Car Donation Tips

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Car Donation Tips

Car Donation Tips - What to look out for when donating your car:

It's important to observe a few rules to make sure you don't lose your tax advantage.

Also, when donating a car, you have different ways of doing so, and not all are to the advantage of the charity you want to profit. It pays to know how to handle a car donation.

Determining the Value of Your Charitable Car Donation and Avoiding Audit

It could be said that the new regulations regarding car donation, going into effect during the 2005 tax season, actually make it easier to avoid audit, since there is far less wiggle room to maneuver within. However, to actually take a legal deduction from your taxes, there will need to be some forms filed and receipts gathered.

Detailed Information About Car Donation

Before you donate your car, you should read up on the correct procedures and the right car donation partners to make sure you don't end up with a high bill instead of savings on taxes and disposal cost when giving your car away to charity!
Car Donation - Home
To donate a car can be either easy (and even save you money and/or taxes) or you can become entangled in all sorts of problems with a car donation. Here's a list with the most important points to observe to avoid problems later:

Used Cars - Used Car Donation Photos

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Avoid IRS Problems When Donating Your Car

Charitable Tax Deductions from Donating Your Car

The extent to which you are required to prove the worth of your charitable donation, given to a IRS approved 501 (c)(3) non-profit organization (NPO), is determined by the likely value of the gift.

That said, one doesn't always know what the sale of their car will fetch in the marketplace, regardless of what some chart may tell you. The actual price your car donation fetches will be your deductible value, and this can actually be rather low when sold on the wholesale market, especially by a third-party agency that facilitates car donation for NPOs that lack the facilities or manpower to handle such donations themselves.

Begun several decades ago by the Goodwill Corporation to train their employees and recycle unwanted vehicles, car donation programs were designed to be offered by NPOs alone to serve a direct and needy market.

In the 1990s, a tremendous upsurge in for-profit organizations that spent a great deal of money on advertisements created a rapidly expanding trend of even lower-middle class individuals using car donation to reap the charitable tax deductions offered by the receiving agents.

Car Donation News

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Guide To Car Donation

New rules for vehicle donations: IRS tries to curb abuses.(from The Tax Adviser): An article from: Journal of Accountancy

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How To Handle Your Own Car Donation.

When assessing your car donation, one must really consider what it is worth on the market, both if you sell it yourself and if you use another agency to sell it on the wholesale market for you. One can assume anywhere from 20-60% of the value of the retail market in such sales. Since a great many NPOs still use third-party (over 95% being for-profit organizations according to a scathing 2002 investigative article) intermediaries to manage the pickups, title-transfers and sales, you should give some hard consideration to how you want to handle your own car donation.

Many people choose to fix up and sell their own vehicles, preferring to pay tax on that "income" and give the remainder to the charity of their choice. Everyone, after all, takes cash. This way you also act as your own "middle man", giving your time as well as the donated value of your car.

You could even sell that car for scrap, have it hauled away, and give the proceeds to the charity, cutting out that sometimes very expensive middle step of involving a car donation facilitator.

The Valuation of Your Car Donation

IRS Requirements for Donating Cars

Regardless of how you go about it, a non-cash gift to a charity is likely to fetch less than $250, you don't need any sort of receipt from the NPO - the IRS will, in this case, take you at your word. All you need to supply is the name of the charitable organization that received your car donation, the date of the car donation, the place the donation took place.

However, if the value of your car donation is $250 or greater, you'll need to get a receipt from the charity that is officially registered as an NPO or charity by the IRS. If you want to check up on a given charity's status, they should be able to provide you with a non-profit tax ID number that you can then check against the IRS database. This receipt should be dated and indicate what use the vehicle was to be put to, even if it is just for sale.

Car donations destined for immediate sale are typically not valued for tax purposes until the sale has been made. Instead, one will receive a temporary receipt that indicates a transfer of title and a forthcoming receipt to be used for determining your deduction.

This is most often true of vehicles worth over $500. Such vehicles must be accompanied by Form 8283 (section A only) that the authorized charity issues along with their own receipt of car donation monies. In a perfect world, those separate car donation and charitable income figures will match up with each other as well as the amounts people are deducting from their personal or family income taxes, as they assuredly didn't before 2005.

Sale values over $5,000 must also be accompanied by an appraisal from an independent agent that can verify the fair market value of any car donation. Now that one must present proof of how much their car donation earned at auction, there is little reason to make any kind of error when valuing your car donation for deductible purposes.

Would YOU consider donating your car?

  • mannysantos Nov 27, 2011 @ 11:30 pm | delete
    I have donated my car. One thing to look for is how much of your donation actually goes to helping the community and if the funds stay in your community. I found a great option in the Kidney Wheels program. Your donated funds stay local.
    see www.kidneywheels.org

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