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By Patrick Rooney
The charitable deduction is a dollar-for-dollar reduction in taxable income that lowers what someone owes the Internal Revenue Service. Only donations to tax-exempt charities count.
This giving incentive is available only for the 10% of American taxpayers who itemize their tax returns. Taxpayers who itemize can sum up certain expenses, such as the interest they pay to for a home mortgage, and then subtract that money from their taxable income.
Here’s a hypothetical example: Clara Doe, a veterinarian, pays a 32% marginal tax rate on her US$200,000 income as a single filer. Because she itemizes, her $100 annual donation to a local food pantry costs her $68 after taxes. Uncle Sam essentially pays the rest by giving her a tax break.
Most people who donate extensively to charity, such as Netflix founder Reed Hastings, use this tax break. Ernesto S. Ruscio/Getty Images via Netflix
Most Americans instead use the standard deduction, a set amount of money based on how you file your taxes. As of 2022, the standard deduction was $12,950 for single taxpayers. People claiming it subtract that amount from their income to see how much of it is subject to the income tax. The standard deduction usually saves more money than itemizing.
With the standard deduction, giving $100 costs, well, $100.
People give to charities for many reasons. Tax breaks cannot be the main one because giving money away doesn’t make you better off financially.
As is true elsewhere, Americans tend to donate more with government incentives. Similarly, donors usually give away smaller shares of their income when Uncle Sam scales back those advantages.
Consider what happened once the 2017 tax reform package took effect. Many economists predicted beforehand that its reduction in giving incentives would prompt American taxpayers to give less to charity. And that did happen in 2018.
Although charitable giving has since rebounded, reaching new records, I believe the total could have been higher if more Americans could deduct charitable contributions from their taxable income.
In 2019, only an estimated 8.5% of taxpayers took advantage of this century-old tax break. Nearly three times as many Americans were claiming this deduction before the 2017 tax reforms.
There’s a simple explanation for this decline: The tax package nearly doubled the standard deduction. Most people who were itemizing until 2018 are now better off if they take the standard deduction instead.
That could change after 2025, when many of the 2017 tax reforms will expire.
Authors
Patrick Rooney
Executive Associate Dean for Academic Programs, Glenn Family Chair, and Professor of Economics and Philanthropic Studies, IUPUI
Disclosure statement
Patrick Rooney receives funding from several different foundations and charitable organizations and serves or has served on several charitable boards or advisory committees. None of them stand to gain from this essay and none have directly funded this effort.
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UPUI provides funding as a member of The Conversation US.
The opinions voiced in this material are for general information only and are not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual.
This information is not intended to be a substitute for specific individualized tax advice. We suggest that you discuss your specific tax issues with a qualified tax advisor.
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This article was prepared by RSW Publishing.
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