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August, 2006 Technical Newsletter
Provided by Leimberg Information Services
See
other issues.
Charitable IRA Rollover (CIR)
in 2006 AND 2007
Professor Christopher R. Hoyt
of the
University of Missouri-Kansas
City School of Law
is currently the Chair of the American Bar
Association's Committee on Lifetime and
Testamentary Charitable Gift Planning (Section
of Probate and Trust) and serves on the
editorial board of Trusts and Estates
magazine.
Chris is a frequent speaker at
legal and educational programs and has been
quoted in numerous publications, including
The Wall
Street Journal, Forbes, MONEY Magazine
and
The
Washington Post.
Chris provides us with an
in-depth look at the long-awaited (but alas
only lasting for
two years) Charitable IRA Rollover (CIR).
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY:
The Pension
Protection Act of 2006 provides that in 2006
and 2007, a person age 70 ½ or older can make
charitable gifts directly from an Individual
Retirement Account ("IRA") of up to $100,000
per year. The donor will benefit by not
having to report the IRA distribution as
taxable income, although the donor will not be
able to claim a charitable income tax
deduction for the gift.
Eligible IRA
owners can use charitable gifts from their
IRAs to satisfy their annual minimum
distribution requirement. For example, a 76
year old who would normally be required to
receive a taxable distribution of just over 4%
from an IRA could instead contribute 3% to a
charity and receive a taxable distribution of
just 1%.
FACTS:
The new law makes
no change to the rules that govern charitable
bequests of IRA assets, either outright to
charities or to deferred giving arrangements.
Such transactions qualified for favorable
income tax consequences in the past and will
continue to be an attractive planning strategy
in the future. The new law only changes the
rules for lifetime charitable gifts
from IRAs.
NO COMPULSION:
The new law
permits distributions to be made from IRAs
directly to charities.
The new law does
not compel IRA administrators to make
such distributions when they receive
instructions from the IRA account owner.
Thus, for example, whereas in theory every
eligible person who claims the standard
deduction will want to make each and every
charitable gift directly from her or his IRA,
the IRA administrators don't want to spend
time cutting thousands or millions of checks
for just $10 or $20. They need to be able to
administer these grants in a cost-efficient
manner and develop a rational and reasonable
fee structure.
The charitable
sector needs to be supportive of the needs and
concerns of IRA administrators in order for
the full potential of charitable IRA rollover
to actually be realized.
COMMENT:
Who Wins With
Charitable IRA Rollover?
1. Donors who
don't itemize their deductions
Probably the
biggest winners of this new law are IRA owners
age 70 ½ or older who do not itemize income
tax deductions (i.e., they take the standard
deduction). Since the charitable deduction is
an itemized deduction, they had the worst tax
consequences from the gifts they made from
their IRAs: they had to report the entire
distribution as taxable income but received no
offsetting income tax deduction.
Nearly two thirds
of American taxpayers claim the standard
deduction and the percentage is even higher
for taxpayers over age 70 ½. By comparison,
the new charitable IRA rollover law gives
eligible IRA donors the equivalent of an
unlimited charitable income tax deduction for
up to $100,000 of the charitable gifts that
they make from their IRAs.[i]
Although
non-itemizers are typically middle and lower
income taxpayers, many are wealthy. The IRS
estimates that there are 5.7 million
higher-income taxpayers who claim the standard
deduction and cannot get any tax benefit from
their charitable gifts.[ii]
They tend to live in the nine states that do
not have a state income tax: Alaska,
Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota,
Tennessee, Texas, Washington and Wyoming.
Donors (and, consequently, charities) who
reside in these states will generally benefit
more from the new charitable IRA rollover law
than donors who live in other states.
2.
Donors Who Lose Tax Deductions
As AGI (adjusted
gross income) Increases.
The most common
lost deduction is the phase-out of itemized
deductions as income increases over $150,500
($75,250 if married filing separately). The
phaseout was 3% in
2005 but is only 2% in 2006 and 2007. By
keeping AGI low, donors can deduct more of
their itemized deductions.
Wealthy
taxpayers cannot
claim personal exemptions for
themselves or their dependents. Social
security recipients may find that their
social security benefits are subject to income
tax but may avoid the tax by keeping their
income under the thresholds.
Other deductions
that are subject to income phase-outs, and the
rates of phase-out, are:
2% for
"miscellaneous itemized deductions" (employee
expense and investment expense deductions)
7 ½% for medical expense deductions
10% for non-business casualty losses (e.g.,
damage to a vacation home)
3.
Donors who live in states with a state income
tax that provides no tax
breaks for charitable gifts.
Indiana, Michigan, New Jersey, Ohio and
Massachusetts
state income tax
computations do not permit itemized
deductions. Consequently,
Indiana, Michigan, New Jersey, Ohio and
Massachusetts residents gets no state income
tax breaks from charitable gifts.
