Common Rhode Island IFTA mistakes

Mailing paper to Rhode Island

Rhode Island stopped accepting paper IFTA returns in 2024. Filing on paper after that triggers a rejection or a penalty — use the Rhode Island Division of Taxation online portal.

Filing a zero return late

Even if you didn't run Rhode Island this quarter — or didn't run at all — you're still required to file. A late zero return triggers the same $50 minimum penalty as any other late filing.

Mixing up where you fueled vs. where you drove

Fuel purchased at the Rhode Island state line counts for the state at the pump, not the state you drove next. This is where shoebox-of-receipts owner-operators most often lose IFTA credits.

Using rate-con planned miles instead of actual driven miles

The rate con says one number. Your actual mileage — including detours, fuel stops off-route, and rerouting around weather — is usually 5-10% higher. IFTA wants what you actually drove.

Run your Rhode Island IFTA in 3 minutes — free

Upload your rate cons and fuel receipts. We pull the Rhode Islandmiles and gallons, apply current quarterly rates, and hand you a filing-ready PDF.

Open the free IFTA calculator

No signup required. One full calc per IP.


Other state IFTA guides

See all 51 state guides →

IFTA Filing Guide for Owner-Operators

Step-by-step IFTA primer covering all 48 states.

How IFTA Math Works

Worked examples of taxable gallons, credits, and net tax.

Owner-Operator Tax Deductions

Schedule C deductions every owner-operator can claim.

Trucking Compliance Checklist

Every DOT, FMCSA, and state filing in one place.

Stop scrambling at quarter-end. The app does Rhode Island IFTA automatically.

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