Charitable Trust
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Transcript Charitable Trust
“Update on Planned Giving Tax Strategies”
Hampton Roads Gift Planning Council
January 9, 2014
Mike Kirkman, Partner
National Leader - Estate, Gift and Trust Services
Items to cover
Top Planned Giving Techniques – 2013
Charitable Stats from 2012
Impact of “NEW” tax law on Planned Giving
Charitable Trusts – What to do when they have
run their course?
Planned Giving Techniques
Outright Gifts
Life Insurance Proceeds
Retention of a Life Interest
Donor Advised Fund
Charitable Gift Annuity
Charitable Lead Trusts
Charitable Remainder Trusts
Charitable Giving 2012 (billions)
Individuals Foundations Bequests Corporations -
$228.93
45.74
23.41
18.15
Total -
$316.23 100%
Source: IRS & Giving USA Foundation
72%
14%
7%
6%
Charitable Giving 2012 – Change over 2011
Individuals
Foundations
Bequests
Corporations
Overall
- 3.9%
- 4.4%
- (7.0)% **
- 12.2%
3.5%
Source: IRS & Giving USA Foundation
** I will comment later on this.
Charitable Giving Sectors (Billions) - 2012
Religion$101.54 [32%]
Education$41.33 [13%]
Human Services$40.40 [13%]
Public Society/Benefit$21.63 [7%]
Health$28.12 [9%]
Arts, Culture, and Humanities- $14.44 [5%]
International Affairs$19.11 [6%]
Environment/Animals$ 8.30 [3%]
Individual Giving – % of Disposable
Income (40 years)
Disposable Income – As defined by Bureau of
Economic Analysis (US Department of Commerce)
1972 - 2.2%
1982 - 2.0%
1992 - 1.8%
2002 - 2.2%
2012 - 1.9%
Source: Giving USA Foundation
2012 Itemized Deductions - Virginia
# of Returns - 3,801,986
# Itemized - 1,513,949
# Claiming Charitable - 1,236,419
Value of Charitable Deduction- $5,351,793,000
Source: IRS
Charitable Receipt Changes
Percentage of responding organizations reporting change in charitable receipts
by year, 2001 through 2012
Source: Nonprofit Research Collaborative
Charitable Receipts – 2013 projected
Anticipated direction of change in charitable receipts, 2013 compared with 2012
Source: Nonprofit Research Collaborative
Impact of New Tax Law on Charitable
Giving
3.8% surtax –Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT)
Taxpayers seek deferral techniques
Fiduciaries face dilemmas
Charitable Trusts – Opportunity
Impact of Charitable Giving - Estate & Gift Tax
Exemption
$5 million (indexed to inflation)
$5.34 million for 2014
Top Rate
40%
Portability
Allows Surviving Spouse to use Deceased Spouse Unused
Exemption
Individuals
New 39.6% rate applies…
MFJ > $450k AGI
Singles > $400k AGI
HH > $425k AGI
MFS > $225k AGI
Medicare 3.8% Surtax * applies…
Taxpayers MAGI > $200k/$250k
Net Investment Income
Supplemental Medicare Tax * .9% applies…
Taxpayers MAGI > $200k/$250k
Part of FICA (Hospital Insurance Tax)
* The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
Individuals- cont.
“High Income” taxpayers $400k/450k
Capital Gain/Qualified Dividends – 20% vs. 15%
Results – 23.8% tax on LTCG/QD
Personal Exemption Phase-out/Pease Limitation
Limits deduction for personal exemption and itemized
deductions
•
•
•
•
MFJ > $300k AGI
Single > $250k AGI
HH > $275k AGI
MFS > $150k AGI
Individuals – cont.
Pease Limitation
Couple has $670,000 AGI & $45,000 itemized
deductions
Thresholds - $250K (single) & $300K (MFJ)
Itemized deductions reduced to $33,000
Mortgage interest - $5,000
Property taxes - $5,000
State income taxes - $20,000
Charitable deduction - $15,000
Reduced by lesser of:
3% x $400K ($700K - $300K) = $12K
80% x $45K = $36K
Tax Rate Changes
Since 1913 – How many rate changes have we had?
Hint: Avg. of more than one every 3 years
How many changes were increases/deceases?
Do rate increases follow decreases?
Economists – 60% probability of change in same direction
2 periods of steeply declining rates
1942 – Executive Order – 100% tax on salaries > ?
Tax Rate Changes – Impact on
Charitable Giving
Discretionary Trusts
Top Rate 39.6% - > $11,950 Taxable Income
Net Investment Income Tax – 3.8%
65 Day Rule
Mitigating the 3.8% Surtax Charitable Trust
Avoiding the Surtax – 3.8%
Pre 2013 - Charitable Remainder Trust
2013 Charitable Trust
Why It Works…
• Let’s look at an example….
Mitigating the 3.8% Surtax Charitable Trust (cont.)
Donors – Couple age 65/64
Contribution - $1 million
Term – Life
Jan 2014 AFR – 2.2% (higher the better)
Annuity payout - 5% ($50,000 per year)
Charitable deduction - $108,111
What if…annuity could be pushed out?
Mitigating the 3.8% Surtax Charitable Trust (cont.)
Charitable Remainder Trust – Net Income Make-Up
NIMCRUT
Distribution
Required - 5% of trust assets FMV
If trust accounting income < 5%...then…
Deficit is accumulated for future years
Why is this a good thing?
Charitable Trust – End of the Road
Facts: In 1990 Tom (72) and Betty (68) established a
CRAT.
$1 million @ 6% annuity, lifetime
Now in 2014 – Tom and Betty don’t need annuity
income.
What options are available?
Charitable Trust – End of the Road (cont.)
Terminate The CRT
Assign the income interest
Divide up CRT assets
Caution! – Must follow rules (Tax and Legal)
Any other options?
Charitable Trust – End of the Road (cont.)
Consider a “Sale of Income Interest”
Is there a Market?
Income beneficiary has “capital gain”
Trust typically continues
Risk is shifted to buyer
Conclusion
Tax law does impacts charitable giving
Planning for the 3.8%
CRTs are not bad options
Charitable trusts DO have an exit strategy
Happy New Year!
Thank You!