Colorado School of Mines

Planned Gifts

Charitable Bequest May Eliminate IRA Tax Trap

SurveyersOver the last twenty years, Individual Retirement Accounts and other "qualified" retirement plans have become an increasingly important element of many individuals’ estates.

However, while these accounts provide attractive tax benefits during working years, they can be heavily taxed when their owner tries to leave plan assets to someone other than a spouse.

Consider the case of Fred and Alice, a 75-year-old couple who plan to leave an IRA worth $500,000 to their daughter after they are both deceased.

Because of the value of their estate, the IRA balance will be subject to federal estate taxes when it passes to their daughter.

Moreover, she will be required to pay federal and state income taxes on the bequest. Let’s assume that the applicable estate tax rate is 50% and the applicable income tax rate is 40%. The results are daunting:

IRA balance  $500,000
Estate tax (50%) (250,000)
After estate tax 250,000
Income taxes (40%) (100,000)
Net of estate and income taxes: $150,000


In short, 70% of the IRA will be lost to the corrosive combination of estate and income taxes.

Fortunately, there is a way to avoid such burdensome taxation, enjoy the benefits of your retirement plan, and control its final disposition.

If you bequeath your remaining retirement plan assets to a duly recognized charitable organization, your estate will receive a charitable deduction that will eliminate estate tax on those assets.

When the charity receives the bequest, no income tax will be due because the charity is exempt from income taxation.

This means that if you leave retirement plan assets to Mines, it will receive all that is left, and you and your spouse will retain the use of the assets for as long as you need them.

Because retirement plans are tax-deferred, you will be making a gift with money that has never been taxed—and never will be.

Fred and Alice, like the rest of us, may wish to direct all or part of their IRA to charitable interests and investigate other strategies for providing for their daughter.

Because the rules governing IRA distributions are complex, it is important that you seek competent professional counsel before you take action in order to avoid unintended consequences.

Also, Congress has shown interest in changing the rules governing lifetime gifts made from IRAs and other qualified plans.

Under proposed changes, a donor may be allowed to withdraw funds from an IRA without recognizing income if the funds were used to make an outright or life-income gift.

Stay tuned.


 
More on Planned Giving

Ideas and Examples

Do Charitable Life-Income Plans Make Financial Sense - A Cash Flow Analysis
Low Interest Rates Provide Gift Planning Opportunities
Portrait of a Plan
- Relieve Stock Market Stress Through Charitable Giving &
   Give Your Way to Higher Income
Choosing a Gift Opportunity to Fit Your Needs
Charitable Bequest May Eliminate IRA Tax Trap
Tax Free Re-Investment Using a Charitable Remainder Trust
Selling Stock vs. Giving for Income - You May Be Surprised
Flexible Gift Annuity - Lower Taxes Now, Income When You Want It
Flexible Gift Annuity Facilitates Retirement Planning
Make a Gift of Real Estate and Retain Use of The Property
Planned Giving Calculator
Sample Language for Bequests to Mines
Recognition of Your Giving

Mines Heritage Society

Alumni and Friends Leave Legacies at Mines
Brochures

Submit a Request for Planned Giving Brochures
Useful Planned Giving Sites

What is Planned Giving?
(Courtesy of the PG Calc Web Site.)
Internal Revenue Service Web Site
Internal Revenue Service - Forms and Publications
Nolo's Legal Encyclopedia: Estate Planning
Crash Course in Wills and Trusts
Dennis Kennedy's Estate Planning Links Web Site
Back to the main Planned Giving Page


Please Contact Us for More Information on Planned Gift Opportunities


Colorado School of Mines Foundation, Inc.
1600 Arapahoe Street
Golden, Colorado 80401-1851

Rod McNeill
Acting Director of Planned Giving
Phone: (303) 273-3161
e-mail: rmcneill@mines.edu
 

Top of Page
Menu