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Funding a Trust with Cash or Stock
Gifts of appreciated stock are ideal for funding charitable remainder trusts because the stock can be reinvested by the trust for greater lifetime income for you, and the trust may also bypass capital gains taxes at the time of the sale.
Funding a Trust with Real Estate
Appreciated real estate may also be an excellent asset to place in a charitable trust. Mature investment properties frequently earn only 2-4% of their fair market value per year. When these properties are sold and the proceeds reinvested by the trust, earnings often increase significantly.
Owners ordinarily face substantial capital gains taxes when they sell rental properties or commercial real estate. Because your charitable trust (a tax-exempt entity) would be selling the property, there would be no capital gains taxes due. Thus all the proceeds of sale could be reinvested to produce more income for you.
Giving Your Home and Keeping It, Too
A charitable life tenancy agreement allows you to give a personal residence or farm to NYOF while retaining the right to live there for life. You may receive an immediate income tax deduction, avoid probate and estate tax on the property—and, of course, get the satisfaction of making a substantial gift to NYOF during your lifetime.
Giving Part of Your Property
Some people find it useful to give an undivided percentage interest of their property into a charitable trust, rather than all of it. A woman recently placed 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.
For More Information
To discuss how you can support impoverished children in Nepal through planned giving or to receive a free Estate Planning Kit, please call NYOF's Executive Director, Janis Olson, at
(415) 331-8585 or email her at info@nyof.org. Although NYOF does not offer professional legal advice, our planned giving consultant can work with your tax advisor to find the best solution for you. All information is provided confidentially and without any obligation.