Eligible donors in
these states will save taxes at their highest
marginal state income tax rate (e.g., 4% or
6%) for every charitable gift that they make
from their IRAs instead of from their checking
accounts. Although Illinois
residents also cannot claim charitable income
tax deductions, distributions from retirement
plans are exempt from the income tax so they
would not see any benefit on their state
returns from this new law.
4.
Donors who are subject to the 50% charitable
deduction limitation.
Charitable
deductions cannot exceed 50% of a taxpayer's
adjusted gross income ("AGI") in any year.[iii]
A donor who is subject to the annual deduction
limitation and who uses a taxable distribution
from a retirement plan account to make an
additional charitable gift would generally be
able to deduct only 50% of the amount in the
year of the gift. The other 50% of the
distribution would be subject to income tax
that year.
If, instead, the
charitable gift is made directly from an IRA,
a donor over age 70 ½ would not pay any extra
income tax.
LEGAL
REQUIREMENTS
A. Overview
A person age 70 ½
or older who makes
an outright charitable gift from her or
his IRA:
(1)
will not have to
report the distribution as taxable income,[iv]
and
(2)
will not be
entitled to claim a charitable income tax
deduction for the gift.[v]
B. Technical
Requirements for Outright Gifts
In order to make a
lifetime charitable gift from an IRA without
having to report the payment as a taxable
distribution, the distribution must meet the
definition of a "qualified charitable
distribution" (hereafter "QCD").[vi]
Unless a
distribution qualifies as a QCD, any lifetime
charitable gift from any sort of retirement
plan account (IRA, 403(b), 401(k), profit
sharing, etc.) must be reported as a taxable
distribution. The donor can then claim an
offsetting charitable income tax deduction.
There are six
requirements for an IRA distribution to
qualify as a QCD:
1.
Donor must be at least age 70/12.
The distribution
must be made on or after the date that the IRA
owner attained age 70 ½..[vii]
In most cases such donors will be retirees.
Donors under age
70 ½ will have to report charitable gifts from
their IRAs as taxable distributions and can
claim offsetting charitable income tax
deductions if they itemize their deductions.
TAX TRAP:
There can be a lot
of confusion in the year that a person attains
age 70 ½.
It is true that
all distributions that are made at any time
during that year can be applied toward
satisfying the minimum distribution
requirement to avoid the 50% penalty tax.
But
ONLY the
distributions that are made on or after
attaining the age of 70 ½ qualify for the
charitable exclusion! (Play it safe and tell
clients not to have any distributions made to
charity until at least one or two days after
they reach age 70 ½).
This can be a
problem for someone who attains age 70 ½ late
in the year, say on December 28.
The law should be
changed in a technical corrections act to
conform the charitable IRA rollover rules
with the minimum
distribution requirements. That is, all
distributions should qualify if made "within
or after the calendar year that the individual
for whose benefit the plan is maintained has
attained age 70 ½". Tax administration would
be simplified and innocent parties would not
be caught in a tax trap.
2.
TAX
TRAP: IRAs only.
The distribution
must be made from an individual retirement
plan.[viii]
That means ONLY an IRA --NOT
a qualified retirement plan or a Section
403(b) annuity. Distributions to charities
from other types of retirement accounts --
such as 403(b) plans, 401(k) plans, profit
sharing plans and pension plans -- will still
have to be reported as taxable distributions
to the account owners.
TAX TRAP:
Another trap that
may lead to confusion is that charitable gifts
from SEPs and
SIMPLE plans, which are basically IRAs that
receive employer contributions, are
ineligible for
the exclusion.
In most cases, the
restriction of such favorable tax treatment to
IRAs should not pose a significant problem.
Many retirees have large IRA balances because
they rolled over distributions from their
company retirement accounts into IRAs when
they retired.
PLANNING TIP:
Donors without
IRAs who would like to take advantage of
charitable IRA rollover can establish a new
IRA and then rollover some assets from their
other qualified retirement plans into the new
IRA.[ix]
3.
TAX TRAP:
Directly from the IRA to the charity rule.[x]
If a check is paid
from the IRA to the IRA owner who then
endorses the check to the charity, it must be
reported as a taxable distribution to the IRA
owner. To comply with the CIR law, the money
must go directly
from the IRA to the charity.
4.
The recipient organization must be a public
charity or a conduit private foundation.
The recipient
organization must be described in Sec. 170(b)(1)(A).[xi]
TAX
TRAP: Donor
advised funds and supporting organizations:
Contributions to
donor advised funds and Sec. 509(a)(3)
supporting organizations qualify for public
charity tax deductions.
But they are
not eligible
beneficiaries for charitable IRA rollover.
In that case, the
donor must report the IRA distribution as
taxable income and then claim an offsetting
charitable income tax deduction.
5.
