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Charitable Trusts: Tax Breaks for Do-Gooders
Theoretically, you can make the payments as high as you want. Practically, however, there are limits. First, the higher the payments, the lower your income tax deduction. Second, high payments might eat into principal, possibly even using it all up before the payment term is over and leaving nothing for the charity. Third, a charity is unlikely to accept a gift if it is likely, or even possible, that all the trust property will be paid back to you.
Percentage of Trust Assets
It's common to set your annual payment as a percentage of the value of the current worth of the trust property. For example, your trust document could specify that you will receive 7% of the value of the trust assets yearly. Each year the trust assets will be reappraised, and you will receive 7% of that amount.
Because you receive a percentage, not a flat dollar amount, if inflation (or wise investment) pushes up the dollar value of the assets, your payments go up accordingly. Under IRS rules, you must receive at least 5% of the value of the trust each year.
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FAQs
- The law allows me to leave everything to my spouse tax free, right? How can we use that to our children's maximum advantage?
- I'm the owner of a business, and I understand that my estate would have to pay taxes on the value of the business if I don't do anythingâbut what can I do to lighten the tax load?
- What if I receive a bequest and don't want it?
- What about state death taxes?
- I'm not rich. Do I have to worry about federal estate taxes?
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