The Kelley Blue Book is No Longer the Last World
in Deduction and Appraisal When Donating an Auto to
Charity
There was once a time when the Kelley Blue Book was used by
most people when they were looking up what to value their car
at when taking deductions at the end of the year for donated
vehicles. However, since 2005, IRS regulations have much more
clearly stated how one can value a vehicle that is donated to
charity.
This has had a very large impact on vehicles that don't run or
are otherwise unsuitable to be given to anyone to drive. Such
vehicles were, for many years, assigned a value out of the
Kelley Blue Book, as if they ran.
What most people failed to realize is that even the “poorâ€
rating in the Kelley Blue Book referred to cars that were legal
and safe to drive as well as actually moving under their own
power. However, most cars that were donated to charity in the
early 2000's were not even running – often rusted hulks there
were good for little else than parting out after a wholesale
auction. This is, of course, where most of them ended up.
Despite this discrepancy, it is very common for people to take
deductions that are listed under the “fair†column of the
Kelley Blue Book rather than what the car was actually worth.
When you read it carefully, the “fair†description of a
vehicle actually describes one that is in rather good
shape.
That's where the IRS stepped in. After a report to the Senate
Finance Committee from the US General Accounting Office in late
2003, it became apparent that more than half a billion dollars
had been deducted that were not actually given to the charities
in question. This was partly due to people taking the wrong
values for their deductions from the Kelley Blue Book.
However, the biggest culprit that made this formerly small
loophole a large-scale tax dodge were for-profit companies that
handled the donation and sales for non-profit organizations.
Many were quite small NPOs that didn't have facilities for
taking care of non-running donations. These companies
furthermore were encouraging people to take the maximum benefit
from the Kelley Blue Book that they could find.
Of course, this is not what the IRS ever meant. However, the
regulation has since been clarified to more accurately reflect
what was meant by fair market value. It means that rather than
taking the highest available Kelley Blue Book value, you should
choose a value that someone would actually be willing to pay if
you were selling the car yourself.
To further clarify this, they have also ruled that if the car
is worth less than $5,000, the value claimed for any car that
is directly sold is the sale value of that vehicle. So, if sold
on the wholesale market by a third-party agent, you could only
claim that amount, even though it may be a fraction of what
your car is actually worth, regardless of the Kelley Blue Book
price.
Vehicles that are thought to be worth more than $5,000 should
be verified by an independent auditor and photographed for
documentation purposes. One doesn't have to actually attach
either of these (or a photocopied page of the Kelley Blue Book)
to their tax return, but a Form 8283 must be attached, even for
donations of more than $500.
So, though you can't simply take the highest value available
for your make and model from the Kelley Blue Book, you can
still use it to help you determine what someone might pay for a
car with the same coughs and dings as yours, just as anyone
deciding what the market will allow. You should also consider
what cars are selling for in the newspaper.
Even if you can't get much out of the corrected Kelley Blue
Book value of your car, donating to charity is a good way to
make an impact in your community. Moreover, you can usually
claim up to $500 without too much bother, and most people can
use even that small of a tax deductible if they're
self-employed.
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