Travel and Parking Expenses in Personal Injury Claims (Ireland)
Author: Gary Matthews, Principal Solicitor, Law Society of Ireland PC No. S8178 • 3rd Floor, Ormond Building, 31 to 36 Ormond Quay Upper, Dublin D07 • 01 903 6408 •
Summary: Travel expenses in Irish personal injury claims form part of your special damages. You can recover the cost of getting to medical appointments, physiotherapy, hospital visits, and rehabilitation. The standard approach uses Revenue-approved Civil Service mileage rates [1] rather than fuel receipts alone. Current rates range from 41.80 to 51.82 cent per kilometre for the first 1,500km depending on engine size. The Injuries Resolution Board (IRB) [2], formerly the Personal Injuries Assessment Board (PIAB), renamed on 14 December 2023, expects itemised travel in your Schedule of Special Damages.
Answer in brief: Claim mileage at Civil Service rates (not just fuel) + parking + taxi/bus if medically needed. Log each trip with date, destination, purpose, kilometres. You do NOT need fuel receipts for mileage claims. Include itemised travel in your Schedule of Special Damages for IRB. Sources: Revenue.ie [1]; IRB Claimant Guide [2].
Revenue rates effective 1 September 2022. Band 1: 41.80 to 51.82 c/km. EVs use 1201-1500cc rate.
Any travel directly caused by your injury: medical, physio, hospital, rehab, pharmacy.
Start a travel log immediately. Check your car's engine size. Keep parking receipts.
Do you have a travel log? Medical records showing dates? Can you prove each trip?
Typical travel claim calculation (Ireland 2025):
| Item | Calculation | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Mileage (600km total) | 600 × €0.4340/km | €260.40 |
| Hospital parking (15 visits) | 15 × €8 | €120.00 |
| Taxi (1 trip, couldn't drive) | Actual fare | €45.00 |
| Total travel claim | €442.92 |
Rates: Revenue Civil Service rates 2025 [1]. Amounts are illustrative; your claim depends on actual trips and distances.
Quick Answers
Contents
Disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every case is different and outcomes vary. Consult a qualified solicitor for advice specific to your situation.
What travel expenses can you claim in Ireland?
Travel expenses are part of your special damages. These are out-of-pocket costs that flow directly from your injury. The principle is straightforward: you shouldn't pay for journeys you wouldn't have made if the accident hadn't happened. Irish courts and the Injuries Resolution Board (IRB) [4] accept reasonable travel costs to access treatment.
You can typically claim for travel to GP appointments, consultants, specialists, physiotherapy, occupational therapy, rehabilitation, hospital visits for scans or follow-ups, pharmacy trips for prescriptions, counselling or psychological treatment, and collecting medical aids. Parking at hospitals and clinics counts, as do tolls on treatment-related journeys.
One thing people miss: if a family member or friend drives you because you can't drive yourself, you CAN still claim the mileage. Someone incurred that cost on your behalf. Log it the same way you would your own driving.
What travel you cannot claim
Not all travel is recoverable. Insurers and the IRB push back on expenses that aren't directly linked to treatment or that seem excessive. In most cases, knowing what's excluded helps you focus on what actually counts.
Travel to your solicitor is NOT claimable as special damages. Legal costs are separate. This is NOT the same as medical travel, and including it in your schedule may lead to your entire travel claim being questioned.
Your normal commute doesn't count. If you were off work, you actually saved commuting costs. You can't claim mileage you would have incurred anyway.
Mixed-purpose trips get scrutinised. If you went to the hospital and then stopped at the supermarket, the detour isn't claimable. Only the portion directly attributable to the appointment counts.
Distant providers when local treatment was available may be reduced. If you chose a consultant in Dublin when an equivalent specialist was 10 minutes from home, the insurer may only pay for the shorter journey. The test is reasonableness. Section 34(2)(b) of the Civil Liability Act 1961 [5] requires plaintiffs to mitigate their losses.
Irish mileage rates for personal injury claims
The standard benchmark is the Revenue-approved Civil Service rate [1]. Unlike the UK where the AA rate is commonly referenced, Irish claims use these government-published rates as the accepted standard. They cover more than fuel. Wear and tear, insurance, tax, depreciation, and maintenance are all factored in.
