Tangible Personal Property

As with gifts of long-term capital-gain securities or real estate, you are entitled to a charitable deduction for a gift of long-term capital-gain tangible personal property such as works of art, rare books, and stamp or coin collections not created by the donor. (Note: The top capital-gain tax rate on such assets is 28 percent.) How much you can deduct depends on the so-called standard of "related use."

Here is how the standard is applied: If the use of the contributed property is related to the exempt purposes of a charity (e.g., a painting to a museum or rare books to a library), you are entitled to a charitable income-tax deduction for the fair-market value of the property.

If the use of the contributed property is unrelated to the exempt purposes of the charity (e.g., stamp collection to the U of I Foundation to sell and use the proceeds), you are entitled to a charitable deduction for your basis in the property.

A donor who contributes a work of art created by himself/herself is limited to cost basis for the charitable deduction.

Tangible Property

Related Use

Unrelated Use

Fair-Market Value
Cost Basis

Charitable Deduction
Actual Tax Savings (24%)

$20,000
$ 5,000

$20,000
$ 4,800

$20,000
$ 5,000

$ 5,000
$ 1,200

More Information

Contact Us

Office of Gift Planning and Trust Services
University of Illinois Foundation
Philanthropy Center
303 St. Mary’s Road, MC-386
Champaign, IL 61820

 

(217) 244-0473 phone
(217) 333-5577 facsimile
GPinfo@uif.uillinois.edu

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