Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How on earth did it get bullet holes in it?
My poor Echo was an innocent bystander in a shooting in front of my house. Perps were never caught.
Anonymous wrote:How on earth did it get bullet holes in it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a 2001 Toyota with 137,000 miles on it. It's totally reliable and runs great. In fact, it's never been in the shop for anything other than maintenance or body work. It has a lot of cosmetic problems. Dents, dings, a bumber that is held on with that adhesive foam stuff, and....a couple bullet holes (they are filled with bondo, so they don't leak or anything). My husband wants to put it on Craigslist and try to get $1,500 for it. Has anyone donated a car? I don't really know how donating a car works. Would it be a better financial decision to donate the car for the tax deduction?
Assuming you could claim a $1,500 deduction, the actual tax savings to you would be about $375.
You itemizing deductions, right? If not, it's worth nothing to you for tax purposes.
Thanks...that sucks, only $375? We do itemize, but looks like selling is definitely the route to go.
I made the assumption you are in the 25% tax bracket (and forgot about the state deduction).
If you're lower income and 15% bracket, the tax savings would total around $225.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a 2001 Toyota with 137,000 miles on it. It's totally reliable and runs great. In fact, it's never been in the shop for anything other than maintenance or body work. It has a lot of cosmetic problems. Dents, dings, a bumber that is held on with that adhesive foam stuff, and....a couple bullet holes (they are filled with bondo, so they don't leak or anything). My husband wants to put it on Craigslist and try to get $1,500 for it. Has anyone donated a car? I don't really know how donating a car works. Would it be a better financial decision to donate the car for the tax deduction?
Assuming you could claim a $1,500 deduction, the actual tax savings to you would be about $375.
You itemizing deductions, right? If not, it's worth nothing to you for tax purposes.
Thanks...that sucks, only $375? We do itemize, but looks like selling is definitely the route to go.
Anonymous wrote:When my husband got rid of his car, he got a quote from CarMax, then contacted a company called (I think) WeBuyCars.com. They guaranteed they would beat CarMax's quote. They gave him $100 more than CarMax offered, and he had a check in hand that day. Very easy. Even if you get a few hundred less than you would on CraigsList, it might be worth your time and aggravation.
Anonymous wrote:Spend an hour at Carmax and get their offer, which is good for several days, so that you have a baseline -- you know that Carmax will give you $X so you list it on Craigslist for $Xplus -- if no one bites, or it turns into a hassle, you can say the heck with it and go back to Carmax and you're done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a 2001 Toyota with 137,000 miles on it. It's totally reliable and runs great. In fact, it's never been in the shop for anything other than maintenance or body work. It has a lot of cosmetic problems. Dents, dings, a bumber that is held on with that adhesive foam stuff, and....a couple bullet holes (they are filled with bondo, so they don't leak or anything). My husband wants to put it on Craigslist and try to get $1,500 for it. Has anyone donated a car? I don't really know how donating a car works. Would it be a better financial decision to donate the car for the tax deduction?
Assuming you could claim a $1,500 deduction, the actual tax savings to you would be about $375.
You itemizing deductions, right? If not, it's worth nothing to you for tax purposes.