Fuel receipts alone undervalue your claim. Fuel typically represents only 17 to 20% of total vehicle running costs. That's it. Using the Civil Service rate captures the full economic cost.
| Distance Band | Up to 1200cc | 1201 to 1500cc | 1501cc+ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Band 1: 0 to 1,500 km | 41.80 c/km | 43.40 c/km | 51.82 c/km |
| Band 2: 1,501 to 5,500 km | 72.64 c/km | 79.18 c/km | 90.63 c/km |
| Band 3: 5,501 to 25,000 km | 31.78 c/km | 31.79 c/km | 39.22 c/km |
Source: Revenue.ie Circular 16/2022 [1]. Band 1 applies to most injury claimants as medical travel rarely exceeds 1,500 km total. Rates reviewed annually.
Electric and hybrid vehicles
EVs don't have a "cc" rating. Revenue directs that EVs use the 1201 to 1500cc band. So if you drive an EV, apply 43.40 cent per kilometre for Band 1 travel. Hybrid vehicles are categorised by the engine size of their internal combustion component, not as EVs.
Motorcycles and bicycles
Separate rates apply for motorcycles, tiered by engine capacity. For bicycles, a flat rate of 8 cent per kilometre applies. This is relevant for minor upper-limb injuries where cycling remained possible.
How to calculate your travel claim
Calculating travel expenses is straightforward once you have your log. It depends on how many appointments you attended and how far you travelled. Here's a realistic example:
Scenario: Sarah was rear-ended in Dublin. Over 8 months, she needed 16 physiotherapy sessions, 3 GP visits, 2 consultant appointments, and 1 MRI scan. Her car is a 1.4 litre petrol (1201 to 1500cc band).
| Appointment | Trips | Round-trip km | Total km | Amount |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physiotherapy | 16 | 18 km | 288 km | €133.40 |
| GP visits | 3 | 8 km | 24 km | €10.42 |
| Consultant | 2 | 32 km | 64 km | €29.64 |
| MRI scan | 1 | 40 km | 40 km | €18.53 |
| Total mileage (416 km × 43.40c) | €180.54 | |||
| Hospital parking (5 visits × €8) | €40.00 | |||
| Clinic parking (8 visits × €3) | €24.00 | |||
| Grand total travel claim | €256.69 | |||
Over a longer recovery with more appointments, this figure can easily reach €400 to €600. For serious injuries requiring years of treatment, travel costs run into thousands. These amounts are illustrative. Your actual claim depends on your specific circumstances, distances, and appointment schedule.
🧮 Travel Expense Calculator
Calculate your claimable travel costs for medical appointments and treatment
Round trips to all medical appointments
See rate table above for your engine size
M1, M3, M4, N6, M7/M8, N18, N25 tolls
Keep receipts or app records (FreeNow, Bolt, Uber)
Total Claimable Travel Expenses
| Category | Details | Amount |
|---|
Documenting travel expenses: what to keep
Special damages must be "strictly proven." The IRB Claimant Guide [2] expects itemised expenses with supporting evidence. What the form doesn't tell you is that 'travel' must be itemised separately from medical expenses. In practice, lumping them together often leads to reductions.
Your travel log
Create a log with these columns: date of journey, destination (clinic name, hospital), purpose (e.g., "Physio session 4 of 16"), distance (round-trip km), mode of transport, cost, receipt status, and notes.
Evidence to preserve
Photograph parking receipts immediately. Thermal tickets fade within weeks. Download M50 eFlow statements monthly. Export taxi app trip history from Free Now, Uber, or Bolt. If you have a registered Leap Card, download your travel history. Bank statements often show parking payments with timestamps.
Perhaps the best backup is your medical records. Your GP or physio will have notes showing exactly when you attended. Cross-reference these dates with your mileage log.
How to export digital evidence
Digital records can prove you were at a location on a specific date. Here's how to export key evidence sources:
Google Maps Timeline (Android/iOS): Open Settings on your phone, tap Location, then Location Services, then Timeline. Select "Export Timeline data" and save. This creates a JSON file showing everywhere you've been. Note: Since 2025, Timeline data is stored locally on your device, not in the cloud.
