Skip to content

Watch Our Educational Masterclasses!

Watch Now
  • Omaha Office
  • (402) 505-5400
  • Iowa Falls Office
  • (641) 648-2343
  • Minot Office
  • (701) 838-1998
Legacy Design Strategies
  • info@ldstrategies.com
Asset 1LegacyDesignStrategies-lt-hamburger Menu
  • Home
  • Estate Planning
    • Trust Administration & Probate
    • Business Planning
    • Nonprofit Entities & Charitable Planning
    • Farm & Ranch Planning
  • Medicaid Planning
    • Elder Law
  • Becoming a Client
    • Book a Call
  • Resources
    • Blog
    • Subscribe
    • Lifetime Legacy Program
    • For Professional Advisors
    • FAQ
    • Video Resources for Clients and Advisors
  • About Us
    • Our Attorneys
      • Andrew C. Sigerson
      • Jessica McCall
      • Ross M. Berg
      • Matthew R. Deaver
      • Matt Molettiere
      • Andria L. Mueller
      • Stacey L. Harding
      • Hilary N. Fisher
      • Amy Sonnenfeld
      • Gabriella Miller
      • Laura Wheeles
    • Our Team Members
      • Michael Carlson
      • Megan Dow
      • Melissa “MK” Epperson
      • Jennifer Allen
      • Julie Larsen
      • Danette Brothers
      • Mitzi Sundheim
      • Afton Basden
      • Derek Swain
      • Haley Rajca
      • Ashley Stuenzi
      • Dawn Plume
      • Catherine Kopti
      • Suzanne Scott
      • Savannah Glick
  • Contact Us
    • Omaha, NE Office
    • Minot, ND Office
      • DocuBank Log In
    • Iowa Falls, IA Office
Menu
  • Home
  • Estate Planning
    • Trust Administration & Probate
    • Business Planning
    • Nonprofit Entities & Charitable Planning
    • Farm & Ranch Planning
  • Medicaid Planning
    • Elder Law
  • Becoming a Client
    • Book a Call
  • Resources
    • Blog
    • Subscribe
    • Lifetime Legacy Program
    • For Professional Advisors
    • FAQ
    • Video Resources for Clients and Advisors
  • About Us
    • Our Attorneys
      • Andrew C. Sigerson
      • Jessica McCall
      • Ross M. Berg
      • Matthew R. Deaver
      • Matt Molettiere
      • Andria L. Mueller
      • Stacey L. Harding
      • Hilary N. Fisher
      • Amy Sonnenfeld
      • Gabriella Miller
      • Laura Wheeles
    • Our Team Members
      • Michael Carlson
      • Megan Dow
      • Melissa “MK” Epperson
      • Jennifer Allen
      • Julie Larsen
      • Danette Brothers
      • Mitzi Sundheim
      • Afton Basden
      • Derek Swain
      • Haley Rajca
      • Ashley Stuenzi
      • Dawn Plume
      • Catherine Kopti
      • Suzanne Scott
      • Savannah Glick
  • Contact Us
    • Omaha, NE Office
    • Minot, ND Office
      • DocuBank Log In
    • Iowa Falls, IA Office
How to Use Qualified Charitable Distributions in Estate Planning

How to Use Qualified Charitable Distributions in Estate Planning

  • Post category:Adjusted Gross Income/AGI/Charity/DAF/Donor Advised Fund/Estate Planning Attorney/Individual Retirement Account/IRAs/Medicare/QCD/Qualified Charitable Distributions/SEP/SIMPLE SEP/Standard Deduction

Assets held in Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) are unquestionably the best assets to gift to charity, since IRAs are loaded with taxes. One way to relieve this tax burden is by using the IRA for charitable giving during your lifetime, says a recent article, “Giving funds in IRAs to charity with QCDs,” from Investment News.

Most people who give to charity don’t receive the taxable benefit because they don’t itemize deductions. They instead use the higher standard deduction, which offers no extra tax deduction for charitable giving.

Older taxpayers are more likely to use the standard deduction, since taxpayers aged 65 and older receive an extra standard deduction. In 2022, the standard deduction for a married couple filing jointly when each of the spouses are 65 and older is $28,700. The exceptions are couples with large medical expenses or those who make large charitable gifts.

Here’s where the IRA for charitable giving comes in. IRAs normally may not be given to charity or anyone in the owner’s life (except in the case of divorce). There is one exception: giving IRAs to charity with a QCD.

The QCD is a direct transfer of traditional IRA funds to a qualified charity. The QCD is an exclusion from income, which reduces Adjusted Gross Income. AGI is the most significant number on the tax return because it determines the availability of many tax deductions, credits and other benefits. Lowering AGI with a QCD could also work to reduce “stealth” taxes–taxes on Social Security benefits or Medicare premium surcharges.

