Finance

Gift in kind valuation

Formal definition

Gift in kind valuation is a charity finance term for tracking restricted versus unrestricted funding, allocating overhead costs, and managing non-cash asset valuations.

What this actually means for you

Use Gift in kind valuation to guide live decisions: apply systematic weighting to shared overheads, review restricted fund terms, and verify legal rules for special payments, with ownership and reporting agreed at month-end and before trustee reporting cycles.

Example: At the next review checkpoint, Gift in kind valuation is used in practice like this: the finance manager registers external gift-in-kind values and reconciles monthly cost allocations across central services. Accountabilities are captured in team templates, reporting packs, and operating checklists.

Related guides and whitepapers

Read deeper guidance and implementation detail connected to this term.

Trustees and Finance: What You Must Actually Know - abstract artwork
guide
Governance,  Finance,  Leadership

The financial literacy trustees genuinely need, the questions they must answer, and the patterns that signal a charity board out of its depth on the numbers.

Charity Website Redesign Without Regret - abstract artwork
guide
Digital,  Strategy,  Operations

A practical guide to UK charity website redesigns that move the dial: scope, governance, content, architecture and the decisions that avoid common regrets.