Donations of non-cash property to charity can provide a valuable charitable deduction—generally, you can deduct the fair market value of the property on the date of the contribution.
Because of multiple past abuses where taxpayers substantially overvalued their property contributions, strict substantiation rules apply, and failure to follow them can cause the IRS to deny your deductions.
If you claim a charitable deduction of more than $5,000 for any single item of property or for multiple similar items of personal or real property, you face the strictest requirements.
You need to do three relatively straightforward things to deduct non-cash contributions over $5,000.
You must obtain a contemporaneous written acknowledgment from the charity (on paper or in electronic form) containing:
The name of the charity.
The date and location of the contribution.
A reasonably detailed description of the property contributed.
A statement that no goods or services were provided in exchange for the contribution (if that was the case).
You must obtain the acknowledgment by the time you file your tax return or, if earlier, by the due date for the return.
You need to obtain an appraisal of the property’s fair market value. This is by far the most onerous requirement.
You must complete Section B of IRS Form 8283, Noncash Charitable Contributions, and attach it to your tax return. The charity must sign Part V of Section B, acknowledging receipt of the property; the charity’s signature does not mean it agrees with the appraised value. The appraiser must sign Part IV of Section B.
You must obtain an appraisal if you claim a charitable deduction of more than $5,000 for any single item of property or for multiple similar items of personal or real property.
“Similar items” means property of the same generic category or type, such as:
Stamps.
Coins.
Fine art.
Books.
Clothing.
Jewelry.
Furniture.
Household goods.
Collectibles.
Decorative art.
Land.
Buildings.
It makes no difference if you donate a group of similar items worth over $5,000 to one charity or to many different charities.
For example, if you give books to three different schools and you deduct $2,000, $2,500, and $900, respectively, your claimed deduction is more than $5,000, and you must get a qualified appraisal for each book.
You must also complete a Form 8283 for each school.
An appraisal is not required for certain types of readily valued property, such as:
Publicly traded stock, mutual fund shares, or other securities. You can use the publicly available list price on the date of the donation; this is one reason donations of stock are extremely popular.
Vehicles (including cars, boats, or airplanes). Your deduction is limited to the gross proceeds from the vehicle’s sale by the charity. The charity must provide you with an acknowledgment listing the sales proceeds within 30 days of the sale.
Business inventory held primarily for sale to customers.
Intellectual property, such as patents, trademarks, copyrights owned by persons other than the creator of the work, and trade secrets. Your deduction is limited to the lesser of fair market value or your basis in the property.
It might seem ridiculous, but digital assets such as Bitcoin are not categorized as publicly traded securities for appraisal purposes, even though their prices are listed on exchanges and trading platforms.
Thus, if the value of donated Bitcoin or other digital assets exceeds $5,000, you must obtain an appraisal.
Hire the appraiser early.
The appraisal must be signed and dated by the due date of your return, plus extensions (October 15 at the latest for extended personal returns).
Waiting until the last minute can be risky.
On the other hand, the appraisal can be completed no earlier than 60 days before the contribution date of the donated item.
Thus, if you have an old appraisal for a donation, you can’t use it.
You also can’t use insurance appraisals.
To satisfy the IRS, the appraisal must be done by a qualified appraiser with verifiable education and experience in valuing the type of property involved.
Appraisers are qualified if:
They have earned an appraisal designation from a generally recognized professional appraiser organization, or
They have completed professional or college-level coursework in appraisal or an apprenticeship program and have two or more years of experience.
Note that most states don’t license appraisers other than real estate appraisers.
The person must regularly prepare appraisals for which they are paid.
The appraiser must be independent—not an employee of the donor or charity or related to them.
The appraiser can’t have been a party to the transaction in which the donor acquired the item, unless the property is donated within two months of acquisition and its appraised value is not more than its acquisition price.
It’s acceptable for the appraiser to regularly work for the donor or charity, but they must perform the majority of their appraisals for others.
