With the standard exemption increasing and federal income tax rates generally falling in 2018, accelerating charitable gifts into 2017 may seem like a no-brainer. You might want to think twice if you plan a large charitable gift.
Under current law, the income tax charitable deduction and many other itemized deductions gradually phase out as income increases above $313,800 for married jointly filing taxpayers. The phase out continues until the deductions are reduced by 80%.
The just-enacted Tax Cuts and Jobs Act suspends this limitation, allowing charitable and other itemized deductions without the income-based phase out. This could cause a 2018 charitable gift to produce a more valuable tax benefit than a 2017 gift, particularly for large gifts.
If you are unsure how to proceed, ask your CPA to run the numbers in both scenarios. Better to wait a year for the deduction, than to receive a much smaller benefit than you expected.
For more information regarding the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, follow these LINKS:
http://blog.williamsparker.com/businessandtax/2017/12/18/whats-tax-reform-bill/
http://blog.williamsparker.com/businessandtax/2017/12/18/reform-business-tax-reform/
E. John Wagner, II
jwagner@williamsparker.com
941-536-2037