Charitable Lead Trusts

Charitable Lead Trusts:  Getting Started

Do you want to benefit from the tax savings that result from supporting the Alliance for the Arts, yet you don’t want to give up any assets that you’d like your family to receive someday?  You can have it  both ways with a charitable lead trust.

How It Works

You give assets to a trust that pays the Alliance for the Arts an income for a number of years, which you choose.  The longer the length of time, the better the gift tax savings for you.  When the term is up, the remaining trust assets go to your family or other beneficiaries you select.

This is an excellent way to transfer property to family members down the line (typically children and grandchildren) at a minimal tax cost.  This type of charitable lead trust (also called a nongrantor, or family lead trust) is especially appealing to the Alliance for the Arts supporters who are financially comfortable enough that they can forgo investment income on some assets.

Charitable Lead Trust

  • You give cash or property to your charitable lead trust.

Your Charitable Lead Trust

  • The Alliance for the Arts receives yearly payments.
  • Remaining trust assets to family at end of trust term.

Fixed or Variable Charitable Payments? A charitable lead trust can make payments in one of two ways:  A charitable lead annuity trust pays a fixed amount each year to the Alliance for the Arts, whereas a charitable lead unitrust (the less common type) pays a variable amount each year based on the value of the assets in the trust.  With a unitrust, if the trust’s assets go up in value, the payments to our organization go up as well.  On the other hand, if the assets decrease in value, so do our payments.

Did you know? You can create a lifetime charitable lead trust to take effect today, or you can set up the trust to take effect at your death (a testamentary trust).

Your Main Benefits

  • You support an organization you love while also making sure your family is taken care of after your lifetime.
  • The gift qualifies for gift or estate tax (1) savings based on the current value of the income paid to the Alliance for the Arts over the trust term.  (Ask your legal and tax advisors for more information about your possible tax savings.)

Example Assume your estate is subject to estate taxes in 2011.  Assuming no further changes from Congress, for each $1 million over the threshold that you leave to your family, estate taxes could consume up to $550,000 and your heirs will get $450,000.  With a lead trust,  you can transfer $1 million to your heirs – albeit after your death – leaving only $107,270 (2) subject to tax, instead of $1 million.

To accomplish this, you create a $1 million lead trust from your estate (a testamentary charitable lead trust) that will pay a qualified charitable organization $70,000 annually for 17 years.  when the trust ends in 17 years, the remaining trust assets will go to your named beneficiaries.

This is just one example.  The size of your trust and its terms are up to you.

We Can Help Contact Patricia Jones at (805) 449-2590 for more information about this type of gift that supports our work and helps you meet your financial goals.

Click on the Links Below for Additional Information:

(1)Currently federal estate taxes are repealed for all deaths that occur in the calendar year 2010.  In 2011, estate taxes are scheduled to be reinstated for estates worth more than $1 million at rates up to 55 percent.  Congress, however is likely to address reinstating estate taxes sooner than 2011.  What the final legislation will look like and when it might become effective is unknown at this point.

(2)Based on annual payments and a 3.4 percent charitable midterm federal rate; this rate changes monthly.

The information in this website is not intended as legal advice.  For legal advice, please consult an attorney.  Figures cited in examples are for hypothetical purposes only and are subject to change.  References to income tax apply to federal taxes only.  Federal estate tax, state income/estate taxes or state law may impact your results.

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