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Advising the Charitable Millionaire Next Door

Jun 11, 2024 | Professional Advisors

Advising the Charitable Millionaire Next Door

At the end of 2024’s first quarter, an estimated 485,000 Americans could count themselves among the so-called “401(k) millionaires,” meaning the balance in their employer-sponsored retirement plans has reached the $1 million level. Thanks in part to stock market rallies during the first part of the year, that’s a larger number than ever before. Many of these 401(k) accounts will be rolled over into IRAs after retirement and the assets will continue to grow.

With so many of your charitably-inclined clients holding large sums of money in 401(k)s and IRAs, now is an important time for a brief refresher course on the benefits of deploying these accounts toward achieving clients’ philanthropic goals. 

Ramsey family at their family business Blue & Gold Sausage Co.

OCCF donors Don and Willadean Ramsey with their family at their family business, the Blue & Gold Sausage Co.

Although a charitable bequest of any type of property can help achieve a client’s estate planning and legacy goals, retirement accounts are especially powerful. When your client names a public charity, such as a donor-advised or other fund at the Community Foundation, as the beneficiary of a traditional IRA or qualified employer retirement plan, your client achieves extremely tax-efficient results. Here’s why:

1. Your client achieved tax benefits over time as they contributed to a traditional IRA or to an employer-sponsored plan. That’s because contributions to certain retirement plans are what the IRS considers “pre-tax”; your client does not pay income tax on the money used to make those contributions (subject to annual limits).

2. Assets in IRAs and qualified retirement plans grow tax free inside the plan. In other words, the client is not paying taxes on the income generated by those assets before distributions start in retirement years, allowing these accounts to grow rapidly.

3. When a client leaves a traditional IRA or qualified plan to a fund at the Community Foundation or another charity upon death, the charity does not pay income taxes (or estate taxes) on those assets. By contrast, if the client names children as IRA beneficiaries, for example, those distributions are subject to income tax (and potentially estate tax), and that tax can be hefty given the tax treatment of inherited IRAs.

OCCF Expert Tip

Speaking of savvy IRA giving techniques, a client who is 70 ½ or older can make tax-efficient gifts of up to $105,000 per year directly from their IRA to a qualified charity – including certain types of funds at the Community Foundation! This is known as a “Qualified Charitable Distribution.”

So, if your client is deciding how to dispose of stock and an IRA in an estate plan and intends to leave one to children and the other to charity, leaving the IRA to charity and the stock to children is a no-brainer. Remember, the client’s stock owned outside of an IRA gets the “step-up in basis” when the client dies, which means that the children won’t pay capital gains taxes on the pre-death appreciation of that asset when they sell it.

The Community Foundation is always happy to work with you to ensure that your clients are maximizing their assets to fulfill their charitable giving goals, both during their lives and through legacy gifts. We look forward to the conversation!

The team at the Community Foundation is a resource and sounding board as you serve your philanthropic clients. We understand the charitable side of the equation and are happy to serve as a secondary source as you manage the primary relationship with your clients. This newsletter is provided for informational purposes only. It is not intended as legal, accounting or financial planning advice.

OCCF will be closed in observance of Indigenous Peoples' Day on Monday, Oct. 14. 

We will reopen at 8:30 a.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 15. Best wishes from all of us to you.

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