How to Deduct Charitable Donations on Your Taxes

Maximize your tax savings with charitable donations: Learn eligibility, documentation, strategies, and 2026 tax law changes.

By Sneha Tete, Integrated MA, Certified Relationship Coach
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Charitable donations offer a valuable way to support causes you care about while reducing your taxable income. To claim these deductions on your US federal taxes, you must follow IRS rules on qualified organizations, proper documentation, and deduction limits. This guide covers everything from eligibility to strategies, including major changes starting in

2026

like a new $1,000 deduction for standard deduction filers and a 0.5% AGI floor for itemizers.

Who Can Deduct Charitable Contributions?

Not everyone qualifies for charitable deductions. You must

itemize deductions

on Schedule A of Form 1040, forgoing the standard deduction ($15,000 single/$30,000 joint in 2025, adjusted annually). Only contributions to qualified organizations count, and you need substantiation. Starting in

2026

, a game-changer: standard deduction filers can deduct up to

$1,000

($2,000 joint) in cash gifts to public charities without itemizing.
  • Itemizers: Deduct full qualified gifts (subject to limits and new 2026 rules).
  • Standard filers (pre-2026): No charitable deduction.
  • Standard filers (2026+): Limited cash deduction above the line.

What Qualifies as a Charitable Contribution?

The IRS defines qualified contributions as voluntary transfers of money or property to eligible nonprofits without receiving equal value in return. Common types include cash, clothing, vehicles, stocks, and goods. Excludes raffles, dues with benefits, or tuition.

TypeDeductible ValueExamples
CashAmount givenChecks, credit cards, payroll deductions
Appreciated property (e.g., stocks held >1 year)Fair market value (FMV)Publicly traded stock
Used clothing/household itemsFMV (thrift shop value)Good used condition only
VehicleFMV or sale proceedsIf charity sells it
Below-market loansForegone interestRare

Note for 2026: Non-itemizer deduction limited to cash to public 501(c)(3)s, not donor-advised funds (DAFs) or private foundations.

Qualified Organizations: Check IRS Status

Donations must go to IRS-approved groups. Most 501(c)(3) public charities qualify; churches, schools, hospitals often do too (self-certified). Private foundations and DAFs have stricter rules. Verify via IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search (TEOS) tool.

  • Always qualify: Public charities, wars veterans’ groups.
  • Partial qualify: Fraternal lodges (charity arm only).
  • Never qualify: Political parties, foreign groups (unless via US intermediary), individuals.

Tip: Get the charity’s EIN and confirm status before donating.

Documentation Requirements

Substantiation is critical to avoid audits. Rules vary by amount and type.

Cash Contributions

  • <$250: Bank record (cancelled check, receipt, credit card statement).
  • >$250: Written acknowledgment from charity (before filing taxes) stating amount, date, no goods/services received (or value if any).

Non-Cash Contributions

  • All: Detailed description, date, FMV.
  • >$500 (non-publicly traded): Form 8283 Section A.
  • >$5,000 (most property): Qualified appraisal + Form 8283 Section B (charity signs).
  • Vehicles >$500: Form 1098-C if sold by charity.

Keep records 3-7 years. Apps like ItsDeductible help value items.

Deduction Limits and Carryovers

Limits based on AGI, gift type, and charity type. Excess carries forward 5 years.

Gift TypePublic Charity LimitPrivate Foundation Limit
Cash60% AGI30% AGI
Appreciated long-term property30% AGI20% AGI
Short-term/tangible property50% AGI50% AGI (cost basis)

2026 Update: Itemizers face 0.5% AGI floor—only excess deductible. E.g., $200k AGI = $1,000 floor. High earners (37% bracket) capped at 35% benefit. Traditional AGI limits persist.

Special Rules for Vehicles, Clothing, and Food

Vehicles

Deduct FMV if charity uses/sells privately; sale price if auctioned (Form 1098-C required). Boats/RVs similar.

Clothing and Household Items

Good used or better; itemize on Form 8283 if >$500 total. No deduction for partial lots.

