Making Car Donations to High Schools
Perhaps the most personally rewarding sort of car donations
involves giving your old ride to the local high school for use
in their shop class. High schools are considered valid
charitable organizations according to the IRS, as are colleges
and adult training programs that fulfill a charitable mission.
Since the tax laws regarding car donations were changed in 2005
to stem the tide of fraudulent deductions that were uncovered
by several independent reporters and the US General Accounting
Office in 2002-3, choosing to make car donations to charities
that will fix up the car and put it to good use will help you
get the full fair market value for your car in the form of a
legal deduction.
Most high schools have a shop program, just as most schools
have a budget shortfall these days. Just after music and arts
programs, the mechanical arts programs are very often among
those programs on the chopping block when budget time rolls
around. A healthy stream of car donations to such programs not
only emphasizes the need for such training, but can also become
a valuable revenue source for the schools in question, making
shop classes that much more difficult to cut or limit.
Moreover, the proceeds from the sale of newly renovated car
donations can benefit other programs such as arts and music.
Even if the purpose of such proceeds are turned right back into
trips to the Corvette Hall of Fame for shop class students, a
valuable message is sent to those students that their services
will be required upon graduation, so perhaps they ought to pay
attention.
Indeed, there's nothing quite like seeing your old jalopy being
used to haul a float in the homecoming parade. You can watch it
drive by with the satisfaction that money from your car
donations is staying in the local community and going to
benefit people whose training your town will rely upon for
years to come.
Of course, there are limits to just how junky the automobiles
used for car donations can be while remaining useful training.
Particularly if there are very expensive parts that need to be
ordered and can't simply be repaired. In this case, the school
might find itself spending more on parts than the car is likely
to get when it's eventually sold.
It is this sale price that drives the ultimate financial value
of car donations as far as the donor is concerned. One of the
most important aspects of such ar donations is the amount of
deduction that can be claimed. Though you should get a receipt
of transfer as soon as a vehicle is donated to the school, the
ultimate value will be determined by the final sale price of
the vehicle.
This represents your fair market value of the donated car and
is often quite a bit higher than if you tried to sell the car
yourself without making repairs or if a charitable organization
simply sold the vehicle on the open, wholesale market. Even if
the car is eventually given away or used to transport the
girl's softball team to away games, such car donations may
still be deducted at the fair market value according to
publications such as the Kelly Blue Book.
There may be other restrictions. For instance, some high
schools stipulate that only car donatations of US manufacture
are suitable for their students to work on. This isn't
necessarily a type of bias – they may simply not have metric
standardized tools to do the work on foreign autos. If you do
have the proper tools to work on your oddball car, you might
want to consider throwing those in with any such car donations,
to sweeten the deal.
Especially in demand are older or classic cars that have plenty
of room and require body work. Vehicles that allow for a
mechanical tune up without special diagnostic equipment are
also highly prized car donations. Taking all these variables
into consideration, your old vehicle might be the very thing
for your local high school to refurbish into the lean, mean,
driving machine you fell in love with in the first place.
Having a plaque on the wall with your name on it isn't a bad
incentive either.
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