Planned Giving at All Saints’
Planned Giving offers each one of us the opportunity to make an enduring statement of faith through a charitable gift that will help build on and extend All Saints’ ministry for generations to come. All Saints’ is committed to being the church of Jesus. Planned giving is one way we can ensure that this commitment remains strong into the future, to ensure the long-term security, viability, and vitality of the church we love, All Saints’ Episcopal Parish, Beverly Hills.
Frequently Asked Questions About Planned Giving
What exactly is a planned gift?
A planned gift is a form of charitable giving made in the context of your estate planning. Since estate planning is the process of managing your accumulated assets for the present and future, a planned gift is included in a written statement of your intentions for your resources. Some frequently used types of planned gifts include:
A Bequest in a Will: You can designate a specific amount of money, a percentage of your estate, or a specific asset. All Saints’ could also be named as a contingent beneficiary.
Life Income Gifts: Gifts such as a charitable gift annuity, a charitable remainder trust, or a pooled income fund provide you and/or your designated beneficiary income for life. Upon your passing, All Saints’ receives the gift. Life income gifts generally reduce or eliminate certain taxes and guarantee an income for life.
Life Insurance: Life insurance can be used to make a sizeable gift to All Saints’. For example, you can purchase a new policy and make the church the owner and beneficiary of the policy. You can make All Saints’ the owner and beneficiary of an existing policy you no longer need. Or you can name All Saints’ a contingent beneficiary of an existing policy. Your life insurance could “endow” your annual pledge to All Saints’.
A Life Estate: You can deed your home, vacation property, or condominium to All Saints’and retain the right to live in the property and/or receive income from the property for as long as you or your beneficiaries live. A life estate gift reduces capital gains, inheritance and estate taxes and offers an income tax deduction as well.
An IRA or 401K: beneficiary or contingent beneficiary.
How do I include All Saints’ in my will or living trust?
The most common way people include All Saints’ in a will or living trust is through a charitable bequest. You do not have to rewrite your current documents. You simply add an amendment, called a codicil, to your will or living trust. Here is some suggested language you can have your attorney review:
“I give and bequeath All Saints’, tax identification number 95-1696319, located in Beverly Hills, California, $_________” (or state a percentage of your estate, or describe real or personal property, including exact location.).
Your bequest is entirely under your control during life and becomes irrevocable only at death.
I hear it’s a big advantage to make All Saints’ a beneficiary of my retirement plan?
A designation in your IRA or other retirement plan may be a very cost-effective way of making a gift to All Saints’. If you leave your retirement plan to your children, they will have to pay income tax on either a lump sum distribution or the income stream from the plan. All Saints’ does not pay this tax. Here’s an example of what this can mean to your heirs:
A widower died a few years ago. He left his $300,000 house to charity and his $300,000 retirement plan to his relatives. He should have done just the opposite. The relatives had to pay income tax on the $300,000 in the retirement plan, an $80,000 cost to them. If they had received the home, and the charity had received the retirement plan payment, no one would have paid income tax.
Should I consider a charitable remainder trust?
Donors who want income for life, bypass of capital gains tax on stock or real estate, reduced taxes, and the satisfaction of providing for a good cause like All Saints’ should consider a charitable remainder trust.
First, a few words about charitable trusts generally.
Anything you place in a charitable trust – cash, stock, real estate – is invested by the trustee to pay you income for the rest of your life and, if you wish, pay your heirs for life or for a term of years. After the death of all income beneficiaries, what remains in the trust passes to All Saints’.
Your trust may provide you with some important tax benefits:
An immediate income tax deduction for a percentage of your gift. We will be happy to give you an idea of the size of your deduction. We simply need to know the ages of the income beneficiary (ies) and the payout rate of the trust.
No tax on the sale of appreciated property. From the donor’s point of view, this is often the most important tax benefit. Sometimes thousands of dollars that would have gone in capital gains taxes remain in the trust, generating income to the income beneficiaries.
The trust principal is not subject to estate tax. Property that might otherwise be subject to federal estate tax, which can be has high as 55%, is preserved from estate tax entirely.
Appreciated real estate is often an excellent asset to place in a charitable trust. Mature investment properties are frequently earning only two, three, or four percent of their fair market value per year. When these properties are sold and the proceeds reinvested by the trust, earnings often increase significantly.
Under ordinary circumstances, owners face substantial capital gains taxes when they sell rental properties or commercial real estate. In some cases personal residences are also subject to capital gains taxes even after the homeowner’s exemption has been used. In any case, because your charitable trust will be selling the property, there will be no capital gains taxes due when the real estate is sold. Thus the entire net proceeds from the sale can be reinvested to produce more income for you.
Gifts of appreciated stock are ideal for funding a charitable remainder trust because the stock can be reinvested by the trust for greater income while bypassing capital gains taxes at the time of the sale.
Some people find it useful to give an undivided percentage interest of real estate to a charitable trust rather than all of it. For example, a donor contributed 75% of a vacant lot into a charitable trust. When the lot was sold, about $70,000 came directly to her from the sale while $210,000 remained in the trust. Some of her $70,000 was taxable, but she used the income tax deduction generated by her gift to the trust to offset the tax due on the gain built into the $70,000 she received.
There are two basic types of charitable remainder trusts. An annuity trust will pay you a fixed dollar amount for the rest of your life. A unitrust will pay you a fixed percentage of the trust principal each year, so if the value of the trust principal increases over time, your income increases with it. By law, your trust must pay you at least 5% of principal. You may choose a higher payout rate if you wish, but the higher the payout rate the lower your income tax charitable contribution deduction. Also, selecting the highest rate possible may not work in your best interests for another reason. If trust principal declines under the strain of meeting the higher rate, your income will decline with it. On the other hand, a lower payout rate may allow the principal to grow, and your income will grow with it. Additions can be made to a unitrust at any time, but you can contribute to an annuity trust only once.
Finally, your trust must have a trustee. If you have an individual trust tailored to your circumstances, the trustee can be a commercial institution such as a bank or trust company, an individual with professional experience in trust management, a relative, or yourself. There are some complications in acting as trustee yourself, but it can be done if you understand and comply with IRS regulations. Our organization will be happy to supply you with a list of on possible trustees or information on being your own trustee.
The basic advantages of charitable trusts are not difficult to understand:
diversification of your assets without incurring capital gains taxes
lifetime income
immediate income tax benefits
reduction of estate tax
the satisfaction of providing for a good cause
There are even ways these trusts can benefit your heirs that we have not covered. But the first thing you should do is find out if a charitable trust makes sense for you.
How can I give my home and keep it, too?
A charitable life tenancy agreement allows you to give a personal residence to All Saints’ while retaining the right to live there for life. Donors who enter a life tenancy agreement receive an immediate income tax deduction. The deduction is based on the present value of the home discounted by the estimated length of time the charity must wait to receive the home. To put it simply, a person age 70 will receive a larger deduction than will a person age 50.
The IRS grants the deduction even though the donor continues to enjoy full use of the home. But the IRS also expects the owner to have full responsibility for the care and maintenance of the home. That’s why life tenancy agreements simply continue things as they are currently, with the donor dealing with maintenance, property taxes, insurance and the like. The major benefits to the donor, then, are continued use of the home, an immediate charitable income tax deduction, the avoidance of probate, the avoidance of estate tax on the property, and the satisfaction of making a substantial gift to All Saints’ during one’s lifetime.
What should I do if I have already remembered All Saints’ in my estate plan?
We would be honored to enroll you in the All Saints’ Planned Giving Program, so please let us know of your bequest by emailing our co-chairs, Sydney Nichols and Steve Fleenor.