Food Inventory (Businesses)

C-3G corps: Enhanced for wholesome food to needy (up to 15% taxable income).

Donating Appreciated Assets: Tax-Smart Strategy

Avoid capital gains tax by donating long-held stocks/property at FMV. E.g., $10k stock (basis $2k, now $10k) = $10k deduction, no gain tax. Beats selling and donating proceeds.

  • Best for: Public charities (30% AGI).
  • 2026 Note: Counts toward 0.5% floor.

Bunching Donations: Beat the Standard Deduction

With rising standard deductions, bunch 2-3 years’ gifts into one to exceed itemizing threshold. Use donor-advised funds for flexibility. Post-2026, combines well with $1,000 standard boost.

Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCDs) from IRAs

Age 70½+: Direct up to $105k (2025, indexed) from IRA to charity. Counts toward RMD, excludes from income (not a deduction). Ideal for non-itemizers.

2026 Tax Law Changes: What Donors Need to Know

The “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” (OBBBA) overhauls rules starting 2026.

Rule20252026
Non-itemizer deductionNone$1,000 single/$2,000 joint (cash only)
Itemizer AGI floor0%0.5% AGI
Top-bracket benefit37%Capped at 35%

Planning Tips: Accelerate 2025 gifts if itemizing small amounts; delay to 2026 for standard filers. High AGI donors: Give more to clear floor.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Q: Can I deduct donations if I take the standard deduction?

A: Pre-2026, no. Starting 2026, yes—up to $1,000 ($2,000 joint) cash to public charities.

Q: What’s the 0.5% AGI floor mean for 2026?

A: Itemizers deduct only contributions exceeding 0.5% of AGI. E.g., $400k AGI = $2,000 floor.

Q: Do I need a receipt for every donation?

A: Yes for >$250; bank record for smaller cash gifts.

Q: Can I deduct stock donations?

A: Yes, at FMV if long-term held, up to limits. Avoids capital gains.

Q: What if my donation exceeds limits?

A: Carry forward up to 5 years.

Q: Are GoFundMe donations deductible?

A: Only if to qualified 501(c)(3); person-to-person no.

This guide equips you to maximize deductions legally. Consult a tax pro for personal advice, as rules evolve. (Word count: 1678)

References

  1. Charitable Giving Rules in 2026: What Donors Need to Know — Edelman Financial Engines. 2025. https://www.edelmanfinancialengines.com/education/tax/charitable-giving-in-2026/
  2. Charitable Giving Is Changing in 2026: What Every Donor Should Know — National Blood Clot Alliance. 2025. https://www.stoptheclot.org/news/new-federal-tax-rules/
  3. 3 Major Changes to the Charitable Deduction for 2026 — Kiplinger. 2025. https://www.kiplinger.com/taxes/major-changes-to-the-charitable-deduction
  4. 2026 New Tax Rules & Giving Guide For Year-End Giving — The Backstoppers. 2025. https://backstoppers.org/2026-new-tax-rules-giving-guide-for-year-end-giving/
  5. A Nonprofit’s Guide to the 2026 Charitable Giving Tax Changes — TrueSense. 2025. https://www.truesense.com/blog/a-nonprofits-guide-to-the-2026-charitable-giving-tax-changes
  6. Deducting charitable contributions at a glance — Internal Revenue Service (IRS.gov). 2024-01-03. https://www.irs.gov/credits-deductions/individuals/deducting-charitable-contributions-at-a-glance
  7. 2026 Changes to Charitable Giving Tax Deductions Due to OBBBA — White Coat Investor. 2025. https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/2026-changes-charitable-giving-tax-deductions-obbba/
Sneha Tete
Sneha TeteBeauty & Lifestyle Writer
Sneha is a relationships and lifestyle writer with a strong foundation in applied linguistics and certified training in relationship coaching. She brings over five years of writing experience to fundfoundary,  crafting thoughtful, research-driven content that empowers readers to build healthier relationships, boost emotional well-being, and embrace holistic living.

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