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Donating Retirement Assets Professor Russell James Texas Tech University
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Donating retirement plan assets

Jul 02, 2015

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Economy & Finance

Russell James

A review of donating retirement plan assets taken from the book Visual Planned Giving (2014)
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Page 1: Donating retirement plan assets

Donating Retirement Assets

Professor Russell JamesTexas Tech University

Page 2: Donating retirement plan assets

Donating Retirement Assets1. Giving During Life

Professor Russell JamesTexas Tech University

Page 3: Donating retirement plan assets

Why are retirement

assets a big deal?

Page 4: Donating retirement plan assets

36% of all household financial assets ($16.5 trillion) are retirement assets

Source: Investment Company Institute (2010) Research Fundamentals, 19, 3-Q1.

Because that’s where

the money is!

Page 5: Donating retirement plan assets

Part I:

Giving During Life

Page 6: Donating retirement plan assets

Life stages of a retirement account

Early distribution (before 59 ½)

Regular distribution (59 ½ to 70 ½)

Required minimum distribution (after 70 ½)

Page 7: Donating retirement plan assets

Giving before 59 ½

Normally, withdrawing retirement plan assets before age 59 ½ creates taxable income plus a 10% penalty

IRA$10,000

$10,000 income+$1,000 penalty

$10,000 deduction

$10,000

Page 8: Donating retirement plan assets

Giving before 59 ½

A charitable gift deduction may offset up to 100% of the taxable income from the withdraw, but will not offset the penalty

$10,000

$10,000 income+$1,000 penalty

$10,000 deduction

$10,000IRA

Page 9: Donating retirement plan assets

Giving 59 ½ to 70 ½

After 59 ½ withdraws are taxable, but create no penalty.

$10,000

$10,000 income $10,000 deduction

$10,000IRA

Page 10: Donating retirement plan assets

Giving after 70 ½

After age 70 ½ participants must take required minimum distributions (account balance / remaining life expectancy) or pay 50% penalty

$10,000

$10,000 incomeIRA

Page 11: Donating retirement plan assets

Giving after 70 ½

If the income is not needed, a charitable gift deduction may offset the income (if itemizing and no income giving limitations exceeded)

$10,000

$10,000 incomeIRA $10,000 deduction

$10,000

Page 12: Donating retirement plan assets

Giving after 70 ½

A Qualified Charitable Distribution (QCD) eliminates both the income and deduction

$10,000

$0 income

IRA$0 deduction

Page 13: Donating retirement plan assets

Qualified Charitable Distribution (QCD)

$10,000

$0 income

IRA$0 deduction

$100,000 per person maximum

Participant 70 ½ or older

No private foundations, donor

advised funds, charitable trusts, or

charitable gift annuities

IRAs or IRA rollovers only; no

401(k), 403(b), SEP, SIMPLE,

pension or profit sharing plans

Page 14: Donating retirement plan assets

Distributions from Roth IRAs are generally not taxed

$10,000

$0 incomeRothIRA $10,000 deduction

$10,000

Page 15: Donating retirement plan assets

Donating Retirement Assets1. Giving During Life

Professor Russell JamesTexas Tech University

Page 16: Donating retirement plan assets

Donating Retirement Assets2. Giving at Death

Professor Russell JamesTexas Tech University

Page 17: Donating retirement plan assets

Part II:

Giving At Death

Page 18: Donating retirement plan assets

Giving during life v. Giving after death

Page 19: Donating retirement plan assets
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Page 21: Donating retirement plan assets

IRA(child); House(charity)

$1,000,000 House$1,000,000 to charity

$1,000,000 IRA-$133,000 (13.3% Cali. income tax)

$867,000-$343,332 (39.6% fed. income tax)

IRA(charity); House(child)

$1,000,000 IRA$1,000,000 to charity

$1,000,000 House-$0 (no income tax)

Page 22: Donating retirement plan assets

Good retirement plan death beneficiaries

• A public charity

• A private family foundation

• A charitable remainder trust

Page 23: Donating retirement plan assets

• Charitable Lead Trust must pay income taxes

• If estate with charitable instructions is beneficiary, income taxes avoided only if assets used to fulfill a specific or residual (but not dollar amount) charitable bequest

• If heirs are also named account beneficiaries, preserving their longer-term payouts requires charitable amount paid out by 9/30 of year after death

Bad retirement plan death beneficiaries

Page 24: Donating retirement plan assets

Participant’s spouse must approve beneficiary for ERISA accounts, e.g., 401(k),

but not for non-ERISA accounts, e.g., IRA

Page 25: Donating retirement plan assets

The plan must actually have a residual death benefit to pass to charity, rather

than just a lifetime income right

Page 26: Donating retirement plan assets

A retirement account with charitable beneficiary can act like a mini-CRT

IRA + Charitable Beneficiary• Remainder to charity at

death• Income to donor after

59 ½ (unrestricted)• Deduction for entire

value placed into IRA• Minor administration

costs• Cash

transfers only

• Limited size

Charitable Remainder Trust• Remainder to charity at

death• Income to donor for life

(fixed)• Deduction for value of

charitable remainder• Significant administration

costs• Cash or

property transfers

• Unlimited size

Page 27: Donating retirement plan assets

Donating Retirement Assets2. Giving at Death

Professor Russell JamesTexas Tech University

Page 28: Donating retirement plan assets

Donating Retirement Assets3. Roth Conversions & Charity

Professor Russell JamesTexas Tech University

Page 29: Donating retirement plan assets

Roth conversions and charitable planning can work together to match

Income Deductions

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$1MM in standard IRA (withdraws

are taxable)

Roth Conversion

$1MM in Roth IRA (withdraws

are tax free)

Page 31: Donating retirement plan assets

Where can I find offsetting deductions?

Page 32: Donating retirement plan assets

Where can I find offsetting deductions?

Put assets or money into a

• Charitable remainder trust

• Charitable lead trust (grantor)

• Charitable gift annuity

• Donor advised fund

• Private foundation

Or give a remainder interest in a residence or farmland to a charity

Page 33: Donating retirement plan assets

Charitable deductions may be limited (with five year carryover) to 20%, 30%, or 50% of income depending on gift and recipient

Page 34: Donating retirement plan assets

If I have unused deductions, how can I pull future income into current year?

With a Roth conversion

Page 35: Donating retirement plan assets

$1MM in standard IRA (withdraws

are taxable)

Roth Conversion

$1MM in Roth IRA (withdraws

are tax free)

Page 36: Donating retirement plan assets

Roth conversions and charitable planning can work together to match

Income Deductions

Page 37: Donating retirement plan assets

Donating Retirement Assets3. Roth Conversions & Charity

Professor Russell JamesTexas Tech University

Page 38: Donating retirement plan assets

Help me

HERE

convince my bosses that continuing to build and post these slide sets is not a waste of time. If you work for a nonprofit or advise clients and you reviewed these slides, please let me know by clicking

Page 39: Donating retirement plan assets

All slides are taken from the

book Visual Planned Giving

Available from Amazon.com

Page 40: Donating retirement plan assets

Donating Retirement Assets

Professor Russell JamesTexas Tech University