Most attorneys, accountants, and financial advisors are well-aware of Donor Advised Funds and the reasons behind their popularity. This vehicle is an excellent way for your clients to organize their giving and get even more connected to the causes they care about.
Enter the Qualified Charitable Distribution
Your clients can give nearly any type of asset to a Donor Advised Fund at the Omaha Community Foundation. A notable exception, though, is the Qualified Charitable Distribution (QCD). A QCD allows a taxpayer 70½ or older to make a direct transfer of up to $100,000 annually from an IRA to a qualifying charity. A Donor Advised Fund is not a qualifying charity.
Although Donor Advised Funds cannot accept QCDs, the Omaha Community Foundation offers other types of funds that can accept QCDs. For example, designated funds and field of interest funds held at the Omaha Community Foundation are ideal recipients of QCD transfers. These fund types are often overlooked, despite the high value they can deliver to your client and to the community.
What is a Field of Interest Fund?
The Council on Foundations defines a field of interest fund as “a fund held by a community foundation that is used for a specific charitable purpose such as education or health research.” Perhaps your client is passionate about rare-disease solutions, feeding the food insecure or preserving works of art, for example. Your client selects the name of the fund (family, cause-related or anything meaningful to them) and then, the knowledgeable team at the Omaha Community Foundation distributes grants from the field of interest fund in a way that is aligned with your client’s values and charitable wishes outlined in the fund documentation.
What is a Designated Fund?
Designated funds are defined as “a type of restricted fund in which the fund beneficiaries are specified by the grantors.” These are an excellent choice for a client who knows they want to support a particular nonprofit for multiple years. The client names the fund and the Omaha Community Foundation fulfills the pre-designated distributions. Made over time, these funds can help the nonprofit with cash flow planning. Distributions are aligned with your client’s wishes set forth in the original fund document.
QCD reminders
For the client aged 70½ through 72, a QCD removes funds from an IRA before the client reaches the age of73, which is the threshold for Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs). This can lessen the eventual income tax hit that accompanies RMDs. And for RMD-applicable clients, the QCD counts toward their RMD. In both cases, the QCD transfers do not fall into the client’s taxable income.
QCDs are even more popular now that the $100,000 cap will be indexed for inflation based on rules established by new laws. Also, the new regulations also permit a a one-time $50,000 distribution to a charitable remainder trust or charitable gift annuity.