The US doesn't have "deemed sale", and US tax law on charitable donation is quite clear. If you donate property, and it was held less than a year, you can deduct the lesser of basis and FMV. If held more than a year, you can deduct FMV. From this deduction, you remove the value of things or services given you by the charity or at the charity's request.Burnaby49 wrote:Yes, at least it was true when I worked in the area but that is quite a while back. The reasoning is obvious. If you make a cash donation to a charity then the money is assumed to come from after tax income. You get a deduction to the extent of the cash to partly compensate for your generosity.Arthur Rubin wrote:IIRC, when you give "appreciated property" in Canada, even to a charity where a cash gift would be deductible, you are liable for capital gains tax as if you had sold it. Is that correct, Burnaby?
There are substantiation and, potentially, assessment requirements, as well.