• @[email protected]
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    219 months ago

    The person who paid the round up donation (i.e. you) is the person allowed to use the donation for their tax benefit. If you save receipts with round up donations, you can deduct them on your taxes, but no one does that.

    • @Got_Bent
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      139 months ago

      It’s difficult for individuals to get deductions for charitable contributions under current tax code. You’ve got to pretty much donate upwards of twenty thousand dollars before any benefits.

      That stated number is different for every situation and is a rough estimate of average of what I see on returns.

      If Trump tax sunsets in 2025, things will revert back to more easily getting benefits from donations, but that’s a long way away and entirely reliant on who’s running the show at that time.

      • @[email protected]
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        129 months ago

        Thats only because of how the standard deduction works; If you have to itemize, then any amount of charitable donations can be deducted (up to like 60% of your AGI i think). Basically anyone needs to “outweigh” the standard deduction with their own deductions, because doing otherwise is worse. Technically i think you could forgo the standard deduction and use your own, even if you don’t go over the standard deduction, but why would you?

        • @grue
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          39 months ago

          That’s the point: almost nobody benefits from charitable donations because almost everybody takes the standard deduction, so “but you can get tax benefits for donating!” is a red herring in almost all cases.

        • @Got_Bent
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          29 months ago

          That catch on current code is that they combined exemption with standard deduction. Makes it quite a bit more difficult than the before times.

          I’ll leave it at that as I’m generally overwhelmed with unparalleled Internet tax expertise any time the subject arises.