Rev. date: 01/01/2011
To be deductible, charitable contributions must be made to qualified
organizations. Payments to individuals are never deductible. See
Publication 526,
Charitable Contributions.
If your contribution entitles you to merchandise, goods, or services,
including admission to a charity ball, banquet, theatrical performance, or
sporting event, you can deduct only the amount that exceeds the fair market
value of the benefit received.
For a contribution of cash, check, or other monetary gift (regardless
of amount), you must maintain as a record of the contribution a bank record or a
written communication from the qualified organization containing the name of the
organization, the date of the contribution, and the amount of the contribution.
In addition to deducting your cash contributions, you generally can deduct the
fair market value of any other property you donate to qualified organizations.
See
Publication 561,
Determining the Value of Donated Property. For any contribution of $250 or more (including contributions
of cash or property), you must obtain and keep in your records a contemporaneous
written acknowledgment from the qualified organization indicating the amount of
the cash and a description of any property contributed. The acknowledgment must
say whether the organization provided any goods or services in exchange for the
gift and, if so, must provide a description and a good faith estimate of the
value of those goods or services. One document from the qualified organization
may satisfy both the written communication requirement for monetary gifts and
the contemporaneous written acknowledgment requirement for all contributions of
$250 or more.
You must fill out
Form 8283, and attach it to your return, if your total deduction for
all noncash contributions is more than $500. If you claim a deduction for a
contribution of noncash property worth $5,000 or less, you must fill out Form
8283, Section A. If you claim a deduction for a contribution of noncash property
worth more than $5,000, you will need a qualified appraisal of the noncash
property and must fill out Form 8283, Section B. If you claim a deduction for a
contribution of noncash property worth more than $500,000, you also will need to
attach the qualified appraisal to your return.
For more information refer to Form 8283 and its instructions,
as well as
Publication 526,
Charitable Contributions. For information on determining the value of your noncash contributions,
refer to
Publication 561,
Determining the Value of Donated Property.