FreeNow: Open the app, go to Activity, and screenshot or export each trip receipt. The app stores fare, pickup/drop-off locations, date, and time.
Bolt: Open the app, tap your profile icon, then Trips. Each trip shows fare, route, and timestamp. Email receipts to yourself from the trip details screen.
Uber: Go to Account then Trips. Select a trip and tap "Get receipt" to email yourself a detailed breakdown.
Leap Card: Visit leapcard.ie, log in, and go to Travel History. You can view the last 13 weeks of journeys. Download or screenshot your relevant trips.
eFlow (M50 tolls): Log into your account at eflow.ie, go to Account, then Statements. Download PDF statements showing each toll transaction with date and time.
Sample travel log format
A simple spreadsheet works. Use these columns:
| Date | Destination | Purpose | Round-trip km | Mode | Cost | Receipt? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12 Mar 2025 | Beaumont Hospital | MRI scan | 24 km | Car | €10.42 | N/A (mileage) |
| 15 Mar 2025 | PhysioFirst Clinic | Physio session 1/16 | 18 km | Car | €7.81 | N/A (mileage) |
| 15 Mar 2025 | PhysioFirst Clinic | Parking | €3.00 | Yes (photo) | ||
| 22 Mar 2025 | Mater Hospital | Consultant review | 16 km | Taxi | €28.00 | Yes (app) |
Start this log on day one. Reconstruct it later and you'll forget trips.
📋 Mileage Log Generator
Create a detailed travel record to support your personal injury claim
| # | Date | Destination | Purpose | KM | Parking € | Tolls € | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TOTALS: | 0 km | €0.00 | €0.00 | ||||
| MILEAGE VALUE: | €0.00 | ||||||
| GRAND TOTAL: | €0.00 | ||||||
Major Irish hospital parking rates
Hospital parking adds up quickly over a long recovery. Here are current rates at major Irish hospitals:
| Hospital | 1 hour | 2 hours | 3 hours | Day max | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| St. James's Hospital, Dublin | €2.50 | €5.00 | €7.50 | €15.00 | First 10 mins free. Concessionary rates for frequent patients. |
| Beaumont Hospital, Dublin | €2.40 | €4.80 | €7.20 | €9.00 | Q-Park operated. 24-hour day pass available. |
| Mater Hospital, Dublin | €3.20 | €6.40 | €9.60 | €15.00 | Euro Car Parks. City centre location. |
| Tallaght University Hospital | €2.50 | €5.00 | €7.50 | €10.00 | First 20 mins free. 6-entry pass €25. |
| St. Vincent's Hospital, Dublin | €3.50 | €7.00 | €10.00 | €17.00 | First 20 mins free. Cancer patients €5/day. |
| Connolly Hospital, Dublin | €2.20 | €4.40 | €6.60 | €10.00 | Pre-paid meters. |
Rates change. Check hospital websites before attending. Many hospitals offer concessionary rates for cancer patients, dialysis patients, or frequent attenders. Ask the clinical nurse manager.
Toll road rates you can claim
If your route to treatment involves tolls, these are claimable. Download your eFlow or toll tag statements as proof.
| Toll Road | Tag Rate | Video Account | Unregistered | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M50 (Dublin) | €2.60 | €3.20 | €3.80 | Barrier-free. Pay by 8pm next day or fines apply. |
| Dublin Port Tunnel (off-peak) | €3.50 | €3.50 | €3.50 | Off-peak: before 6am, 10am to 4pm, after 7pm. |
| Dublin Port Tunnel (peak southbound) | €14.00 | €14.00 | €14.00 | Peak: Mon to Fri, 6am to 10am southbound only. |
| M1 (Drogheda bypass) | €1.90 | €1.90 | €1.90 | Barrier toll. |
| M3 (Clonee to Kells) | €1.50/€1.50 | €1.50/€1.50 | €1.50/€1.50 | Two toll points on M3. |
| M4 (Kilcock to Kinnegad) | €2.90 | €2.90 | €3.00 | Barrier toll. |
| N6 (Galway to Ballinasloe) | €1.90 | €1.90 | €1.90 | Barrier toll. |
| M7/M8 (Portlaoise) | €1.90 | €1.90 | €1.90 | Barrier toll. |
| N18 Limerick Tunnel | €1.90 | €1.90 | €1.90 | Barrier toll. |
| N25 Waterford bypass | €1.90 | €1.90 | €1.90 | Barrier toll. |
Source: Transport Infrastructure Ireland. Tag rates are cheapest. Keep toll statements as proof. Claim the rate you actually paid.
