Hi All,
I have a PIA client that I fight with every year regarding donation receipts. I thought I had him trained after last year, but I just received his tax info and he has the following donations with no receipts or documentation of any kind:
$600 of cash (plate) donations to church
$240 of cash donations for "jeans day" at work
$2,091 of non-cash donations (no details on what was donated, not even a blank receipt that you would get from DAV, Goodwill, etc..)
If I'm reading the substantiation requirements correctly he's out of luck on the cash donations, correct? You have to at least have a cancelled check or bank statement if no letter from the organization, so cash deposited in the collection plate at church doesn't count, same with cash donations for jeans day.
What about the non-cash donations? If he can provide details (date of contribution, name of the charity, description of items donated, etc.), will that suffice for the $2,091 of goods donated? Or does he have to have at least the blank receipt provided by Goodwill and similar charities (I don't even know who he donated these items to).
Knowing that this is a pain in the *** client that's going to get fired after this tax season anyway, how would you handle this situation? Tell him the donations are a no-go and he's welcome to go elsewhere if he doesn't like it? Allow him to come up with some documentation for the non-cash donations?
Any advice is appreciated. Thanks,
Kristine
I have a PIA client that I fight with every year regarding donation receipts. I thought I had him trained after last year, but I just received his tax info and he has the following donations with no receipts or documentation of any kind:
$600 of cash (plate) donations to church
$240 of cash donations for "jeans day" at work
$2,091 of non-cash donations (no details on what was donated, not even a blank receipt that you would get from DAV, Goodwill, etc..)
If I'm reading the substantiation requirements correctly he's out of luck on the cash donations, correct? You have to at least have a cancelled check or bank statement if no letter from the organization, so cash deposited in the collection plate at church doesn't count, same with cash donations for jeans day.
What about the non-cash donations? If he can provide details (date of contribution, name of the charity, description of items donated, etc.), will that suffice for the $2,091 of goods donated? Or does he have to have at least the blank receipt provided by Goodwill and similar charities (I don't even know who he donated these items to).
Knowing that this is a pain in the *** client that's going to get fired after this tax season anyway, how would you handle this situation? Tell him the donations are a no-go and he's welcome to go elsewhere if he doesn't like it? Allow him to come up with some documentation for the non-cash donations?
Any advice is appreciated. Thanks,
Kristine
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