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How much can I deduct for gift of business car?

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How much can I deduct for gift of business car?

I have a business auto for my business (a single member Limited Liability Company), held for more than one year; cost $80,000; current cost basis $0 (due to depreciation taken); current Fair Market Value $50,000. If my business wants to donate this auto to a private foundation, would it be considered a long-term capital gain asset?  Would my charitable deduction be FMV of $50,000, limited to 20% of my Adjusted Gross Income because it would be a gift of personal property to a private foundation?

I am afraid I have bad news for you.  Your car would not be considered long term capital gain property, first because it has not risen in value and has no long-term gain and, second, because it would be considered “ordinary income property” since it has been used in your trade or business and depreciated. 

Ordinarily if you give a charity property that has a fair market value of less than your cost basis, you can deduct only its lower fair market value, not its cost basis.  But when you give ordinary income property used in your business, under section 170(e)(1)(A) of the Tax Code you must recalculate the amount you can deduct.  You must reduce the fair market value of the property by the amount of depreciation that would have been recaptured if you had sold the property at fair market value on the day of the gift.  The amount that can be recaptured is the entire amount of depreciation taken during the life of the property.  This rule normally limits the deduction to the remaining cost basis in the property.

In your case, with a fair market value of $50,000, but a recapture up to $80,000, the amount you can deduct would be $0.  You have already deducted the full fair market value of the car as a business expense.  If you had taken only $40,000 in depreciation, you would have been allowed to claim a $10,000 deduction ($50,000 fair market value reduced by $40,000 depreciation recapture).

You are correct that you can deduct only 20% of your AGI for a gift of personal property to a private foundation, but unfortunately you wouldn’t have to worry about that if you make this gift.

Tuesday, July 18, 2023

Comments

I'd be interested in how the questioner fully depreciated an $80000 auto that has a fmv of $50000. I think IRS would question that in itself. Does not compute.

Depreciation is an arbitrary figure based on loss of value of the property over its reasonable life expectancy.  It is not based on actual fair market value of the property.  If a property has a reasonable life expectancy of 10 years and you take straight line depreciation, you would reduce its value by $8000 a year and it would be fully depreciated after 10 years.  It might turn out to be a collectible piece of equipment that is actually worth more than its original value, but was depreciated as a reasonable cost of doing business. —Don Kramer

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