Reports R48789
Tax Issues Relating to Charitable Contributions and Organizations
Published January 8, 2026 · Brendan McDermott, Donald J. Marples, Jane G. Gravelle
Summary
The federal government supports the charitable sector through favorable tax treatment for charitable organizations and donors. Individuals itemizing deductions may claim a tax deduction for charitable contributions (and other individuals can deduct a limited amount of contributions). Estates can make charitable bequests. Corporations can deduct charitable contributions before computing income taxes. Earnings on funds held by charitable organizations and used for a related charitable purpose are also exempt from tax. In FY2026, projected tax subsidies for charities, not including the value of the tax exemption on earnings of charities or the estate tax deduction, total $78 billion. If investment income of nonprofits were taxed at the 21% corporate tax rate in 2022, revenue collected is estimated at $12 billion (this amount excludes religious organizations). Based on 2023 estate tax returns, the cost of deducting bequests on estates is estimated at $13 billion to $20 billion.
Charitable organizations include both operating charities (including religious institutions) and organizations that tend to hold assets and make grants to operating charities, most notably private foundations, but also donor-advised funds (DAFs) and supporting organizations. The tax code treats different types of organizations differently. For example, foundations and certain supporting organizations have minimum payout requirements, while DAFs do not. Limits on charitable giving also differ across gifts to different types of organizations.
Changes in the tax revision enacted in late 2017, popularly known as the Tax Cut and Jobs Act (TCJA; P.L. 115-97), reduced the scope of the tax benefit for charitable giving through broader modifications to the tax code. A higher standard deduction and the limit on the deduction for state and local taxes caused more individuals to take the standard deduction, as opposed to itemizing deductions. As a result, many individuals who were able to deduct charitable contributions no longer claim this itemized deduction. Other changes exempted more estates from the estate tax, eliminating the benefit of deducting charitable contributions in these cases. These changes were made permanent by P.L. 119-21, the FY2025 reconciliation law sometimes referred to as the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA). Concerns have arisen that these changes are expected to lead to a reduction in charitable contributions.
In 2024, charitable contributions were estimated at $593 billion, or 2.9% of gross domestic product (GDP). Charitable gifts come from four sources: individual contributions (accounting for 66%), foundations (accounting for 19%), bequests (accounting for 8%), and corporations (accounting for 7%). Estimates suggest approximately 63% of individual contributions were claimed as itemized deductions in 2022.
A number of policy options could be considered with respect to the tax treatment of charitable giving or the tax treatment of charitable entities. The charitable deduction could be modified in ways that could extend charitable giving incentives to taxpayers not itemizing deductions, or with the intent of making charitable giving tax incentives more effective (inducing more giving for each dollar of lost federal tax revenue). There are also options related to the type of treatment of certain types of gifts, such as appreciated property or charitable miles driven. Some proposals have also been made to address concerns about aspects of certain charitable organizations, such as payouts by DAFs and university endowments. Some proposals would reverse certain changes made by the 2017 tax revision to the unrelated business income tax (UBIT) or impose administrative reforms.
Topics
Charitable ContributionsCollege & University EndowmentsDonor-Advised Funds (DAFs)Nonprofits & Tax-Exempt Organizations