Bill Would Raise Rate for Volunteers’ Car Use
January 29, 2009 | Read Time: 1 minute
Several members of Congress are trying again this year to pass legislation that would increase the tax deduction for people who use their cars, trucks, and other vehicles as part of their volunteer work.
Under federal law, volunteers who drive their cars for charitable purposes may deduct 14 cents a mile for their car costs or be reimbursed by a charity at that rate without the payment’s being subject to federal income tax.
Last year, in a bid to help volunteers cope with high gas prices, a dozen bills were introduced in Congress that would have increased the mileage rate in various ways. None of the measures passed. But one of the bills has been revived in the new session of Congress.
The latest measure (S 243, HR 524) would allow the Internal Revenue Service to continually adjust the mileage rate for charitable activities for inflation and other costs without seeking Congressional approval as the IRS already does for business, medical, and moving expenses. The current business rate is 55 cents per mile; the medical and moving rate is 24 cents.
Under the bill, the IRS could set the rate as high as the business rate but no lower than the deduction set for medical and moving expenses.
Sponsors of the measure said that despite the recent decline in oil prices the cost of gas still outpaces the current mileage deduction limit.