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Issue
Number: IR-2009-114
Inside This
Issue
IRS Offers Tips
for Year-End Donations
Watch Video: Year-End Tax Tips:
English
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WASHINGTON — Individuals and
businesses making contributions to charity should keep in mind several
important tax law provisions that have taken effect in recent years.
Some of these changes include
the following: Special Charitable
Contributions for Certain IRA Owners
This provision, currently
scheduled to expire at the end of 2009, offers older owners of individual
retirement accounts (IRAs) a different way to give to charity. An IRA
owner, age 70½ or over, can directly transfer tax-free up to $100,000 per
year to an eligible charity. This option, created in 2006, is available
for distributions from IRAs, regardless of whether the owners itemize
their deductions. Distributions from employer-sponsored retirement plans,
including SIMPLE IRAs and simplified employee pension (SEP) plans, are not
eligible. To qualify, the funds must be
contributed directly by the IRA trustee to the eligible charity. Amounts
so transferred are not taxable and no deduction is available for the
transfer. Not all charities are eligible.
For example, donor-advised funds and supporting organizations are not
eligible recipients. Amounts transferred to a
charity from an IRA are counted in determining whether the owner has met
the IRA’s required minimum distribution. Where individuals have made
nondeductible contributions to their traditional IRAs, a special rule
treats transferred amounts as coming first from taxable funds, instead of
proportionately from taxable and nontaxable funds, as would be the case
with regular distributions. See Publication 590,
Individual Retirement Arrangements (IRAs), for more information on
qualified charitable distributions. Rules for Clothing and
Household Items To be deductible, clothing and
household items donated to charity generally must be in good used
condition or better. A clothing or household item for which a taxpayer
claims a deduction of over $500 does not have to meet this standard if the
taxpayer includes a qualified appraisal of the item with the return.
Household items include furniture, furnishings, electronics, appliances
and linens. Guidelines for Monetary
Donations To deduct any charitable
donation of money, regardless of amount, a taxpayer must have a bank
record or a written communication from the charity showing the name of the
charity and the date and amount of the contribution. Bank records include
canceled checks, bank or credit union statements, and credit card
statements. Bank or credit union statements should show the name of the
charity, the date, and the amount paid. Credit card statements should show
the name of the charity, the date, and the transaction posting date.
Donations of money include
those made in cash or by check, electronic funds transfer, credit card and
payroll deduction. For payroll deductions, the taxpayer should retain a
pay stub, a Form W-2 wage statement or other document furnished by the
employer showing the total amount withheld for charity, along with the
pledge card showing the name of the charity. These requirements for the
deduction of monetary donations do not change the long-standing
requirement that a taxpayer obtain an acknowledgment from a charity for
each deductible donation (either money or property) of $250 or more.
However, one statement containing all of the required information may meet
both requirements. Reminders
To help taxpayers plan their
holiday-season and year-end giving, the IRS offers the following
additional reminders:
For additional information on
charitable giving:
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