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Charitable Remainder Trust You can design your trust to fit your own special needs. First, you decide how much you'd like to put into the trust. Second, you determine the income you'd like to receive from the donated assets. The rate of income return you select must be at least 5 percent. Usually, the rate selected is 5 percent to 7 percent. The best rate for you will depend upon the number of beneficiaries you select and their ages. Third, you decide which type of charitable remainder trust will work best for you. Choosing a charitable remainder trust is a little like shopping for a new car-the right one depends on your personal needs. Luckily, CRTs come in five variations. We can help you and your professional advisors decide the method that will work best for you.
Which Is Better: Annuity Trust or Unitrust? In comparison, a unitrust may be a hedge against inflation. If you foresee economic growth resulting in appreciation of the trust's assets, you'll favor a unitrust. The valuation can rise or fall, but over time a well-managed unitrust may offer better protection of your purchasing power than fixed dollar payments. A further advantage is that if you want to enlarge the trust later, you can make additional contributions without the cost of creating and administering more than one trust. Marvelous Tax Benefits First, when you fund the trust, you immediately obtain the benefit of a sizable income tax charitable deduction. This is equal to the present value of the remainder interest ultimately payable to Dakota Wesleyan University, based on Internal Revenue Service tables of life expectancy factors. The older the beneficiary, the greater the charitable deduction. You can fund your charitable remainder trust with cash, securities or other property. Highly appreciated assets that generate low current income are an ideal funding medium. While you'd be reluctant to sell such assets directly because of the tax you would pay on the gain, you can transfer them to the trust without incurring the capital gains tax. The trust could sell the assets without incurring any tax and then reinvest the proceeds in order to secure a higher current income yield. Perhaps over the years your personal investments have grown handsomely, but you now realize that their yield is grossly inadequate. Unfortunately, if you sell and reinvest in higher yielding securities, you'll lose part of your gain to taxes. The answer? Transfer your appreciated securities to a charitable remainder trust. In return for your gift, you might get an income two to four times greater than the current dividend from the typical growth stock.
Even More Tax Advantages Taxation of annual payments. This depends on what type of income your trust earned during the year (or what was undistributed from prior years). Each payment is treated first as ordinary income to the extent of the trust's ordinary income; second, as capital gains to the extent of the trust's capital gains; third, as tax-exempt income to the extent of the trust's tax-exempt income; and last, as a tax-free return of principal. Investment growth, as well as the type of trust (annuity trust or unitrust), will determine the taxation of the annual payments. The point is, part of your income may be treated as capital gains or may even be tax-free. The trustee will tell you what to report, so you don't have to figure this out yourself. If you want to receive tax-free income, you can deposit tax-exempt securities, assuming they meet with the trustee's approval for retention by the trust. But the trust instrument may not require that other kinds of transferred property be converted into tax-exempt securities or that only tax-exempt investments may be made by the trust. Estate tax savings. Where you are the only income beneficiary, your charitable remainder trust will be free from federal estate tax. Because of the marital deduction, this is also true if your spouse is a U.S. citizen and the only surviving income beneficiary. If the surviving beneficiary is not your spouse, the life interest of the survivor may be subject to tax, depending on the size of your estate and the available tax benefits remaining in your estate. The value of the survivor's interest is based on that individual's age at your death. But the charitable contribution of the remaining principal, made on a survivor's death, is always tax deductible. Who Can Benefit? Some Typical Cases
These are only a few of the many ways a charitable remainder trust can help you supplement other sources of income while providing exceptional tax benefits. Choosing the Payout Size For an annuity trust, the fixed dollar amount must be at least 5 percent of its initial net fair market value. For a unitrust, the fixed percentage generally must be at least 5 percent of the trust's net fair market value, as determined each year. You may also choose from three unitrust variations: "net income with makeup," "net income without makeup" and "flip." (We'll be glad to explain their advantages.) Is there any upper limit on the amount or percentage? A charitable remainder trust must have a payout rate limited to a maximum of 50 percent, and it must have a charitable remainder value of at least 10 percent of the value contributed to the trust. You probably would like to receive a higher payout than you could obtain from other investments. That's understandable. But the payout should reflect a reasonable expectation of the trust's investment performance. If the payout size is larger than the trust's growth in future years, the trust's principal will gradually erode, reducing the charitable remainder. The U.S. Treasury rules base the value of the charitable remainder on the payout rate, so the higher the payout, the smaller the charitable value. And, of course, the smaller your anticipated contribution to our future needs. Despite these considerations, you will be pleasantly surprised to see how a charitable remainder trust can increase your income from low-yield investments. Now Add Up Your Benefits
Design Your Own Life Income Plan For more information on planned giving opportunities, please contact: Jackie Davis
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| Dakota Wesleyan University 1200 W. University Ave Mitchell, SD 57301 800-333-8506 |
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