The payment would otherwise fully qualify
for a charitable income tax deduction.[xii]
A distribution
will qualify as a QCD only if a person would
normally be able to claim a charitable income
tax deduction for the entire payment. This
eliminates favorable tax treatment for IRA
distributions that are used for auctions,
raffle tickets, fund-raising dinners or any
other type of quid-pro-quo transaction.
If there is any
financial benefit, then the entire
distribution is taxable income and the donor
must hope to get a partially offsetting
charitable income tax deduction.
6.
Distribution would otherwise be a taxable
distribution.[xiii]
By way of
background, most IRA distributions are fully
taxable. However, if an IRA owner made any
nondeductible contributions to the IRA, then
those distributions to the IRA owner are
normally tax-free. A QCD only applies to the
taxable portion.
The new law
provides very favorable tax treatment for
outright charitable gifts from IRAs that hold
non-deductible contributions. Charitable
distributions are deemed to come first from
the taxable portion, thereby leaving the
maximum amount of tax-free dollars in the IRA.[xiv]
An example is in the
footnote[xv]
from Example 2 of "Technical Explanation Of
H.R. 4, The Pension Protection Act of 2006",
Prepared by the Staff of the Joint Committee
On Taxation August 3, 2006 (JCX‑38‑06) on page
268.
If any tax-free
amounts are distributed to a charity, that
portion does not qualify as a QCD. Instead,
the donor is deemed to have received that
amount free from income tax and can claim a
charitable income tax deduction for a
charitable gift of that part of the payment.
CONCLUSION
There will be
administrative obstacles in the short term as
IRA administrators learn to adapt to this new
law. IRA administrators will be reluctant to
invest a lot of effort to modify computer
systems for a law that will expire at the end
of 2007.
An eligible IRA
owner over the age of 70- ½ should, therefore
only attempt to make a charitable IRA rollover
if the tax savings exceed the administrative
costs that the transaction might generate.
For people who itemize their deductions and
can claim offsetting charitable income tax
deduction, it will usually be administratively
easier to simply receive a check from the IRA
and then make a charitable gift.
However, for those
individuals who do not itemize, who live in
states with no charitable deduction or who
otherwise benefit by keeping their AGI lower,
it may be worth the effort to work with the
IRA administrator to make that large
charitable gift from the IRA.
HOPE THIS HELPS
YOU HELP OTHERS MAKE A POSITIVE DIFFERENCE!
Chris Hoyt
Edited by Steve
Leimberg
CITE AS:
Steve
Leimberg's
Charitable Planning Newsletter #101
(August 7, 2006) at
http//www.leimbergservices.com
Reproduction in Any Form or
Forwarding to Any Person Prohibited - Without
Express Permission.
(c) 2006
Christopher R. Hoyt All
Rights Reserved
CITES:
For a summary of
the Charitable Provisions of the Pension
Protection Act of 2006 (to be signed into law
Thursday, August 17, 2006):
http://waysandmeans.house.gov/media/pdf/taxdocs/072806charitable.pdf
Click here for the
ActualText of H.R.
4 - The Pension Protection Act of 2006.
FOOTNOTES
[i]
The ability to avoid reporting taxable
income from IRA distributions in the first
place produces a similar result to (a)
reporting an IRA distribution as taxable
income and then (b) claiming an offsetting
charitable income tax deduction for the
entire amount.
[ii]
Balkovic,
Brian, "Individual Income Tax Returns,
Preliminary Data, 2001, SOI Bulletin, Data
Release, Winter 2002-2003, p. 136.
[iii]
Secs. 170(b)(1)(A)
and (C) and Reg. Sec.
1.170A-9(e)(11)(ii). There is a 5 year
carry-forward for the charitable
contributions that exceed 50% of AGI.
Sec. 170(b)(1)(C)(ii)
and last sentence of Section 170(b)(1)(B).
[vii]
Sec. 408(d)(8)(B)(ii).
[ix]
Sec. 408(d)(3).
Employees who receive distributions from
any type of qualified retirement account
can rollover the distribution to an IRA.
[x]
Sec. 408(d)(8)(B)(ii).
[xi]
Sec. 408(d)(8)(B)(i).
[xiii]
Sec. 408(d)(8)(B)
(last sentence).
[xv]
Example: An IRA owner has a traditional
IRA with a balance of $100,000, consisting
of $20,000 of nondeductible contributions
and $80,000 of deductible contributions
and accumulated earnings. Normally, 80%
of a distribution to the IRA owner would
be taxable and 20% would be a tax-free
return of non-deductible contributions.
If however, there is a distribution to a
charity that qualifies as a QCD, all of
the distribution is deemed to come first
from the taxable portion. Thus, if the
IRA trustee makes an $80,000 distribution
to a charity, the entire $80,000 is deemed
to come from the taxable portion of the
IRA and is a QCD. No amount is included
in the IRA owner's taxable income. The
$20,000 that remains in the IRA is treated
as entirely nondeductible contributions.
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