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Charitable extenders and incentives in the 2008 Extenders Act (MS Word)
Charitable extenders and incentives in the 2008 Extenders Act (.pdf)
Charitable extenders and incentives in the 2008 Extenders Act
Dear Reader,
The Tax Extenders and Alternative Minimum Tax Relief Act of 2008,
which was enacted on Oct. 3, 2008, extends several expired
charitable giving tax breaks and provides several new tax incentives
for charitable giving. Here is a brief overview of the charitable
provisions in the new legislation.
Charitable giving provisions extended for two years.
Several popular charitable incentives expired at the end of 2007 and
would not have been available to taxpayers on their 2008 tax returns
if Congress had not acted. The new law restores the provisions and
extends them for two years (through 2009). The extended provisions
include:
-
IRA charitable rollover.
This provision allows individuals aged 70 1/2 and older to
donate up to $100,000 from their individual retirement accounts
(IRAs) and Roth IRAs to public charities without having to count
the distributions as taxable income. This giving incentive is
particularly beneficial to those individuals who do not itemize
their tax deductions and would not otherwise receive any tax
benefit for their charitable contributions.
-
Enhanced charitable deduction for food inventory.
This provision allows businesses to claim an enhanced deduction
for the contribution of food inventory. The new law also
eliminates the percentage limitation for contributions made by
certain farmers and ranchers after Dec. 31, 2007, but before
Jan. 1, 2009.
-
Enhanced charitable deduction for contributions of book
inventory to schools.
This provision allows C corporations an enhanced charitable
deduction for donations of books to schools, public libraries
and literacy programs.
-
Enhanced charitable deduction for qualified computer
contributions.
This provision encourages businesses to contribute computer
equipment and software to elementary, secondary, and
post-secondary schools by allowing an enhanced deduction for
such contributions.
-
Basis adjustment to stock of S corporations making charitable
contributions of property.
Under this provision, if an S corporation makes a contribution
to a charity the amount of a shareholder's basis reduction in
the S corporation stock will be equal to the shareholder's pro
rata share of the adjusted basis of the contributed property
(rather than the pro rata share of the fair market value of the
contribution, as was the case under prior law).
New tax incentives for charitable giving.
New incentives for charitable giving contained in the new
legislation include:
-
Temporary suspension of limitations on charitable contributions.
The amount allowed as a charitable deduction in any year may not
exceed ten percent of the corporation's taxable income or fifty
percent of an individual's adjusted gross income. The new law
temporarily waives these limits regarding charitable cash
contributions dedicated to Midwestern disaster relief efforts.
The provision is effective for contributions paid during the
period beginning on the earliest applicable disaster date for
all States and ending on Dec. 31, 2008.
-
Increase in standard mileage rate for charitable use of
vehicles.
The mileage rate individuals may use to compute a tax deduction
for personal vehicle expenses associated with charitable work is
statutory and has not been increased since 1997 and is currently
at 14 cents per mile. For a taxpayer assisting in relief efforts
related to the Midwestern disaster, the new law sets the
charitable mileage rate at seventy percent of the current
standard business mileage rate, beginning on the applicable
disaster date and ending on Dec. 31, 2008.
-
Exclusion from income of mileage reimbursements for charitable
volunteers.
In general, reimbursements received for operating expenses of a
personal vehicle used in connection with charitable work in
excess of the statutory charitable mileage rate are taxable
income to the recipient. However, reimbursements for charitable
mileage attributable to the Midwestern disaster up to the amount
of the standard business mileage rate will not be considered
taxable income through Dec. 31, 2008.
I hope this information is helpful. If you would like more details about these changes, or any other aspects of the new law, please do not hesitate to call.
Lewes CPA
office