Public transport fares for comparison
If an insurer argues you should have taken public transport instead of a taxi, know what the alternative would have cost. These are the fares they'll compare against:
| Service | Leap Card Fare | Cash Fare | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Luas (any distance, Zone 1) | €2.00 | €2.60 to €3.00 | TFI 90-minute fare allows transfers. |
| Dublin Bus (most routes) | €2.00 | €2.60 to €3.60 | Exact fare only. No change given. |
| DART (within Zone 1) | €2.00 | €3.00+ | Covered by TFI 90-minute fare. |
| Bus Éireann (city services) | €2.00 | €2.60 | Cork, Galway, Limerick, Waterford. |
Source: Transport for Ireland. Daily cap €6 (Leap Card, Zone 1). Weekly cap €24. If you took 10 taxi trips at €25 each (€250), but the bus would have cost €20 total, expect challenge unless medically justified.
Travel to the defendant's medical examination
The insurer may require you to attend an Independent Medical Examination (IME) with a doctor of their choosing. This is different from your own treatment appointments.
Who pays? The defendant (or their insurer) pays for the IME itself, including reasonable travel expenses to attend. You should NOT include IME travel in your Schedule of Special Damages because it's the defendant's cost, not yours.
What's reasonable? You cannot be required to travel an unreasonable distance. If the insurer's doctor is in Dublin and you live in Cork, they should either find a Cork-based examiner or pay for your travel and, if necessary, overnight accommodation.
Expenses you can request from the defendant: Mileage at Civil Service rates, parking at the examiner's location, and taxi fare if your injury prevents driving. Submit these directly to the insurer or their solicitor, not as part of your special damages claim.
Travel to medico-legal reports
Your solicitor may arrange for you to see a medical expert to prepare a report for your case. This is different from both treatment and the defendant's IME.
Can you claim this travel? Yes. Travel to solicitor-arranged medical examinations is a legitimate expense arising from your injury. It goes in your Schedule of Special Damages alongside treatment travel.
Not the same as visiting your solicitor. Travel to your solicitor's office is NOT claimable as special damages. But travel to a consultant your solicitor instructs you to see for a medico-legal report IS claimable. The distinction matters.
Log these trips separately in your travel record. Note "medico-legal report" as the purpose. Apply the same mileage rates.
Companion travel to your appointments
Sometimes you need someone to accompany you to appointments. Perhaps you're anxious, have cognitive difficulties from your injury, or need help communicating with medical staff.
Can you claim your companion's travel? If their presence was medically necessary or reasonably required due to your injury, yes. The argument is that the cost flows from your injury.
What makes it claimable: A medical note stating you should be accompanied to appointments. Cognitive or psychological injury affecting your ability to attend alone. Physical injury preventing you from driving yourself (companion drives you).
What's harder to claim: A family member who simply wanted to come along for support, without medical justification. Companionship is appreciated but harder to recover without a medical basis.
Where your companion drives you, you can claim their mileage. Where you both travel separately, you'd need strong justification for claiming both sets of travel.
Failed or cancelled appointment travel
You drove 40km to the hospital. When you arrived, the consultant's clinic was cancelled. Can you claim that travel?
Yes. You incurred the cost. The cancellation wasn't your fault. The travel was undertaken for treatment purposes. It belongs in your special damages.
How to document it: Note in your travel log "Appointment cancelled on arrival" or "Clinic postponed." Keep any text message or letter notifying you of the cancellation. The key is showing you made the journey in good faith for treatment purposes.