The donor, not the charity, must pay the appraiser.
Moreover, donors can’t deduct appraisal fees as part of their charitable contribution. Nor may donors deduct such fees as a miscellaneous itemized deduction on Schedule A. (This deduction was permanently eliminated by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.)
For obvious reasons, the appraisal fee cannot be based on:
A percentage of the appraised value of the property, or
The value of the property allowed as a charitable deduction.
You should pay the appraiser a flat fee or an hourly rate.
The appraisal must be performed in accordance with generally accepted appraisal standards and contain the following information:
Description of the property and its physical condition.
Date (or expected date) of the contribution.
Terms of any restrictions on the use, sale, or other disposition of the property or of the right to income from it.
Appraiser’s contact information.
Appraiser’s qualifications, including background, experience, education, and any membership in professional appraisal associations.
Statement that the appraisal was prepared for income tax purposes.
Date (or dates) the property was valued.
Declaration stating the appraiser understands that the report will be used for tax purposes and that he or she is subject to penalties if there is a substantial misstatement of the property’s value.
Appraised fair market value on the date (or expected date) of the contribution.
Method of valuation, such as the sales comparison approach, the cost approach, or the income approach.
Specific basis for the valuation, such as any specific sales transaction.
Report completion date.
For artwork—paintings in particular—the appraisal must include:
A professional-quality digital color image.
A detailed description.
Cost information.
Provenance.
Exhibition history.
Comparable sales.
Authenticity information.
When the IRS audits art donations of over $50,000, it asks a board of art experts to review the donor’s appraisal.
Thin art appraisals are asking for trouble.
The appraisal is not qualified if you fail to disclose or misrepresent facts and a reasonable person would expect that to cause a misstatement of value.
Give the appraiser:
Purchase documents.
Prior appraisals.
Repair records.
Condition issues.
Restrictions on use or resale.
Anything unusual about the property.
You summarize the results of the appraisal when you complete Form 8283.
Thus, generally you don’t need to attach a copy of the appraisal report to your tax return.
You do need to attach the appraisal to your return if:
You claim a deduction of $20,000 or more for art donations.
You claim a deduction of more than $500,000 for property donations of any kind.
You claim a deduction for an easement or other restriction on the exterior of a building in a historic district.
Be sure to keep a copy of the appraisal with your tax records.
The IRS doesn’t have to accept your appraisal. It has its own appraisers and valuation specialists. If the IRS determines that you underpaid your taxes because your appraisal inflated the value of donated property, it can impose tax penalties.
You’ll also have to:
Pay back the tax you saved by claiming the inflated deduction.
Pay interest on the underpaid tax.
The penalty is 20 percent of the underpayment if:
The appraised value was 150 percent or more of the item’s actual fair market value, and
You underpaid your taxes by $5,000 or more because of the inflated value.
The penalty jumps to 40 percent of the underpayment if:
The appraised value was 200 percent or more of the property's actual value.
Claiming a charitable deduction for a single item of non-cash property—or multiple similar items of property—worth more than $5,000 requires careful compliance with IRS substantiation rules.
Donors generally must:
Obtain a contemporaneous written acknowledgment from the charity.
Secure a qualified appraisal from an independent appraiser.
File IRS Form 8283 with their tax return.
Failure to satisfy these requirements can cause the IRS to completely deny the deduction—even if the donation itself was legitimate.
Before claiming a deduction for non-cash gifts over $5,000, make sure you:
☑ Obtain a written acknowledgment from the charity.
☑ Hire a qualified, independent appraiser.
☑ Ensure the appraisal is completed within the required time frame.
☑ Complete and attach Form 8283.
☑ Obtain the required signatures from both the charity and the appraiser.
☑ Retain the appraisal with your tax records.
☑ Attach the appraisal itself when required for large deductions.
☑ Avoid overstating value to prevent IRS penalties.