charitable giving
Donations of money, assets, or time to nonprofit organizations — can provide significant tax deductions.
Example
“Donating appreciated stock instead of cash eliminated capital gains tax and provided a full deduction.”
Memory Tip
DONATE APPRECIATED ASSETS — avoid capital gains and get the full deduction.
Why It Matters
Charitable giving allows you to support causes you care about while potentially reducing your taxable income through deductions. Understanding how to structure your donations can help you maximize both your charitable impact and your financial benefits, making it an important part of comprehensive financial planning.
Common Misconception
Many people believe that any donation to any organization will result in a tax deduction, but only contributions to qualified charitable organizations recognized by the IRS are tax-deductible. Additionally, you must itemize deductions on your tax return to benefit from charitable giving, which not all taxpayers do.
In Practice
If you earn 80000 dollars annually and donate 5000 dollars to a qualified nonprofit organization, you can deduct that amount from your taxable income if you itemize deductions. In a 22 percent tax bracket, this deduction would save you approximately 1100 dollars in taxes while supporting your chosen cause.
Etymology
From Latin 'caritas' meaning love or charity — giving motivated by generosity.
Common Misspellings
Get a free financial plan from a real advisor
Related Terms
More in financial planning
Other financial planning terms you should know
See Also
Need financial definitions?
Clear definitions for 2,500+ finance, insurance, and investing terms.