14 Charitable Transfers Flashcards

1
Q

Charitable Transfers - Direct Outright Gifts

A
  1. Income tax deduction is permitted
  2. Amount eligible for income tax deduction = FMV
  3. Unlimited charitable deduction allowed for transfer tax purposes.
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2
Q

Charitable Gift Annuity

A

A donor makes an irrevocable transfer of assets to a charity, and receives an annuity from the charity in return.

Donor is eligible for an income tax charitable deduction based on the difference between the value of the donated property and the present value of the annuity payments that will be received

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3
Q

Pooled Income Fund (PIF)

A
  • Irrevocable transfer of assets to a charity for an income stream from the charity’s commingled asset management.
  • Charitable deduction available
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4
Q

PIF mechanics

A
  1. Created and maintained by the charity
  2. Donated property commingled with property of other donors
  3. Grantor retains income interest for one or more beneficiaries for life (no term trusts)
  4. Payment to donor is determined by earnings of trust annually
  5. Investments cannot include tax-free municipal bonds
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5
Q

Charitable Remainder Trusts

A

Irrevocable trust in which the remainder beneficiary is a qualified charity

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6
Q

CRT Term

A

Trust can last for

  • life of grantor, or
  • up to 20 years
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7
Q

CRT: Does charity have to know?

A

No!

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8
Q

CRT Remainder interest requirement

A

PV(remainder interest at inception) >= 10% FMV

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9
Q

CRTs Payout Rate

A

>= 5%, <= 50%

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10
Q

Unique Features of a CRAT

A
  1. Very inflexible!
  2. No additional contributions permitted after inception
  3. Grantor receives either a fixed dollar amount or fixed percentage of the initial FMV
  4. Annuity must be paid regardless of necessity to invade principal
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11
Q

Unique Features of a CRUT

A
  1. Very flexible
  2. Additional contributions after inception permitted
  3. Grantor receives fixed percentage, assets valued annually
  4. Unitrust amount may be limited to income earned
  5. Trust may provide for catch-up provisions when income does not meet the percentage requirement and then later exceeds the current percentage payout
  6. Annual valuation may be expensive if property in trust is not easily valued (e.g., closely held businesses, real estate)
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12
Q

Charitable Lead Trusts (CLTs)

A
  • Income from property transferred to a trust is distributed to charity
  • Remainder reverts to the noncharitable beneficiary (often a family member).
  • Set up by wealthy with no need for current income
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13
Q

CLT Grantor Trust

A
  • charitable income tax deduction for PV(income interest) available at the inception
  • Annual trust income is taxable to the grantor
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14
Q

CLT Nongrantor Trust

A
  • No charitable income tax deduction is available
  • Gift is valued at FMV less the PV(charitable income interest)
  • Trust receives an unlimited annual charitable deduction for the gift made to the recipient charity each year
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15
Q

Private Foundations

A
  • Tax exempt charitable entities created to direct contibutions effectively
  • Created by person, family, or corporation
  • Do not receive contributions from a wide range of supporters
  • Can be operating (do stuff) or nonoperating (donate elsewhere)
  • Net investment income of the private foundation is subject to special income tax
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16
Q

Private Foundations: Tax Ramifications of Cash contribution

A

min(30% of donor’s AGI)

17
Q

Private Foundations: Tax Deduction for LTCG Property Contribution

A

For contribution to private nonoperating foundations: min(basis, 20% taxpayer’s AGI)

18
Q

Advantages of Private Foundations

A
  1. Donor is eligible for a charitable deduction in the year the contribution is made, subject to the income tax rules for charitable donations
  2. Donor can control the investment and distribution of assets
  3. Allows the donor to address specific charitable objectives that may not be addressed by other organizations
  4. Provides ability to train heirs to manage wealth
  5. Accumulation of assets allows for larger charitable gifts
19
Q

Disadvantages of Private Foundations

A
  1. Subject to strict reporting requirements
  2. Can be administratively expensive
  3. Donations to private foundations are subject to deductibility limitations
  4. Foundation must generally distribute at least 5% of its net investment assets each yea
20
Q

Donor Advised Funds

A
  1. The charity establishes a fund in the donor’s name.
  2. The donor or its representative makes future recommendations of grants to charitable beneficiaries.
  3. It is usually established by a public charity or community foundation
21
Q

Tax Ramifications of Donor Advised Funds

A
  1. Donor is eligible for an immediate income tax deduction when initial donation is made, subject to income tax rules for charitable donations
  2. Income tax deduction for contributions of cash is limited to 60% of donor’s AGI for the tax year
  3. Income tax deduction for contributions of appreciated property is limited to 30% of donor’s AGI for the tax year
  4. Donor-advised funds fall under the tax-exempt classification of the charity offering the fund
22
Q

Advantages of Donor Advised Funds

A
  1. Donor is eligible for immediate income tax deduction, even though grants to charities may be spread over several years
  2. Costs to establish the fund are low
  3. Donor has ability to name several charitable recipients
  4. Fund is generally very simple to understand and use
  5. Minimum required contribution is usually relatively low
  6. Can be established relatively quickly
  7. Charity performs any necessary annual filings
23
Q

Disadvantages of Donor-Advised Funds

A
  1. Once donor makes a donation to the fund, it is irrevocable
  2. Charity may place restrictions on the grant
  3. Occasionally, annual fees charged by the fund are substantial
  4. Donor only has a limited right to control management of fund assets