If your expenses exceed the standard deduction and itemizing is more beneficial, you may wonder how donations affect your taxable income. Assuming an adjusted gross income (AGI) of $105,000, you can deduct cash contributions to qualified charities up to 60% of your AGI—approximately $63,000. Any contributions beyond this limit can be carried forward for up to five years. While GoFundMe donations to individuals are not deductible, if the funds are collected on behalf of a qualified charitable organization, then they ARE deductible.
Understanding the Standard Deduction vs. Itemizing
When tax season arrives, the first step in determining how charitable donations affect your taxes is deciding whether to take the standard deduction or to itemize deductions. The standard deduction is a flat reduction of taxable income: in 2024 it is $14,600 for single filers, $29,200 for married couples filing jointly, and $21,900 for head-of-household filers. Itemizing, on the other hand, requires you to list expenses such as charitable donations, mortgage interest, state and local taxes (up to $10,000), and certain medical expenses. Charitable donations only reduce your taxable income if your total itemized deductions exceed the standard deduction for your filing status.
How Much You Need to Donate to Itemize
In 2024, for taxpayers with no mortgage, minimal state taxes, and no qualifying medical expenses, donations must exceed the standard deduction on their own. That means a single filer would need to donate more than $14,600, a married couple more than $29,200, and a head of household more than $21,900 before charitable giving starts to lower taxable income. For example, with an adjusted gross income (AGI) of $105,000, the IRS allows cash donations to qualified charities up to 60% of AGI—$63,000 in this case. Contributions above this limit can be carried forward for up to five years. This rule means that very large donations may still provide tax benefits over multiple years.
Rules on Deductibility and Reporting
Charitable donations must be given to a qualified organization to be deductible. Personal transfers, such as GoFundMe campaigns for individuals, do not qualify. However, if funds are collected through a GoFundMe campaign run on behalf of a registered nonprofit, then those donations are deductible. Reporting also depends on filing situation. Individuals claim charitable contributions on Schedule A as itemized deductions. C corporations deduct them directly on the corporate return. For S corporations and partnerships, donations pass through to shareholders or partners to report individually. LLCs and sole proprietors cannot deduct charitable gifts at the business level unless taxed as a C corporation.
The Real Impact on Taxes
One important misconception is that a charitable donation lowers taxes dollar-for-dollar. In reality, it lowers taxable income, and the tax savings depend on your marginal tax bracket. For example, if you are in the 22% bracket and donate $1,000, your tax liability decreases by roughly $220. The benefit of donating scales with both your tax bracket and the size of your donation.
Charitable deductions reported on Your Tax Return
- Individual Deductions: Report charitable contributions on Schedule A as itemized deductions; only deductible if you itemize on your individual return.
- C Corporation Benefits: Claim charitable deduction directly on the corporate return.
- S Corporation Pass-Through: S corp donations are allocated to shareholders and reported on their individual returns.
- No Direct Business Deductions: LLCs, sole proprietors, and S corps do not deduct charitable gifts at the business level.
Key Points
- For individuals, charitable deductions matter only if itemized deductions exceed the standard deduction.
- Cash gifts to qualified charities generally capped at 60% of AGI, with excess carried forward up to five years.
- Donations to individuals are not deductible unless directed through a qualified charity.
- Tax savings are based on your tax bracket, not the full amount of the donation.
- Charitable donations are never deductible at the business level for LLCs, partnerships, or S corporations—they pass through and must be reported by the individual owners on their personal tax returns.
- Only C corporations can deduct donations directly as a business expense.
Conclusion and Next Steps
Charitable giving can be a meaningful way to support causes you care about while also reducing taxable income—but only when your total itemized deductions are greater than the standard deduction. If you are planning significant donations, it is important to calculate your break-even point in advance and understand how much you can realistically deduct in the current year.
If you want to maximize both the impact of your giving and your tax savings, let’s run the numbers together. And we’ll build a giving strategy that works for you.