What if you cancelled? If you failed to attend through your own fault, that journey is harder to claim. Insurers may argue you should have checked before leaving. Be prepared to explain the circumstances.
Second medical opinion travel
Can you claim travel to get a second opinion on your diagnosis or treatment?
Generally yes, if reasonable. If your treating doctor recommended a second opinion, or if there was genuine uncertainty about diagnosis or treatment, travel to obtain that opinion is a reasonable expense.
The test is reasonableness. Seeking one additional specialist opinion is usually accepted. Travelling to five different consultants for reassurance may face challenge. The question insurers ask: was this opinion necessary or helpful to your treatment?
Document why you sought the second opinion. A referral letter from your GP or treating consultant is strong evidence.
Pharmacy-only trips
Separate trips to collect prescriptions are claimable. You wouldn't have made these journeys but for your injury.
What counts: Trips specifically to collect medication prescribed for your injury. Monthly prescription collections. Emergency pharmacy visits for pain relief.
Tips: If you can collect prescriptions during another medical trip, do so. Insurers may question why you made separate journeys if you could have combined them. But if your prescription needed collecting on a different day, or from a different location, the separate trip is justified.
Log pharmacy trips separately with the pharmacy name and prescription collected.
Waiting time and parking duration
Your appointment was scheduled for 15 minutes. You waited 3 hours. Can you claim the full parking cost?
Yes. You had no control over the waiting time. The hospital or clinic kept you there. Claim the actual parking cost you incurred, not just what a 15-minute appointment would have cost.
Extended appointments: Some consultations run longer than expected. Scans get delayed. Physio sessions extend. Claim the parking for the time you were actually there.
Proof: Your parking receipt shows the duration. If challenged, medical records showing appointment time versus actual attendance time support your claim.
Future travel costs (serious injuries)
For serious injuries requiring ongoing treatment, you can claim future travel costs, not just past expenses.
How it works: Your medical expert estimates how long treatment will continue and how frequently you'll need appointments. A calculation is made: X appointments per year × Y kilometres × mileage rate × Z years = future travel damages.
The multiplier approach: Courts use actuarial multipliers to convert annual losses into a lump sum, discounted for the fact you're receiving money now for future expenses. Factors include your age, life expectancy, and the duration of treatment.
Reddy v Bates [1983] IR 141 established principles for capitalising future periodic losses. For catastrophic injuries (spinal cord injury, severe brain injury), future travel costs over a lifetime can amount to tens of thousands of euro.
Your solicitor will address future travel in serious injury cases. Ensure your medical reports estimate ongoing treatment needs.
Proving distance: what insurers accept
You've logged your journeys, but can you prove the distances are accurate?
Google Maps: Screenshot the route from your home to the destination. Show the round-trip distance. This is widely accepted as reasonable evidence of distance.
AA Route Planner: The AA's online route planner (theaa.ie/routes) is another accepted source. It provides distance in kilometres.
Your car's odometer: If you photographed your odometer before and after key journeys, this provides direct evidence. Few people do this, but it's compelling if you have it.
What insurers challenge: Round numbers that seem estimated ("about 30km each way"). Inconsistent distances for the same destination. Unusually long routes when a shorter one existed.
Use actual route-planner distances. Be consistent. If Google Maps says it's 18.4km, claim 18.4km, not 20km.
What if you've lost your receipts?
This is a common worry. But you do NOT need fuel receipts to claim mileage. Mileage claims work differently. The per-km rate replaces receipt-based proof.
What works without receipts: A detailed mileage log (date, destination, purpose, km) is your primary evidence. Google Maps Timeline can prove you were at the hospital on a specific date. Medical records confirm appointment dates. Bank statements show parking payments even without the original receipt.
What doesn't work: A vague statement like "I attended about 20 appointments and spent roughly €300 on travel" will likely be reduced. Specifics matter. Guesses don't.
One mistake we often see is people waiting until their claim is nearly settled to reconstruct their travel. By then, memories are hazy and digital records may have been deleted. Start logging from day one.
How to include travel in your IRB application
Travel expenses go into your Schedule of Special Damages. The IRB (formerly PIAB until 2023) assesses claims based on documentation. There's no oral hearing to explain a missing receipt. If it's not in writing, it effectively doesn't exist.
