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Gifts of Real Estate: Watch Every Step

Sep 17, 2024 | Professional Advisors

Your Gifts of Real Estate: Watch Every Step

We’re hearing from more and more attorneys, accountants and financial advisors that your clients are expressing interest in giving real estate to charity. This is wonderful news!

You’re certainly aware that gifts of real estate to a fund at the Community Foundation, just like gifts of other long-term capital assets, can be extremely tax-efficient. That’s because your client is typically eligible for a charitable deduction based on the fair market value of the property. Because the Community Foundation is a public charity, when it sells the donated property, the proceeds will flow into the fund free from capital gains tax.

A donor to Westview Boys’ Home in Hollis, Oklahoma, for 20 years, Ralph Pickle established the Ralph Pickle Family Fund at OCCF through his estate in 2017, and now his impact is stronger than ever before.

To achieve the best tax outcome and overall charitable result, it’s critical to undertake a careful process along the general lines of the following (depending of course on the specific situation):

The deductibility rules are different for real estate gifts to a public charity (such as the Community Foundation) versus a private foundation. Sometimes we meet with advisors whose clients are very close to transferring real estate to a private foundation, which could be devastating in terms of missed tax savings.

  1. You’ll need to determine that the real estate is a long-term capital asset (held for more than one year). That may sound obvious, but we’ve talked with advisors and their clients in the past about a potential gift of real estate and it turned out that the property was only recently purchased. The fair market value deduction (versus cost basis deduction) is available only for a long-term capital asset.
  2. You’ll want to work with the team at the Community Foundation to structure a donor-advised or other type of fund to receive the asset, if your client does not already have a fund in place. The deductibility rules are different for real estate gifts to a public charity (such as a community foundation fund) versus a private foundation. Again, clients may not be aware of the pitfalls here.

Sometimes we meet with advisors whose clients are very close to transferring real estate to a private foundation, which could be devastating in terms of missed tax savings.

3. You’ll need to verify that the property is not subject to a mortgage or other debt. Transferring encumbered property triggers important considerations with potentially significant tax consequences. The lender might not even allow a transfer in the first place. If you’re dealing with commercial property, you’ll also need to check to be sure that the property is not subject to “recapture” if your client has previously taken depreciation deductions.

4. You will need to determine whether the property produces income and discuss this with the Community Foundation. Income-producing real estate can potentially trigger “UBIT” (unrelated business income tax) for the Community Foundation. Although there are exceptions and strategies to minimize UBIT’s impact, it’s important that this issue be dealt with up front.

5. You may need to work with the Community Foundation to determine whether an environmental audit is required for the property.

6. Verify that the client has not entered into any discussions about an imminent sale of the property. Even if the Community Foundation will sell the property shortly after receipt (so that the proceeds can flow into the donor-advised or other fund to support the client’s favorite causes), your client cannot have pre-arranged this sale. Doing so could trigger the IRS’s step transaction doctrine and wipe out the tax deduction.

7. Importantly, ensure that the client obtains a qualified appraisal to determine the fair market value of the property. This is critical to obtain a tax deduction, and the appraised value must be reported to the IRS on a Form8283 in strict compliance with the IRS’s rules.

8. Finally, transfer the property with the appropriate legal documents, including a deed.

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 is provided for informational purposes only. It is not intended as legal, accounting or financial planning advice.

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