Charitable Giving

What Are My Charitable Donations Worth?

Keep track of items donated to charity — the IRS requires you to report fair market value, not the charity.

As you clean out your closet or reorganize your home, keep track of items given to charity. Tax law requires all household items donated to charity must be in good or better condition.

Items in 'fair' condition are no longer acceptable for deduction claims. Use the value guide below as a reasonable starting point.

Key rule

You must document the fair market value — not the original price. Get a written acknowledgment from the charity for donations over $250.

Value Guide

Fair market value by item category

Item CategoryPoorGoodExcellent
Men's Clothing$2 – $12$12 – $20
Women's Clothing$2 – $12$12 – $20
Children's Clothing$1 – $6$6 – $15
Shoes$3 – $10$10 – $30
Furniture (sofa)$35 – $100$100 – $200
Furniture (chair)$10 – $50$50 – $90
Electronics (TV)$5 – $50$50 – $150
Appliances$15 – $75$75 – $150
Books$0.50 – $2$2 – $5
Kitchenware$1 – $5$5 – $15
IRS Rules

What the IRS requires

Items must be in good or better condition

Fair‑condition items no longer qualify for a deduction.

Keep receipts and written acknowledgment

Required for any single donation over $250.

Form 8283 for non‑cash over $500

Attach to your return when total non‑cash donations exceed $500.

Qualified appraisal over $5,000

Donations valued above $5,000 require a written qualified appraisal.