Include a clear travel section with an itemised list (date, destination, km, rate, amount), a total figure for mileage, and separate lines for parking, tolls, taxi fares, and public transport. Attach supporting documents.
The IRB application fee is €45 online (€90 for paper). See how to make a claim [4]. While the official assessment timeline is 9 months from respondent consent, in practice we typically see 12 to 14 months for straightforward claims.
How insurers challenge travel claims
Insurers look for opportunities to reduce quantum. They're good at it. Knowing what they'll challenge helps you prepare.
"The travel was excessive." If you drove past three physios to attend one 40 km away, expect pushback. Have a reason ready (your GP specifically recommended that clinic, or it was the only one with availability).
"Taxis weren't necessary." Insurers often push back on taxi claims first, expecting you to justify each one. Having the GP note ready usually ends that line of challenge. Medical evidence that you were unfit to drive is your defence.
"No proof of these journeys." Unvouched estimates get slashed. Every time. The more documentation you have, the harder it is to reduce.
"The rates are too high." Some insurers try to apply lower fuel-only rates. Don't accept that. The Civil Service rate is the established benchmark in Irish practice. Stick to it.
Can family members claim travel to visit you?
When someone is hospitalised for an extended period, the claimant CAN recover travel costs incurred by family members visiting them. This applies even WITHOUT being the one who drove.
The legal basis is "therapeutic value." Visits from a spouse, partner, or parent that aid the patient's recovery can be considered a reasonable expense flowing from the injury. This is established in catastrophic injury cases.
Recoverable: spouse/partner travel to visit a seriously injured plaintiff, parents' travel to visit an injured child (effectively mandatory for minors), reasonable accommodation if distance makes daily travel impractical.
Not recoverable: extended family visits without therapeutic justification, excessive visits beyond what's medically reasonable.
Taxis and public transport: when they're reasonable
Taxis are significantly more expensive than driving or taking the bus. To succeed with taxi claims, you need to show medical necessity.
Taxi use is reasonable when your injury prevents driving (leg fracture, back injury, medication causing drowsiness), when your injury makes public transport impractical, when no public transport exists for your route, or when you'd be sedated after the appointment.
Public transport is the baseline expectation. If you could reasonably have taken the bus, the insurer will argue they're only liable for the bus fare. Export your taxi trip history from the app. It's far better evidence than bank statements alone.
What the GP note should say for taxis
A vague "patient is unwell" note won't cut it. The GP note needs to be specific about why you couldn't drive or use public transport. Effective wording includes:
Example GP note wording: "This patient was medically unfit to drive from [date] to [date] due to [specific injury/condition]. The patient was also unable to use public transport due to [reason: mobility limitations, pain on sitting, risk of falling, sedating medication]. Taxi transport to medical appointments was medically necessary during this period."
Ask your GP to include the date range, the specific reason (not just "injury"), and confirmation that public transport was also unsuitable. This closes off the insurer's usual argument that you could have taken the bus.
Multiple claimants travelling together
If two or more people were injured in the same accident and travel together to appointments, how is mileage calculated?
The general approach: each claimant can claim the mileage if they were a passenger. The cost was incurred on their behalf. If you drove your spouse to their consultant appointment (and you're both injured from the same accident), both of you can include that journey in your respective Schedules of Special Damages.
The practical limit: insurers may push back if the same journey appears twice for the same vehicle. The counter-argument is that each plaintiff has a separate entitlement to recover their losses. Document who was in the vehicle and why. If only one of you had an appointment that day, only that person claims the trip.
Proving travel was injury-related
Insurers occasionally challenge whether travel was genuinely caused by the accident. Google Maps Timeline can help here.
Before vs after comparison: If you can show you never visited a particular physio clinic, hospital, or consultant before the accident, and then started regular visits after, that's strong evidence the travel was injury-caused. Your Timeline history from the months before the accident becomes a baseline.
How to use this: Export your Google Maps Timeline for the 6 months before the accident. Show that you had no visits to the locations you're now claiming travel to. Then export the post-accident period showing regular visits. The contrast speaks for itself.
