Car Doantion
 

Donate a Car  

Demographics of Who Will Donate a Car to Charity in the U.S.A.

Short Survey on Who Offers Cars for Donation

The average person who was liable to donate a car to charitable organizations once included just about everyone in the late 20th century. Since the changes in IRS regulations and rules governing deductibles in 2005 is responsible for a demographic shift towards the upper-middle class with regards to just who will donate a car to a charitable group or non-profit organization (NPO).

 

Donate a Car - Car Donation

 

Self employed are more likely to doante a car

There are multiple reasons for this shift.  To start with, those who are self-employed are far more likely to take itemized deductions since such people have a greater upward mobility than peolple who are employed, they also tend to earn quite a bit more a lot from their activities. 

Self employment also means that you pay your own contributions as well as those normally picked up by an employer.  This double taxation leaves many of the self-employed on a constant lookout for deduction possibilities.  When you donate a car to charity you can make up several thousand dollars at a time in deductions – sometimes enough to  bump you into a lower bracket.

Of course, not everyone who wants to donate a car is interested in the deduction.  There will always be people who just want their old junker cars to go away and many of the ads imploring you to donate a car rely upon the offer of free towing (and sometimes a hotel or cruise voucher) to help get low-value cars from far less off individuals than the PhDs who are donating perfectly good cars.

Donation of a Car in working order is more popular again

However, in yet another installment of how it pays to have a few extra coins to rub together, those who are able to afford to give a working car that is likely to be used for transport rather than sold at wholesale auction.  This other type of use occurs when you carefully choose a charity you trust, donate a car to it and find out 3 years later that it's been used for various official functions and as transport for in-house needs that furthers the mission of the charity. 

As such, those who already have some extra money to throw around are more likely to get the higher deductible that they're more likely to be able to capitalize upon in the first place.  That means the demographics of someone looking to donate a car have somewhat suddenly moved back to where they were before the advertising push of the 1990s.  Though many middle class people might donate a car that doesn't run very well, they won't enjoy the higher level of benefits that a better quality donation typically garners. 

But other than wealth, the other demographics of those who participate in charitable organizations when they donate a car include many of those who grew up or recently used the services of such an organization.  This is gives one a good idea as to how non-monetary benefits work in the real world.  The chance to give back to an organization that has helped one get back on their own two feet is an invaluable feeling of pride and accomplishment that the IRS cannot put a value upon.

Donating Scrap Cars is still popular too

So, despite recent setbacks in deduction amount for the typical donation from a mid-level income individual or family, this hasn't stopped a segment of the population from donating scrap cars that they simply want hauled away as junk.  This is especially true in the case of vehicles that have no chance to have a useful resale value whether conducting the transaction yourself or letting a car donation service take care of it. 

The main difference between the classes of donation that have sprung up since the 2005 ruling means that if you choose to donate a car, it may not be very lucrative for the charity in question unless it's running well and worth their while to fix up for use (rather than selling on the wholesale market), even if they don't use a third-party donation agent.