
ROAD
I am in agreement with Ray. I have been on the board of a non-profit that helps families of homicide victims for almost 20 years. And I have been involved in church leadership positions. I get a bad feeling reading about all the potential conflict of interest situations that seem to have developed around this particular charity. I know what good charities and good churches do, and we don't do that stuff. I think the extra effort you go to sell your boat yourself will help insure a good person gets the boat and your church gets the level of support you envision for it. Worst case scenario, hire a yacht broker to deal with the buyers.NiceAft wrote:Could you give it to the church, take a write off for whatever you believe it's worth, and have the church sell it? You will know that the maximum amount of proceeds go to where it needs to go.
Ray
^ This.Catigale wrote:Are you moving upor moving on
from sailing Road?
Don't be a stranger either way...
I can appreciate your secular position on this issue, but I think we do better on this forum to honor the intent and values of the poster as much as we can. One of the very nice things about living in democratic countries like yours and ours, is that we do have the freedom to choose how we expend our resources and upon whom we bestow our gifts. I recommend that we celebrate Road Warrior's generosity, and try to share our opinions about the charity (and it's type) that he is questioning.sunshinecoasting wrote:You lost me the second you said "church", sell it and donate all proceeds directly to the local childrens hospital, this way 100% goes directly to the needy and no questions about propiety.
I have donated boats to non-profits and charities. I don't remember all the details of how it works, but the IRS has many rules that limit how much you can write off a vehicle or boat donated to charity. Under $500 the rules are pretty simple. Over $500 it gets complicated.NiceAft wrote:Could you give it to the church, take a write off for whatever you believe it's worth, and have the church sell it? You will know that the maximum amount of proceeds go to where it needs to go.
Ray
Good info, Judy. I didn't know that. Thanks for the post.I have donated boats to non-profits and charities. I don't remember all the details of how it works, but the IRS has many rules that limit how much you can write off a vehicle or boat donated to charity. Under $500 the rules are pretty simple. Over $500 it gets complicated.
First of all, at a certain value (I think over $500), you have to obtain a professional appraisal before donating. Using Blue Book Value isn't acceptable.
Secondly, if the charity sells the boat within 3 years, they are required to report the actual selling price to the IRS. They send you a copy of the form too. If they sold it for a lower price than you claimed as a deduction, , the IRS will send you a bill to recapture the tax benefit you got for the over-stated deduction.