by Kerry Hannon | Feb 22, 2010
Donate to a charity helping 
Haiti earthquake victims
before March 1,
and the Internal Revenue Service
has some relief for you.
Haiti earthquake victims
before March 1,
and the Internal Revenue Service
has some relief for you.
Under a new law,  you can actually write off a 2010 Haiti donation on your 2009 tax  return if you itemize. (You can put the donation on your 2010 return  next year if you prefer.) “This is quite unusual,” says Tom  Ochsenschlager, vice president of taxation for the American Institute of  Certified Public Accountants. “But there are a number of requirements  to qualify for this break.”
- Your donation must be dated no later than February 28.  That means, if you’re mailing a check, the postmark will need to be the  27; the 28th is a Sunday and post offices will be closed.
 
 
- Your gift must be cash. Donations of clothes or other goods  won’t qualify.
 
 
- The charity must qualify as tax-deductible according to the  IRS. The agency’s Publication  78 has a list of many approved groups. Churches, synagogues,  mosques and government agencies are also eligible, even if they are not  listed in Publication 78. But contributions made to foreign  organizations generally are not deductible, so if you have your eye on a  foreign charity, check to see if they have an American subsidiary. (For  example, you can’t claim a deduction for a donation directly to Médecins Sans Frontières, but you can  deduct a gift to Doctors  Without Borders.)
 
 
- You must be able to prove the donation was for Haiti relief.  Be sure you have documentation that your contribution was earmarked to  help victims of the Jan. 12 earthquake. The Clinton Bush Haiti Fund  qualifies, and MoneyWatch blogger Kathy Kristof has noted some other  groups worth considering. For contributions made by cash, check,  credit or debit card, you’ll need either a bank record such as a  cancelled check, a credit card statement, or a receipt from the charity.  A receipt should show the name of the charity, the date of your  donation and amount you gave. And if you zapped a text-message donation  from your cell to the American Red  Cross, United  Way, or Catholic Relief Services, a  phone bill will satisfy the recordkeeping requirement, as long as it  has the required documentation for receipts.
 
 
- Donations of $250 or more will demand additional documentation. For these gifts, you’ll also need written acknowledgment from the charity showing whether the organization provided any goods or services in exchange for the gift.
 
 

 
 

 
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