Client has a wholesale business. Not selling a lot, but has a large inventory. He wants to donate to a charitable organization and take a deduction. Amount could be in excess of $25,000. Sch A deduction? or if inventory is reduced on Sch C by giving it away, that would be a negative amount on his Sch C. Which was can or should it be done?
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Originally posted by JenMO View Postor if inventory is reduced on Sch C by giving it away, that would be a negative amount on his Sch C. Which was can or should it be done?
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Originally posted by JenMO View PostAs inventory, he is considering cost. Would an appraisal be necessary? If appraisal is necessary, how would this be handled? Would someone actually have to come count (he has lots of little things) and look at invoices?Last edited by Burke; 09-10-2013, 11:36 AM.
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CHARITABLE DONATIONS OF INVENTORY/Receipt
Originally posted by Burke View PostUsually, someone in the same type of business that your client is in, who deals in the same type of inventory.
B. Seems to me that these provisions from IRS Publication 334 would apply to a sole prop situation, but not to a corporation or partnership:
Donation of inventory. If you contribute inventory (property that you sell in the course of your business), the amount you can claim as a contribution deduction is the smaller of its fair market value on the day you contributed it or its basis. The basis of donated inventory is any cost incurred for the inventory in an earlier year that you would otherwise include in your opening inventory for the year of the contribution. You must remove the amount of your contribution deduction from your opening inventory. It is not part of the cost of goods sold.
If the cost of donated inventory is not included in your opening inventory, the inventory's basis is zero and you cannot claim a charitable contribution deduction. Treat the inventory's cost as you would ordinarily treat it under your method of accounting. For example, include the purchase price of inventory bought and donated in the same year in the cost of goods sold for that year.
A special rule may apply to certain donations of food inventory. See Publication 526, Charitable Contributions.
Example 1.
You are a calendar year taxpayer who uses an accrual method of accounting. In 2012 you contributed property from inventory to a church. It had a fair market value of $600. The closing inventory at the end of 2011 properly included $400 of costs due to the acquisition of the property, and in 2011, you properly deducted $50 of administrative and other expenses attributable to the property as business expenses. The charitable contribution allowed for 2012 is $400 ($600 − $200). The $200 is the amount that would be ordinary income if you had sold the contributed inventory at fair market value on the date of the gift. The cost of goods sold you use in determining gross income for 2012 must not include the $400. You remove that amount from opening inventory for 2012.
Example 2.
If, in Example 1, you acquired the contributed property in 2012 at a cost of $400, you would include the $400 cost of the property in figuring the cost of goods sold for 2012 and deduct the $50 of administrative and other expenses attributable to the property for that year. You would not be allowed any charitable contribution deduction for the contributed property
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Someone asked about getting a receipt from the charity. As a practice, it would be wise to advise the taxpayer/client to obtain a detailed receipt from the charity, perhaps with a list of the inventory items being donated, or a "general" receipt acknowledging the specific items on an attached list. Besides, if the items are worth more than $500.00, a receipt is likely going to be required anyway. As Burke and others have frequently pointed out, sometimes it is best to prepare for inevitable audit on such matters.
A few years back, I handled an audit for a single member llc (thus sole prop basically) which donated a ton (literally) of items to a homeless shelter, mostly clothing, some shoes, and related non-food items. The donation was in the mid 2000's, and other than a generalized acknowledgment and some book entries on inventory, TP has no receipt specifically listing the items other than "boxes of socks" and so on. It took much too long to get a satisfactory resolution. TP had sketchy inventory records showing actual purchase or other acquisition of the donated items as well.Friends double; family triple. Don't buy an audit for yourself. If someone has to go to jail make sure it is the client. Remember it is only taxes, nothing important.
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