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How to maximize tax deduction for charitable giving


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When filing your taxes, you claim the larger of the standard deduction or your total itemized deductions. The latter category can include charitable and medical deductions, state and local taxes and more.

In 2018, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act nearly doubled the standard deduction, slashing the number of filers who itemized. For 2023, the standard deduction is $13,850 for single filers and $27,700 for married couples filing jointly.

Given these constraints, here are the most tax-friendly charitable giving strategies to consider, according to financial experts.

1. Qualified charitable distributions

QCDs are a great way to give to charity, especially for those with large IRAs and in a higher marginal tax bracket.

Michael Maye

Owner of MJM Financial Advisors

“QCDs are a great way to give to charity, especially for those with large IRAs and in a higher marginal tax bracket,” said CFP Michael Maye, owner of MJM Financial Advisors in Gillette, New Jersey. He is also a certified public accountant.

2. Donor-advised funds

3. Give profitable assets

Whether you’re transferring money to a donor-advised fund or giving directly to a charity, experts recommend sending profitable assets, rather than cash.

Here’s why: If you have profitable assets in a brokerage account, you can give those investments to bypass the capital gains taxes you’d otherwise owe from selling.

If you owned the assets for more than a year, you can deduct the full market value of donated assets, limited to 30% of your adjusted gross income, Maye explained. But the excess donation “can be carried over to the next five tax years,” he said.

4. Bunching donations

Another way to exceed the higher standard deduction is by bunching donations, which is a popular strategy for donor-advised funds, experts say. Rather than making a gift every year, bunching combines those donations into a single year.

Lumping multiple years of gifts into a donor-advised fund can offer donors “more bang for their buck,” said CFP Mitchell Kraus, owner of Santa Monica, California-based Capital Intelligence Associates.

Here's how to get the most value out of your charitable giving

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