IRS Pub. 17, Your Federal Income Tax
You must keep records to prove the amount of the cash and noncash
contributions you make during the year. The kind of records you must
keep depends on the amount of your contributions and whether they are
cash or noncash contributions.
Note.
An organization generally must give you a written statement if it
receives a payment from you that is more than $75 and is partly a
contribution and partly for goods or services. (See Contributions
From Which You Benefit under Contributions You Can Deduct,
earlier.) Keep the statement for your records. It may satisfy
all or part of the recordkeeping requirements explained in the
following discussions.
Cash Contributions
Cash contributions include those paid by cash, check, credit card,
or payroll deduction. They also include your out-of-pocket expenses
when donating your services.
For a contribution made in cash, the records you must keep depend
on whether the contribution is:
- Less than $250, or
- $250 or more.
Amount of contribution.
In figuring whether your contribution is $250 or more, do not
combine separate contributions. For example, if you gave your church
$25 each week, your weekly payments do not have to be combined. Each
payment is a separate contribution.
If contributions are made by payroll deduction, the deduction from
each paycheck is treated as a separate contribution.
If you made a payment that is partly for goods and services, as
described earlier under Contributions From Which You
Benefit, your contribution is the amount of the payment that is
more than the value of the goods and services.
Contributions of Less Than $250
For each cash contribution that is less than $250, you must keep
one of the following items.
- A canceled check, or a legible and readable
account statement that shows:
- If payment was by check - the check number, amount,
date posted, and to whom paid.
- If payment was by electronic funds transfer - the
amount, date posted, and to whom paid.
- If payment was charged to a credit card - the amount,
transaction date, and to whom paid.
- A receipt (or a letter or other written communication) from
the charitable organization showing the name of the organization, the
date of the contribution, and the amount of the contribution.
- Other reliable written records that include the information
described in (2). Records may be considered reliable if they were made
at or near the time of the contribution, were regularly kept by you,
or if, in the case of small donations, you have emblems, buttons, or
other tokens that are regularly given to persons making small cash
contributions.
Car expenses.
If you claim expenses directly related to use of your car in giving
services to a qualified organization, you must keep reliable written
records of your expenses. Whether your records are considered reliable
depends on all the facts and circumstances. Generally, they may be
considered reliable if you made them regularly and at or near the time
you had the expenses.
Your records must show the name of the organization you were
serving and the date each time you used your car for a charitable
purpose. If you use the standard mileage rate of 14 cents a mile, your
records must show the miles you drove your car for the charitable
purpose. If you deduct your actual expenses, your records must show
the costs of operating the car that are directly related to a
charitable purpose.
See Car expenses, earlier under Out-of-Pocket
Expenses in Giving Services, for the expenses you can deduct.
Contributions of $250 or More
You can claim a deduction for a contribution of $250 or more only
if you have an acknowledgment of your contribution from the qualified
organization or certain payroll deduction records.
If you made more than one contribution of $250 or more, you can
have either a separate acknowledgment for each or one acknowledgment
that shows your total contributions.
Acknowledgment.
The acknowledgment must meet these tests.
- It must be written.
- It must include:
- The amount of cash you contributed,
- Whether the qualified organization gave you any goods or
services as a result of your contribution (other than certain token
items and membership benefits), and
- A description and good faith estimate of the value of any
goods or services described in (b). If the only benefit you received
was an intangible religious benefit (such as admission to a religious
ceremony) that generally is not sold in a commercial transaction
outside the donative context, the acknowledgment must say so and does
not need to describe or estimate the value of the benefit.
- You must get it on or before the earlier of:
- The date you file your return for the year you make the
contribution, or
- The due date, including extensions, for filing the
return.
Payroll deductions.
If you make a contribution by payroll deduction, you do not need an
acknowledgment from the qualified organization. But if your employer
deducted $250 or more from a single paycheck, you must keep:
- A pay stub, Form W-2, or other document furnished by
your employer that proves the amount withheld, and
- A pledge card or other document from the qualified
organization that states the organization does not provide goods or
services in return for any contribution made to it by payroll
deduction.
Out-of-pocket expenses.
