SFA Posted March 22, 2016 Report Posted March 22, 2016 Today I felt bad for a client who gave me all the detail documents to support all of their charitable contributions. Included were several "donations" to an organization holding a carwash, the other was for a sub sale. So what do I do? I carefully deduct the value of the car wash and the sub from each of the donations. I felt like Ebinizer Scrooge. The next client that I work on, had a business with over $30,000 of office supplies and expense. I inquired if there were any significant purchases, and also asked him to groom through his records in case something was misclassified. His answer: "No big purchases, all good." Sometimes I feel sorry for the clients who bring in all their receipts and details. 3 Quote
Margaret CPA in OH Posted March 23, 2016 Report Posted March 23, 2016 I understand. Recall the $53 haircut issue I recently raised. Client cut her hair and rather than leaving it on the floor to be swept away, gave it to an organization for wigs. She had a definite benefit and would have cut her hair anyway. Group consensus was to let it go. I still feel a bit uneasy, though. 1 Quote
jasdlm Posted March 23, 2016 Report Posted March 23, 2016 Wow. I have really long hair, and I regularly send a 12 inch bunch to an organization that makes wigs for children. I have a tax practice, so I think about deductions often, and it never even occurred to me to consider deducting the cost of the haircut. Eeegads. 3 Quote
kcjenkins Posted March 25, 2016 Report Posted March 25, 2016 I would not know how to allocate that $53 between cost of normal haircut vs donation value, unless the 'normal' haircut cost, say, $45, and the shop charged the extra $8 for collecting the hair. And really, even if you deducted the entire $53 it's highly unlikely to move the dial on the A. Quote
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