![]() |
| Fundraising / Car Donation |
Car DonationDonating A Car to CharityDonating a car to charity is not that difficult. However, you need to be aware of the tax regulations before you donate your car to a non-profit organization. The IRS provides some general rules of thumb on car donations:
This is substantially different than earlier years when you could deduct the entire estimated fair market value instead of the amount that the car donation actually raised for the charity. Another caveat is that many non-profit organizations use a third-party administrative service to handle the pick-up and auction sale or your car donation. The resulting administrative fees are often 20% or more of what the car sells for at auction. Your tax deduction is correspondingly lowered by the amount of third-party
fees because the net amount the charity receives has been reduced. In the example above, your
car donation deduction would be reduced from $2,500 to $2,000. Car Donations: IRS RulesSignificant Use & Material ImprovementsIf the charity significantly uses or materially improves the vehicle, they must certify that in the form of an acknowledgement to the donor (within 30 days of the contribution). In the case of significant use or material improvement, the donor may usually
deduct the vehicle's market value ($4,000 in the example above).
Significance also depends on the frequency and duration of use by the non-profit organization.
Cleaning the vehicle, minor repairs, and routine maintenance are not material improvements. Make sure you don't get misled by a car donation sales pitch claiming higher tax deductions than the IRS allows. See IRS Publication 561, Determining the Value of Donated Property |
|
||||
|
Copyright © 1999-2069 - Net Sense | Privacy
|
Fund Raisers |
More Fundraising Ideas | More Fundraisers |