Texarkana Gazette

Year-end giving doesn’t guarantee getting a tax break

- By Susan Tompor

In years past, nearly one-third of all annual donations were made in the month of December, as people made their charitable gifts before the deadline for tax deductions.

Yet this year, if you’re more focused on getting back in the form of a tax break come April, you may want to think twice about how many year-end checks you write to charity.

Will you or won’t you be able to take a tax deduction for charitable contributi­ons on your 2018 tax return?

The tax rules for 2018 will be vastly different than they were last tax season, thanks to the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017.

Some taxpayers will no longer be itemizing deductions beginning on their 2018 federal tax returns because of a higher standard deduction and other significan­t changes tax rules, including new limits on deducting state and local income taxes and property taxes.

About 46.5 million tax returns itemized deductions for 2017. It’s estimated that the number will drop to 18 million for 2018 returns—or about a bit more than 10 percent of individual returns, according to the Joint Committee on Taxation.

So do you need to really make a donation by Dec. 31? Or can you wait until January? Or even February?

The standard deduction on 2018 returns is $12,000 for individual­s, $18,000 for heads of household and $24,000 for married couples filing jointly and surviving spouses. Those amounts are nearly double what they were in 2017.

You’d still consider itemizing—if your itemized deductions exceeded those amounts.

“My philosophi­cal advice is give to charity, if you want to give to charity,” said Leon LaBrecque, managing partner and CEO, LJPR Financial Advisors in Troy, Mich.

“And don’t worry about the write-off.”

After all, many people give to animal shelters, food banks, their alma mater and religious organizati­ons because they’re genuinely grateful and want to help others do good.

But some people try to plan their giving to maximize their tax breaks. If so, you need to take into account the new standard deductions, as well as other changes.

Under the new rules, for example, employees will no longer be able to itemize their unreimburs­ed business expenses beginning on 2018 tax returns. Most taxpayers—with the exception of members of the military on active duty who move pursuant to a military order—won’t be able to deduct qualifying moving expenses related to a job.

Medical expenses are deductible but only if those expenses exceed 7.5 percent of your adjusted gross income in 2018. (On the 2019 return, the threshold jumps to 10 percent.)

Another key change: The deduction for state and local income taxes, property taxes, personal property taxes (including license tabs on cars in Michigan) is limited to up to $10,000 for every filing status except married filing separately, which is $5,000.

Such changes, LaBrecque noted, can make it harder to simply look at your old deductions and think you’d easily hit that threshold to itemize again on the 2018 return.

Many people may still want to keep their receipts and proof of deductions because it is hard to simply guess whether you’d still itemize or you won’t.

“You still have to do all the same things you used to do,” said Kathy Pickering, vice president of regulatory affairs and executive director for the H&R Block Tax Institute.

“A lot of taxpayers will have this expectatio­n that tax filing will be so simple and easy, they won’t have to worry about it,” Pickering said.

But that’s not necessaril­y the case, she said. Taxpayers who carefully review their situation with their tax preparer may be able to tap into a few different strategies, depending on their situation. They include:

BUNCHING DEDUCTIONS IN A GIVEN YEAR

One strategy is called “bunching”—where you pull contributi­ons into one year in order to be able to itemize deductions. LaBrecque noted that such a strategy can work if you’re near the standard deduction limit and want to add more charitable contributi­ons in a given year to enable you to itemize.

If you’re well under the standard deduction, he said, you’re not going to be able to deduct donations to a charity short of a very large donation in a given year. But that has always been true and many people still make charitable contributi­ons anyway.

Another change on 2018 returns: Individual­s can take a deduction for charitable cash donations that amount to up to 60 percent of their income, up from an earlier limit of 50 percent. So individual­s who donate a sizable portion of their income to charitable organizati­ons will be able to take a larger deduction.

OPENING A DONOR-ADVISED FUND

If you have a significan­t amount of money to donate, you can make a lump-sum contributi­on into what’s called a donor-advised fund.

You’d be able to deduct the full amount of the contributi­on in the year you make it, up to the contributi­on limits based on the type of asset donated and your adjusted gross income.

Many people haven’t heard of such programs but total assets in donor-advised funds hit about $110

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