If you render services to a qualified organization and have
unreimbursed out-of-pocket expenses related to those services, you can
satisfy the written acknowledgment requirement just discussed if:
- You have adequate records to prove the amount of the
expenses, and
- By the required date, you get an acknowledgment from the
qualified organization that contains:
- A description of the services you provided,
- A statement of whether or not the organization provided you
any goods or services to reimburse you for the expenses you
incurred,
- A description and a good faith estimate of the value of any
goods or services (other than intangible religious benefits) provided
to reimburse you, and
- A statement of any intangible religious benefits provided to
you.
Noncash Contributions
For a contribution not made in cash, the records you must keep
depend on whether your deduction for the contribution is:
- Less than $250,
- At least $250 but not more than $500,
- Over $500 but not more than $5,000, or
- Over $5,000.
Amount of contribution.
In figuring whether your contribution is $250 or more, do not
combine separate contributions. If you received goods or services in
return, as described earlier in Contributions From Which You
Benefit, reduce your contribution by the value of those goods or
services. If you figure your deduction by reducing the fair market
value of the donated property by its appreciation, as described
earlier in Giving Property That Has Increased in Value,
your contribution is the reduced amount.
Deductions of Less Than $250
If you make any noncash contribution, you must get and keep a
receipt from the charitable organization showing:
- The name of the charitable organization,
- The date and location of the charitable contribution,
and
- A reasonably detailed description of the property.
A letter or other written communication from the charitable
organization acknowledging receipt of the contribution and containing
the information in (1), (2), and (3) will serve as a receipt.
You are not required to have a receipt where it is impractical to
get one (for example, if you leave property at a charity's unattended
drop site).
Additional records.
You must also keep reliable written records for each item of
donated property. Your written records must include the following
information.
- The name and address of the organization to which you
contributed.
- The date and location of the contribution.
- A description of the property in detail reasonable under the
circumstances. For a security, keep the name of the issuer, the type
of security, and whether it is regularly traded on a stock exchange or
in an over-the-counter market.
- The fair market value of the property at the time of the
contribution, and how you figured the fair market value. If it was
determined by appraisal, keep a signed copy of the appraisal.
- The cost or other basis of the property if you must reduce
its fair market value by appreciation. Your records should also
include the amount of the reduction and how you figured it. If you
choose the 50% limit instead of the special 30% limit on certain
capital gain property, you must keep a record showing the years for
which you made the choice, contributions for the current year to which
the choice applies, and carryovers from preceding years to which the
choice applies. See How To Figure Your Deduction When Limits
Apply in Publication 526
for information on how to make the
capital gain property election.
- The amount you claim as a deduction for the tax year as a
result of the contribution, if you contribute less than your entire
interest in the property during the tax year. Your records must
include the amount you claimed as a deduction in any earlier years for
contributions of other interests in this property. They must also
include the name and address of each organization to which you
contributed the other interests, the place where any such tangible
property is located or kept, and the name of any person in possession
of the property, other than the organization to which you
contributed.
- The terms of any conditions attached to the gift of
property.
Deductions of At Least $250
But Not More Than $500
If you claim a deduction of at least $250 but not more than $500
for a noncash charitable contribution, you must get and keep an
acknowledgment of your contribution from the qualified organization.
If you made more than one contribution of $250 or more, you can have
either a separate acknowledgment for each or one acknowledgment that
shows your total contribution.
The acknowledgment must contain the information in items (1)
through (3) listed under Deductions of Less Than $250,
earlier, and your written records must include the information
listed in that discussion under Additional records.
The acknowledgment must also meet these tests.
- It must be written.
- It must include:
- A description (but not necessarily the value) of any
property you contributed,
- Whether the qualified organization gave you any goods or
services as a result of your contribution (other than certain token
items and membership benefits), and
- A description and good faith estimate of the value of any
goods or services described in (b). If the only benefit you received
was an intangible religious benefit (such as admission to a religious
ceremony) that generally is not sold in a commercial transaction
outside the donative context, the acknowledgment must say so and does
not need to describe or estimate the value of the benefit.
- You must get the acknowledgment on or before the earlier
of:
- The date you file your return for the year you make the
contribution, or
- The due date, including extensions, for filing the
return.
Deductions Over $500
You are required to give additional information if you claim a
deduction over $500 for noncash charitable contributions. See
Records To Keep in Publication 526
for more information.
Qualified conservation contribution
If the gift was a "qualified conservation contribution," your
records must also include the fair market value of the underlying
property before and after the gift and the conservation purpose
furthered by the gift. See Qualified conservation contribution
in Publication 561 for more information.
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