To claim the deduction, the receiving organization will need to provide you with a written statement confirming the donated food will be used exclusively for the care of the ill, the needy, or infants. This statement will need to be in hand by the tax return filing date.
Additionally, the following information should be maintained for each donation:
- Description of the food
- Name and address of organization receiving the donation
- Date of donation
- Fair market value of the food on the date of the donation, and
- How the fair market value was determined (comparable sales, etc.)
For example, Aldrich Foods processes produce and has found itself with an abundance of beans. The beans have a fair market value of $100,000 and tax basis of $85,000. The bumper bean crop has buyers at capacity, and Aldrich Foods is short on storage so instead of paying to store, sell, transport or dispose of the excess beans, Aldrich Foods reaches out to the local food bank to see if they have a need for the beans. The local food bank happily accepts the donation and provides Aldrich Foods with the necessary documentation to support the deduction. Come tax time, Aldrich Foods takes a deduction for $92,500 (tax basis of $85,000 + 50% of the fair market value $7,500), which assuming a 40% tax rate, results in a tax benefit of $3,000.