This approach is particularly useful when claiming travel to a new treatment provider. It rebuts any suggestion you would have made these journeys anyway.
Free and voluntary transport schemes
Some claimants use free or subsidised transport to medical appointments. Does this affect what you can claim?
HSE National Ambulance Service (non-emergency patient transport): If the HSE provides transport to hospital appointments, you didn't incur a cost, so there's nothing to claim for those specific journeys. But you CAN still claim for journeys where you arranged your own transport.
Irish Cancer Society Volunteer Driver Service: This free service uses volunteer drivers to bring cancer patients to treatment. If you used it, you didn't pay, so you can't claim mileage for those trips. Claim only the journeys you paid for yourself.
Irish Wheelchair Association transport: Similar principle. If the service was free, no claim. If you paid a contribution, claim the contribution.
Family or friend drove you for free: This is different. Even though you didn't pay your friend, someone incurred the cost of fuel and vehicle wear. You CAN claim the mileage as if you drove yourself. The loss exists even if it wasn't your pocket it came out of.
The key question: did someone incur an actual cost? If yes, claim it. If the transport was genuinely free (charity, HSE), you can't manufacture a loss that didn't happen.
What the courts have said
Compensation amounts for injuries are now guided by the Judicial Council Personal Injuries Guidelines [7], which replaced the Book of Quantum in 2021. Travel expenses sit alongside these as special damages, calculated separately from general damages for pain and suffering.
Reddy v Bates [1983] IR 141
The Supreme Court established principles for calculating future periodic losses, including ongoing travel expenses in catastrophic injury cases. Why it matters: For serious injuries requiring lifelong treatment, future travel costs can be capitalised using actuarial multipliers, subject to a discount for "vicissitudes of life." Courts.ie [6]
Strict proof of special damages
Irish courts require special damages, including travel expenses, to be strictly proven with documentary evidence. Vague estimates without supporting records are routinely reduced by judges and assessors. Why it matters: Keep detailed records from day one. Courts will not guess at your losses.
Duty to mitigate: Civil Liability Act 1961, s.34
A plaintiff's failure to mitigate losses can be treated as contributory negligence. Why it matters: Choosing expensive transport when cheaper reasonable options existed may reduce your recovery. If you took a €50 taxi when a €3 bus was available and your injury didn't prevent bus travel, expect a reduction. Irish Statute Book [5]
Common mistakes that reduce your travel recovery
- Using fuel receipts instead of mileage rates. Fuel is only 17 to 20% of vehicle running costs. You're leaving money on the table.
- Not keeping a log. Trying to reconstruct travel months later leads to vague estimates that get reduced. Start now.
- Photographing parking tickets late. Thermal receipts fade. Photograph them on the day.
- Claiming mixed-purpose trips in full. If you went to the hospital and then to Dundrum, only the hospital portion is claimable.
- Forgetting tolls. M50 eFlow, Dublin Tunnel. They add up. Download your statements.
- Not getting medical backup for taxis. Without a GP note, taxis become hard to justify.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need receipts to claim mileage?
No, you do NOT need fuel receipts for mileage claims. Mileage is calculated using the per-kilometre Civil Service rate, not by proving fuel purchases. A detailed travel log is your primary evidence.
- Fuel receipts don't prove the fuel was used for medical travel
- The per-km rate covers more than fuel (wear, insurance, depreciation)
- Medical records can corroborate your log by confirming appointment dates
Why it matters: People often don't claim travel because they think no receipt means no claim. That's not how mileage works in Ireland.
Next step: Start a travel log now. Use Google Maps to confirm distances.
What mileage rate should I use?
Use the Revenue Civil Service mileage rates. For Band 1 (0 to 1,500 km): 41.80 c/km (up to 1200cc), 43.40 c/km (1201 to 1500cc), 51.82 c/km (1501cc+). Electric vehicles use the 1201 to 1500cc rate.
- Most injury claimants stay within Band 1 (under 1,500 km total)
- These rates are published by Revenue and widely accepted
- They cover total vehicle running costs, not just fuel
Why it matters: Using fuel-only calculations undervalues your claim by 80% or more.