QCDs are limited to $100,000 per person, per year (not per IRA). They can also satisfy RMDs up to the $100,000, but only if the timing is right.

There are some limitations to discuss with your estate planning attorney. For instance, QCDs are only available to IRA owners who are 70 ½ or older. They can only be made once you turn age 70 ½, not anytime in the year you turn 70 ½. The difference matters.

QCDs are not available from 401(k) or other employer plans. They also aren’t allowed for gifts to Donor Advised Funds (DAFs) and private foundations, and they can’t be made from active SEP or SIMPLE IRAs, where contributions are still being made.

Appreciated stocks can also be gifted to qualified charities and itemized deductions taken for the fair market value of the stock, if it was held for more than one year. There’s no tax on appreciation, as there would be if the stock were sold instead of gifted.

There are some tax traps to consider, including the SECURE Act, which allows traditional IRAs to be made after age 70 ½. However, it pairs the provision with a poison pill. If the IRA deduction is taken in the same year as a QCD, or any year before the QCD, the QCD tax exclusion could be reduced or lost. This can be avoided by making Roth IRA contributions instead of tax-deductible IRA contributions after age 70 ½.

Speak with your estate planning attorney about whether using a QCD makes sense for your estate planning and tax situation.

Reference: Investment News (Dec. 9, 2022) “Giving funds in IRAs to charity with QCDs”

What are the New IRA Distribution Rules?

What are the New IRA Distribution Rules?

  • Post category:Beneficiaries/Disabled/Estate Planning Attorney/Individual Retirement Account/Internal Revenue Service/IRA/IRS/Minor Children/Required Minimum Distribution/RMD/Roth/SECURE Act/Spousal/Surviving Spouse

Many of the proposed distribution rules, which will be subject to further action in late spring, depend upon whether or not the original IRA owner died before or after the applicable required beginning date for distributions. As explained in the article “The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Issues Proposed Minimum Distribution Rules” from The National Law Review, the age changed as a result of the SECURE Act, to 72.

Spousal Beneficiaries. If the spouse of the deceased IRA owner is the sole designated beneficiary and elects not to rollover the distribution, the surviving spouse may take RMDs over the deceased’s life expectancy. However, if the owner died before their required beginning date and the spouse is the sole beneficiary, the spouse may opt to delay distributions until the end of the calendar year in which the owner would have turned 72.

If the decedent died after turning 72, the annual distributions are required for all subsequent years and the spouse may take distributions over the longer remaining life expectancy.

Minor Children Beneficiaries. If the beneficiary of the IRA is a minor child, under age 21, annual distributions are required using the minor child’s life expectancy. When the minor turns 21, they must take annual distributions and the account must be fully distributed ten years after the child’s 21st birthday.

Adult Children Beneficiaries. If the account owner dies after their required beginning date (age 72), an adult child who is a beneficiary must take annual distributions based on the beneficiary’s life expectancy. The account must be completely emptied within ten years of the original IRA owner’s death.

This applies only to adult children who are beneficiaries and are not disabled or chronically ill. Disabled or chronically ill adult children fall into a different category under the SECURE Act, with different distribution rules.

Special Rules for Roth IRAs. The benefits of Roth IRA accounts remain. There are no minimum distributions from a Roth IRA while the account owner is still living. After the death of the Roth IRA owner, the required minimum distribution rules apply to the Roth IRA, as if the Roth IRA owner died before their required beginning date.

If the sole beneficiary is the Roth IRA owner’s surviving spouse, the surviving spouse may delay distribution until the decedent would have attained their beginning distribution date.

If you own IRAs or other retirement accounts, speak with your estate planning attorney to determine if you need to update your estate plan. There are strategies to protect heirs from the significant tax liabilities these changes may create.

Reference: The National Law Review (March 25, 2022) “The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Issues Proposed Minimum Distribution Rules”

What Qualifies as a Qualified Charitable Distribution?

What Qualifies as a Qualified Charitable Distribution?

  • Post category:401(k)/403(b)/CARES/Charity/Contributions/Individual Retirement Account/IRA/Itemizing Deductions/QCD/Qualified Charitable Distributions/Required Minimum Distribution/RMDs/SECURE Act/Tax Deduction

Qualified charitable distributions allow individual retirement holders to divert some of their federally taxable required distributions to charity, reports a recent article “A tax break for retirees is back. Here’s how to use it–and what to avoid,” from The Washington Post. Known as QCDs, they were not a big deal until 2017, when a change in the tax law changed the number of people itemizing deductions, including charitable contributions, from 31 percent to 11 percent, according to the IRS.

Tax laws let you put tax-deductible money into “defined contribution” accounts, including IRAs, 401(k)s and 403(b)s, until you reach age 72, when you are required to start taking withdrawals—federally taxable Required Minimum Distributions–from the accounts.

