Anonymous wrote:How much is your time worth? If you spend hours trying to get anther $1k in donated value, that may not be worth it. It's not a tax credit remember -- it doesn't come straight off in your taxes. The actual bottom-line tax benefit will be lower anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Donate to an org that will use it as a car. That gets you the blue book value. If you just donate it to an org who will sell it you only get the price they sold it for (less).
Check in with your HS auto shop or the local fire department.
This is from Intuit
The charitable deduction for a car that a charity sells is limited to the sales price, even if the car’s fair market value is higher.
• If the sales price of your donated vehicle is less than $500, you can deduct $500 or your car’s fair market value, whichever is less.
• If the charity sells the car at a significant discount to a needy individual, or keeps the car for its own use, then you can claim a deduction for the car’s fair market value.
• Charities are typically required to report the sales price of your car to you on Form 1098-C.
This is correct. We are getting ready to get rid of a car so I'm in the thick of this - I looked into donating it to NPR vs a school. NPR will sell it at auction so the amount it sells for would be on the 1098-C... the school (Marshall in Falls Church) will use it in their automotive tech class so we can claim blue book value on the 1098-C. If you claim more than $5000, you need an appraisal.
Where did you get this information on what you can deduct? Just wondering if there's a good source on it that I can read.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Donate to an org that will use it as a car. That gets you the blue book value. If you just donate it to an org who will sell it you only get the price they sold it for (less).
Check in with your HS auto shop or the local fire department.
This is from Intuit
The charitable deduction for a car that a charity sells is limited to the sales price, even if the car’s fair market value is higher.
• If the sales price of your donated vehicle is less than $500, you can deduct $500 or your car’s fair market value, whichever is less.
• If the charity sells the car at a significant discount to a needy individual, or keeps the car for its own use, then you can claim a deduction for the car’s fair market value.
• Charities are typically required to report the sales price of your car to you on Form 1098-C.
This is correct. We are getting ready to get rid of a car so I'm in the thick of this - I looked into donating it to NPR vs a school. NPR will sell it at auction so the amount it sells for would be on the 1098-C... the school (Marshall in Falls Church) will use it in their automotive tech class so we can claim blue book value on the 1098-C. If you claim more than $5000, you need an appraisal.
Anonymous wrote:Donate to an org that will use it as a car. That gets you the blue book value. If you just donate it to an org who will sell it you only get the price they sold it for (less).
Check in with your HS auto shop or the local fire department.
This is from Intuit
The charitable deduction for a car that a charity sells is limited to the sales price, even if the car’s fair market value is higher.
• If the sales price of your donated vehicle is less than $500, you can deduct $500 or your car’s fair market value, whichever is less.
• If the charity sells the car at a significant discount to a needy individual, or keeps the car for its own use, then you can claim a deduction for the car’s fair market value.
• Charities are typically required to report the sales price of your car to you on Form 1098-C.