Help!! Will be doing donor statements soon for donations, but am sure I read on here somewhere about a required IRS wording about no benefits received or something. Quickbooks for Nonprofits doesn't have this statement on the donor form. Can't find. Am I crazy?
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There was a thread but I can't seem to find it. The wording is to the effect of "No goods or services were received or exchanged other than intangible religous benefits" or something like that.In other words, a democratic government is the only one in which those who vote for a tax can escape the obligation to pay it.
Alexis de Tocqueville
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Well, you may
Originally posted by Super MomHelp!! Will be doing donor statements soon for donations, but am sure I read on here somewhere about a required IRS wording about no benefits received or something. Quickbooks for Nonprofits doesn't have this statement on the donor form. Can't find. Am I crazy?
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) wherein taxpayers omitted the statement to which you refer (all other aspects of the deduction were properly done). Upon audit they acquired a corrected acknowledgment, but even though the donation had actually been made and paid on time, IRS refused to allow it because it had not been done at the time of the original donation (talk about sore losers ).
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Contribution Statement and wording
For our church, we give a detailed contribution statement, with dates and amounts.
And funds. General offering, Benevolent, building fund, etc.
We don't include items where they have "received" something . . . like books and cd's, or youth camp.
On the statement, we write a thank you and tell them how long they have to contact us for any discrepancies in the contribution amounts. (like 90 days, so we can toss all those contribution envelopes that pile up in that box!)
Then for the IRS, we put this statement:
"No goods or services were provided in exchange for your contribution."
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Originally posted by sandigi View PostFor our church, we give a detailed contribution statement, with dates and amounts.
And funds. General offering, Benevolent, building fund, etc.
We don't include items where they have "received" something . . . like books and cd's, or youth camp.
On the statement, we write a thank you and tell them how long they have to contact us for any discrepancies in the contribution amounts. (like 90 days, so we can toss all those contribution envelopes that pile up in that box!)
Then for the IRS, we put this statement:
"No goods or services were provided in exchange for your contribution."
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No
Originally posted by Super Mom View PostCurious about your statement of throwing away those contribution envelopes. The secretary is under the impression that we have to keep all those envelopes for 10 years!!! Is that right if we have records of their donations in the computer??????????
Soon, I'll be packing our 2012 church files and if I find the source of my decision, I'll update you.
Here is the paragraph I put on our Statements. You are welcome to use it!
"According to our records, this itemized statement shows your cash contributions for the calendar year. If you have any concerns about the accuracy of this information, please contact the church office. Statements not questioned within 90 days will be assumed to be accurate and we may discard the offering envelope documentation."
First paragraph is the thank you. 2nd comes the bonfire clause (tossing of the envelopes). 3rd paragraph is the "No goods or services were provided in exchange for your contributions." End it with another thank you and a blessing. Print statements and thank God.
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Originally posted by sandigi View PostI can't remember where I found it, and spent the past 20 minutes searching to no avail. It was either in "Church & Clergy Tax Guide" by Richard R Hammar or in some IRS publication. But it said that if you gave notice on the contribution statement, you could toss the original source documents. I think it said a reasonable time or something like that. We were ecstatic when we found that information, and the secretary and I had a bonfire . . .
Soon, I'll be packing our 2012 church files and if I find the source of my decision, I'll update you.
Here is the paragraph I put on our Statements. You are welcome to use it!
"According to our records, this itemized statement shows your cash contributions for the calendar year. If you have any concerns about the accuracy of this information, please contact the church office. Statements not questioned within 90 days will be assumed to be accurate and we may discard the offering envelope documentation."
First paragraph is the thank you. 2nd comes the bonfire clause (tossing of the envelopes). 3rd paragraph is the "No goods or services were provided in exchange for your contributions." End it with another thank you and a blessing. Print statements and thank God.
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Originally posted by Super Mom View Post....now, if I tell them 3 years is plenty and toss the rest (they have 10) is that safe? Donor records are in the computer.
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Toss the envelopes not the books
Originally posted by Burke View PostWell, I think I would print out each year's records (at least the last 3) and keep a hard copy somewhere as a backup. Or do you have a backup elsewhere?
Originally posted by Super Mom View PostCurious about your statement of throwing away those contribution envelopes. The secretary is under the impression that we have to keep all those envelopes for 10 years!!! Is that right if we have records of their donations in the computer??????????
Our church was sitting on boxes full of back year's envelopes, under the impression they had to save them since they were "original source" documents. The envelopes is what we toss after 90 days. The books we keep.
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