Tax Deduction Limits for Donations: Cash vs. Goods
You donated $5,000 to charity, but the IRS might ignore it completely. Why? Because of the Standard Deduction. Unless your total itemized deductions (donations + mortgage interest + taxes) exceed the standard threshold ($16,100 for singles in 2026), your donation has zero tax impact. Even if you itemize, strict limits apply based on your income (AGI). Here is the breakdown of how much cash versus old clothes you can actually deduct.
1. The Rule: The “AGI Ceiling”
The IRS caps generosity to prevent people from zeroing out their tax bill completely.
AGI Example: If your Adjusted Gross Income is $100,000:
• Cash Limit (60%): Max deduction is $60,000.
• Goods/Stock Limit (30%): Max deduction is $30,000.
2. Deduction Limits by Type (Checklist)
Different assets have different ceilings. Knowing this prevents audit surprises.
| Donation Type | Deduction Limit (of AGI) | Valuation Method |
|---|---|---|
| Cash / Check | 60% | Face Value. Must have bank record or receipt. |
| Household Goods | 30% | Fair Market Value (Thrift Shop Price). Not what you paid for it. |
| Appreciated Stock | 30% | Fair Market Value. (No Capital Gains Tax). |
| To Private Foundation | 30% (Cash) 20% (Stock) |
Stricter limits for private family foundations. |
3. Timeline: The 5-Year Carryover Rule
If you are super generous and hit the ceiling, the IRS puts the excess in a “savings account” for later.
| Year | Action | Tax Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | Donate Huge | |
| Year 2-6 | Carryover | |
| Year 7 | Expire |
4. Strategy: Donating Stock > Cash
The wealthy rarely donate cash. They donate appreciated assets.
- Scenario: You bought Tesla stock for $1,000. It is now worth $10,000.
- Option A (Sell & Donate): You sell, pay $1,350 in capital gains tax (15%), and donate the remaining $8,650. Deduction = $8,650.
- Option B (Donate Directly): You transfer the stock to the charity. Charity sells it (tax-free). You get a deduction for the full $10,000. You pay $0 tax.
- Result: Bigger deduction for you, more money for the charity.
5. Warning: The “Car Donation” Trap
The radio ads are misleading.
⛔ Gross Proceeds Rule
You cannot just deduct the “Blue Book Value” of your old car.
- The Rule: If the charity sells your car (which they usually do at auction), your deduction is limited to the actual sale price (Gross Proceeds).
- Example: Blue Book says $4,000. Charity sells it for $500 at auction. Your deduction is $500.
- Exception: If the charity uses the car (e.g., delivers meals), you can deduct Fair Market Value.