Charitable Giving - How to Benefit a Charity and the Family
Benefiting a charity and a family member at the same time and achieving
tax breaks is an attractive proposition. One such vehicle for doing
this is the charitable remainder trust. With proper planning, it can
provide you and your family with many tax and estate planning
advantages.
Basically, you contribute cash to a trust. You designate your child to
receive income from the trust for a fixed period of years or for life.
When the child's income interest ends, the trust property is paid to a
charity that you choose when you set up the trust.
One immediate tax advantage is that you get an income tax deduction in
the year you set up the trust. The amount of the deduction is the
present value of the charity's remainder interest, as it is technically
called. Furthermore, you do not have to pay gift tax for the charity's
remainder. You also will save estate tax because the property will not
be included in your estate.
The income interest that you give to your child, however, is subject to
gift tax. Even so, you may not have to pay any tax out-of-pocket.
First, the annual exclusion can be used to reduce or eliminate gift
tax. And, if the value of the income interest exceeds the $10,000
annual exclusion amount ($20,000 if your spouse consents to gift
splitting), you still may not have to pay tax if you have not
previously used all of your unified credit. The credit, in effect,
allows you to transfer $675,000 in year 2000 or 2001 free of tax. (This
amount would increase if estate tax reform provisions pending in
Congress make it into any final budget deal).
You cannot just set up any trust and gain the advantages outlined
above. You must use a trust that satisfies the technicalities of a
charitable remainder unitrust, a charitable remainder annuity trust or
a pooled income fund. There is only one donor in the case of a
charitable remainder annuity trust or unitrust, whereas pooled income
funds involve commingling of funds from several donors. In that sense,
pooled income funds offer better protection in the form of greater
diversification.
The key difference between a unitrust and an annuity trust is how the
income payment is computed. If you set up a unitrust, your child's
income payment each year will be a fixed percentage of the trust's
assets. This percentage must be at least 5 percent. With an annuity
trust, the payment is a fixed amount, which must not be less than 5
percent of the initial value of the trust property. You cannot fix
payments from a pooled income fund. They depend solely on the fund's
earnings.
You don't have to fund an annuity or unitrust with cash. You can
transfer, for example, stock you own that is way up in value from what
you bought it at. An advantage of doing this, provided the transaction
is properly structured, is that you would not pay tax on the gain like
you would if you sold the stock. The trust could sell the stock without
paying tax. A pooled income fund, however, is not exempt from tax and
you would be taxed on property it sells at a gain.
Please do not hesitate to contact us to explore the proper vehicle for
you, your family and your favorite charity.
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