this post was submitted on 10 Mar 2024
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This is certainly an important point and all, but the store is at the very least providing a huge promotional service. How much more does that particular charity get over the course of a year due to this free promotion.
It's a little weird to me that we're at the point of "I'm not going to donate to sick kids if a corporation I already shop at also gets some small benefit!"
Studies show that people really do give more overall with these campaigns.
And people also really don't understand how write-offs work around here in general. It's not some magical way to invent money. Money that's written off is not taxed, but that doesn't make it not money spent.
For easy math, let's say your tax rate is 20% and you give $100 to a charity and wite it off your income. That means you don't pay the $20 in taxes you would have owed otherwise, which brings the effective cost of the donation down to $80.
There's no magic trick where you give money to a charity and suddenly have more money because of reduced taxes.
I understand the write off part. The part I don't understand is if you give me $100, and then I donate the $100 (so cost of donation becomes $80), do I have to report that your $100 donation to me as income? Or did I just use your money to decrease my tax burden?
On a personal level you can deduct it from your income, but only if it passes a certain threshold...but also, it doesn't really count as income before a certain threshold, so realistically, at that quantity, it doesn't matter.
It starts mattering when you start dealing with donation quantities nearing like, $10000, because then you start to run into the standard deduction (the assumed amount that "well everyone just donates this amount, we don't need to keep track of it all before then, we'll just hand that exemption to everyone"). I forget what the gift threshold is in a similar vein, but it's not as low as $100.
Edit: I went through all that and didn't really address the core of the question. If you get paid a large amount of money, say, $20,000 and then donate all of it, ignoring the standard deduction whackery as discussed above (as a corporation would effectively do), yes, your taxes will have you deduct all of the donation from your income (you will not have to count it as revenue, essentially) if the group is registered properly with the IRS. You do not reduce your tax burden further than you would have if you had not received the donation, you essentially get taxed as though you never got the money at all.
From the store's perspective, money donated through the point of sale and given to charity is neither income nor a deduction. It's just the collection of money that doesn't count as anything to the store's finances.
In the same way, if I pay rent for my entire unit and collect the portions owed from my roommates, the money my roommates pay me don't count as my income. I was just passing it along, and it was never mine to begin with.
Yea I guess I was thinking something like this
I would have to include the donation either in my earnings or report it some other way.