Donor Advised Funds

 


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Enhancing Charitable Trusts with Donor Advised Funds

Charitable Remainder Trusts

Donors can create an opportunity for continuing family involvement by naming American Endowment Foundation as the remainderman on a Charitable Remainder Trust. Here's how it work:

  1. A donor contributes to a CRT, receives capital gains tax benefit, income tax deduction, and lifetime income stream.
  2. At termination of trust, the remainder interest is transferred to a Donor Advised Fund at American Endowment Foundation.
  3. A donor's family can stay involved in these meaningful assets after the CRT terminates. The family can then recommend distributions from the Donor Advised Fund to charities over time.

Charitable remainder trusts

Benefits:

1) Continuing family involvement.

2) This strategy eases the pressures associated with deciding the ultimate charities. AEF, an IRS recognized 501 (c)(3) charity, qualifies for the maximum and immediate tax deduction .

3) The donor can use the Donor Advised Fund as the vehicle for their lifetime charitable giving.

4) When income from the CRT is no longer needed, the Donor Advised Fund can become the charitable overflow to the CRT.

5) If a donor wants to accelerate a CRT in order to give more to charity now or in the near future, he/she can collapse the CRT into a Donor Advised Fund.

see terminating a Charitable Trust

Naming AEF as income beneficiary on a Charitable Lead Trust

Charitable lead trust


A donor contributes an asset to a CLT for a specified period (either a term of years or someone's life), and receives tax benefits.

Distributions are made annually from the CLT to the family's Donor Advised Fund.

The donor, and then children recommend distributions periodically to charities from the family Donor Advised Fund.

After specified period, the principal goes to your family (or other designated beneficiaries).

Benefits:

1) Continuing family involvement.

2) provides a unique forum for families to work together.

3) offers the opportunity for several generations to join in a common purpose.

4) may become the “link” that connects families whose branches are increasingly geographically dispersed.

 

 



 

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