Giving To Those Who Need Our Support

Giving To Those Who Need Our Support

Welcome to Money Monday with Suze, a weekly newsletter designed to inspire your financial life and give you actionable insights from the World’s Personal Finance Expert. Like what you’re reading? Subscribe and share with your friends. Let’s dive in…

There is no best season for charitable giving. The need is year-round. But for whatever reason, I know many of you tend to focus on charitable giving toward the end of the year.

That said, I am very aware that many households are struggling to pay their everyday bills, as inflation is causing sharp price increases on many must-haves, from gasoline to milk.

I hope that those of you whose budgets are extra tight right now will be clear-eyed in your giving this year. As kind and generous as it is to want to donate money, you must stand in your truth. If your household expenses are eating up all your available monthly cash flow, that’s your truth, at least for now.

What I don’t want is for you to make donations and then need to put some of your household spending on credit cards that you can’t pay back when the statement arrives in January. Or skipping any deposits to your emergency fund. Charity must work for both the recipient and the giver. Paying high credit card interest rates or forgoing putting any money into your emergency fund this month is certainly not an act of kindness to yourself.

That doesn’t mean you can’t give.

If there’s a local charity you want to support, check in and ask if you can donate some of your time.

Or let your family and friends know the gift you most want is for them to make a charitable donation instead. It could be to a cause you care about or one they support. The goal is the same: giving to those who need our support.

Now, if you can handle making charitable donations this year, that’s great. We all know there is a need. And this year there’s a special tax break I want you to know about.

Anyone who files an individual federal tax return for the 2021 tax year will be allowed to deduct up to $300 in charitable donations made this year. A married couple that files a joint tax return can deduct up to $600 in 2021 charitable donations. You can claim this tax deduction even if you don’t file an itemized federal tax return. The IRS will allow these charitable tax deductions for 2021 tax returns that claim the standard tax deduction.?

Line break
Listen in and subscribe to Suze Orman's Women & Money Podcast on your favorite streaming app.

Don't Rush Time

Don’t be in a rush or dwell on what you don’t have right now.?Take the time to enjoy the blessings you do have and take the time to plan for the future. On this podcast, Suze talks about why it is important to be patient in all aspects of our lives.?Remember, time does heal all wounds and time helps your money grow for the long run. Listen in and subscribe to Suze Orman's Women & Money Podcast?on your favorite streaming app.

Line break


Geraldine Ibiam

Entrepreneur, Educator, Business coach, School Administrator, capacity builder, production, sales, singing gospel music, writing business plan, grant application services, content writing and editing.

3 年
回复
Narghiza E.

Finance Executive

3 年

Keep it up!

citizen concerned

we are looking for partners

3 年

Greetings from durban South Africa www.citizenconcerned.org.za

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Suze Orman的更多文章

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了