Tax Law and News Treasury, IRS Issue Proposed Regulations on Charitable Contributions and State and Local Tax Credits Read the Article Open Share Drawer Share this: Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn Written by Intuit Accountants Team Published Aug 29, 2018 2 min read The U.S. Department of the Treasury and the IRS issued proposed regulations providing rules on the availability of charitable contribution deductions when the taxpayer receives or expects to receive a corresponding state or local tax credit. The proposed regulations issued today are designed to clarify the relationship between state and local tax credits and the federal tax rules for charitable contribution deductions. The proposed regulations are available in the Federal Register. Under the proposed regulations, a taxpayer who makes payments or transfers property to an entity eligible to receive tax deductible contributions must reduce their charitable deduction by the amount of any state or local tax credit the taxpayer receives or expects to receive. For example, if a state grants a 70 percent state tax credit and the taxpayer pays $1,000 to an eligible entity, the taxpayer receives a $700 state tax credit. The taxpayer must reduce the $1,000 contribution by the $700 state tax credit, leaving an allowable contribution deduction of $300 on the taxpayer’s federal income tax return. The proposed regulations also apply to payments made by trusts or decedents’ estates in determining the amount of their contribution deduction. The proposed regulations provide exceptions for dollar-for-dollar state tax deductions and for tax credits of no more than 15 percent of the payment amount or of the fair market value of the property transferred. A taxpayer who makes a $1,000 contribution to an eligible entity is not required to reduce the $1,000 deduction on the taxpayer’s federal income tax return if the state or local tax credit received or expected to be received is no more than $150. Treasury and IRS welcome public comments on these proposed regulations. For details on submitting comments, see the proposed regulations. Updates on the implementation of the TCJA can be found on the Tax Reform page of IRS.gov. Editor’s note: Learn more about tax reform with the Intuit® ProConnect™ Tax Reform Resource Center. Previous Post 5 Ways to Get a Head Start on Tax Reform… Next Post Accounting for Cannabis: Grow your Niche Within the Accounting Industry Written by Intuit Accountants Team The Intuit® Accountants team provides ProConnect™ Tax, Lacerte® Tax, ProSeries® Tax, and add-on software and services to enable workflow for its customers. Visit us online or follow us on X, Instagram, Facebook, and LinkedIn. More from Intuit Accountants Team Comments are closed. Browse Related Articles Tax Law and News Tax Year 25 E-file opens January 26, 2026 Tax Law and News Tax update TY25: Navigating the OB3 Act and more Practice Management New Year’s resolutions: firm operations, growth, and team Tax Law and News Why advocating for tax extensions is a “win” Tax Law and News New USPS guidelines: Effect on tax payments Tax Law and News 5 key deductions and credits for 2025 tax returns Tax Law and News What you need to know about the Disaster Related Extension of Deadlines Act Grow your practice Case study: Blueprint for firm turnaround and growth Workflow tools Learn 2025: Tax Product Training, January 21-22 Practice Management The remote advantage: Scaling smarter