The size of the distribution depends upon the year-end retirement account balances and your age. If you had $100,000 in a retirement account last December 31 and turned 75 this year, the RMD is about $4,370. For an 80-year-old, the number would be around $5,350, and at 85, it would be $6,760.

In 2020, QCDs were of little interest because the CARES Act cancelled any RMD requirements. You could still use a QCD, but there was no tax advantage of reducing taxable income by offsetting required distributions.

In 2021, RMDs are back, and QCDs are worth doing again. To make a QCD, you ask the IRA administrator to send a check made out to a registered charity. You are permitted to donate as much as $100,000 per year. Let’s reinforce the message: the check must be made out to the charity, not to you. You also may not send the money to your own donor-advised fund.

IRAs can be used for QCDs, but not 401(k)s or 403(b)s.

You will need to keep track of the QCDs yourself. Do not expect the IRA custodian to do that for you. The retirement plan does send a tax form, the 1099-Rs, to the IRS that shows your total distributions for the year. The QCDs are subtracted from your 1099-R income by you or your tax preparer.

It sounds great, but there is a problem, created by the SECURE Act of 2019. That law let people aged 70½ and older make tax-deductible contributions to their IRAs. However, if you make a tax-deductible contribution to your IRA that you use for a QCD, it triggers a reduction in the amount of the QCD that you can deduct from your federally taxable income.

Do not make QCDs from the same IRA to which you are making tax-deductible contributions. You can set up a solo 401(k) if you are self-employed or use a SEP-IRA to make deductible contributions.  Here again, trouble lurks; do not make a QCD from a SEP-IRA in the same year you are claiming an income tax deduction for contributing to the SEP-IRA.

Reference: The Washington Post (March 18, 2021) “A tax break for retirees is back. Here’s how to use it–and what to avoid”

Get All The Marketing Updates

Please Share!

Recent Posts

  • What Happens When Property Is Owned Jointly and an Owner Dies?
    What Happens When Property Is Owned Jointly and an Owner Dies?
    January 27, 2023/
    0 Comments
  • Some Expenses are Paid by Estate and Some by Beneficiary
    Some Expenses are Paid by Estate and Some by Beneficiary
    January 26, 2023/
    0 Comments
  • These Celebrities Didn’t have Wills…But You Should
    These Celebrities Didn’t have Wills…But You Should
    January 25, 2023/
    0 Comments

Categories

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur ni adipiscing elit.
Legacy Design Strategies - An Estate and Business Planning Law Firm
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer

Omaha

9859 South 168th Avenue
Omaha, NE 68136

Minot

7 Third Street SE, Suite 202
Minot, ND 58701

Iowa Falls

310 N Oak Street, PO Box 295
Iowa Falls, IA 50126

Information

  • (641) 648-2343
  • info@ldstrategies.com
Facebook Twitter Linkedin Rss

Contact Us

Copyright © IMS. All rights reserved. You may reproduce materials available at this site for your own personal use and for non-commercial distribution. All copies must include this copyright statement. Some artwork provided under license agreement.

Office Locations

OMAHA, NE OFFICE

  • (402) 505-5400

IOWA FALLS, IA OFFICE

  • (402) 680-6997

MINOT, ND OFFICE

  • (701) 838-1998
Close
Legacy Design Strategies
  • Home
  • Estate Planning
    • Trust Administration & Probate
    • Business Planning
    • Nonprofit Entities & Charitable Planning
    • Farm & Ranch Planning
  • Medicaid Planning
    • Elder Law
  • Becoming a Client
    • Book a Call
  • Resources
    • Blog
    • Subscribe
    • Lifetime Legacy Program
    • For Professional Advisors
    • FAQ
    • Video Resources for Clients and Advisors
  • About Us
    • Our Attorneys
      • Andrew C. Sigerson
      • Jessica McCall
      • Ross M. Berg
      • Matthew R. Deaver
      • Matt Molettiere
      • Andria L. Mueller
      • Stacey L. Harding
      • Hilary N. Fisher
      • Amy Sonnenfeld
      • Gabriella Miller
      • Laura Wheeles
    • Our Team Members
      • Michael Carlson
      • Megan Dow
      • Melissa “MK” Epperson
      • Jennifer Allen
      • Julie Larsen
      • Danette Brothers
      • Mitzi Sundheim
      • Afton Basden
      • Derek Swain
      • Haley Rajca
      • Ashley Stuenzi
      • Dawn Plume
      • Catherine Kopti
      • Suzanne Scott
      • Savannah Glick
  • Contact Us
    • Omaha, NE Office
    • Minot, ND Office
      • DocuBank Log In
    • Iowa Falls, IA Office

Scroll Down for Office Locations