Next step: Check your car's engine size. Revenue rates [1].
Can I claim travel to my solicitor's office?
No. Travel to legal appointments is NOT part of your special damages. Legal costs are dealt with separately from your injury compensation.
- Only treatment-related travel is claimable as special damages
- This includes medical appointments, not legal ones
Why it matters: Including solicitor travel in your schedule may lead to the entire travel claim being questioned.
Next step: Focus your travel log on medical and rehabilitation journeys only.
Can my partner claim their travel to visit me in hospital?
Potentially yes, if the visits had therapeutic value. You (the injured person) claim these costs as part of your special damages. The argument is that family visits aided your recovery.
- Most relevant for serious injuries with extended hospitalisation
- Parents visiting injured children is routinely accepted
- Medical evidence linking visits to recovery strengthens the claim
Why it matters: For catastrophic injuries, family travel and accommodation can be a significant head of damage.
Next step: Ask your treating doctor to note the importance of family support in your records.
When can I claim taxi fares instead of mileage?
When your injury made driving or public transport unreasonable. You need to show medical necessity. Examples: leg fracture preventing driving, back injury making bus travel painful.
- A GP note saying "unfit to drive" is strong evidence
- Rural areas with no public transport make taxis reasonable by default
- Export your taxi app trip history for detailed proof
Why it matters: Without justification, insurers reduce taxi claims to the public transport equivalent.
Next step: Get written medical confirmation if your injury prevents driving or bus use.
What rate do I use for an electric vehicle?
Electric vehicles use the 1201 to 1500cc band. For Band 1, that's 43.40 cent per kilometre. This is specified in Revenue guidance.
- EVs don't have engine capacity, so Revenue assigns them to a specific band
- Hybrid vehicles use the band matching their combustion engine size
Why it matters: EV drivers sometimes under-claim because they don't know the applicable rate.
Next step: Apply 43.40 c/km (Band 1) for your medical travel. Revenue rates [1].
How much can I expect to claim for travel?
It depends on your treatment intensity. A typical soft tissue injury with 20 physio sessions might generate €200 to €400 in travel. Serious injuries requiring specialist consultants and extended rehab can exceed €1,000.
- 20 appointments × 30km × 43.40 c/km = €260.40 mileage alone
- Add parking (15 × €8 = €120) and total reaches nearly €400
- Rural claimants with longer distances accumulate more
Why it matters: Travel costs are often higher than people expect. Don't leave money unclaimed.
Next step: Calculate your actual mileage using your appointment records and the rates table.
I lost my parking receipts. Can I still claim?
Possibly, with alternative evidence. Bank statements showing parking payments, credit card records, or hospital parking system records may help. For mileage, receipts aren't required anyway.
- Check your bank app for transaction details
- Hospital parking systems may have records if you registered
- Google Maps Timeline can prove you were at the location
Why it matters: Don't abandon a valid claim because one receipt is missing. Alternative proof exists.
Next step: Review your bank statements for the relevant dates.
References
All sources accessed January 2026 unless otherwise noted.
- Revenue.ie: Civil Service Mileage and Subsistence Rates (2025)
- Injuries Resolution Board: Claimant Guide (PDF) (2025)
- Citizens Information: Personal Injuries Resolution Board (2025)
- Injuries Resolution Board: Making a Claim (2025)
- Civil Liability Act 1961, Section 34: Irish Statute Book
- Courts Service of Ireland (2025)
- Judicial Council: Personal Injuries Guidelines (2021)
- Transport Infrastructure Ireland: Toll Locations and Charges (2026)
- Transport for Ireland: Fares (2025)
Related pages on this site
Car accident claims in Ireland: Overview of the claims process
Types of damages you can claim: Special and general damages explained
Loss of earnings claims: Documenting income loss
Medical expenses: Treatment costs and receipts
This page was written by Gary Matthews, Principal Solicitor at Gary Matthews Solicitors, Dublin. Gary holds Law Society of Ireland Practising Certificate No. S8178. The information above is for general guidance only and does not constitute legal advice. For advice on your specific situation, please contact us or request a callback.