CHARITABLE TRUST YOU SHOULD KNOW
They come with the funny abbreviations so common in
estate planning—CRTs, CRUTs, CRATs, NIMCRUTs, CLTs, CLATs, CLUTs—but
if you have significant charitable intent you should become acquainted
with these versions of charitable trusts.
For all the many abbreviations, there are only two
types of charitable trusts: charitable remainder trusts and charitable
lead trusts. When the charity receives the benefit of your gift
determines which type of trust. Let’s start with the lesser-known
version, the charitable lead trust.
In addition to helping charity, the main benefit of
a CLT is a reduction of the donor’s gift and estate taxes. The donor
gifts appreciated property that is expected to generate income and the
trust makes annual payments to a named charity or charities for a
specific period, such as 10 or 20 years, or lifetime. When the period
ends, the remaining trust assets pass to the trust’s beneficiaries,
usually with a gift or estate tax savings. Obviously, this type of
charitable trust is for donors who don’t need current income from the
assets and who want to make an immediate gift to charity.
CLTs come in several variations. A charitable lead
annuity trust (CLAT) pays out a fixed dollar amount to the charity set
at the time of transfer of assets to the trust. There is no required
minimum amount, but the amount will affect the size of the charitable
deduction. The trust may need to dip into principal should the income
be insufficient to make the fixed payments. In contrast, charitable
lead unitrust (CLUT) payouts are based on a fixed percentage of the
fair market value of the assets, recalculated annually.
These versions are further modified depending on
whether it’s a grantor trust or a nongrantor trust. With a grantor
trust, a portion of the assets may revert to the donor. The donor can
take an upfront income-tax deduction, but has to pay taxes annually on
all trust income paid out to the charity.
With a nongrantor trust, the income
generated by the trust is taxable to the trust, not the donor, but the
trust receives a charitable deduction. The donor receives a charitable
gift-tax deduction based on the value of the payments and how long the
assets are to remain in the trust. Also, future appreciation of trust
assets is removed from the donor’s estate and any gift or estate taxes
due at the time of the trust termination may be reduced through a
discount.
Charitable remainder trusts are
essentially mirror images of charitable lead trusts. They are designed
for people who need current income or worry about running out of
income during their lifetime, and who need income-tax deductions more
than they need estate tax savings.
The donated assets, which can be sold by
the charity without a capital gains tax to the donor, typically are
invested in diversified income-generating assets and the income is
paid out to the donor. When the trust terminates, the remaining assets
pass to the charity. The donor receives an upfront income tax
deduction for the gift based on the donor’s age and the amount
expected to ultimately go to the charity or charities. (If you name
someone else besides yourself or your spouse as income beneficiary,
the donation may be subject to gift tax.)
As with the charitable lead trust, a CRT
comes in two flavors, but with very important differences. The annuity
version (CRAT) must annually pay out an amount equal to at least five
percent of the value of the initial donation. The percentage can be
higher than what you’d get from a commercial annuity, though if it’s
too high you’ll disqualify the trust.
A unitrust version (CRUT) operates like
the unitrust version of the CLT in that the percentage is initially
set, but the trust value is recalculated every year, so the payout
value will vary year to year. A variation of the CRUT is a NIMCRUT—net
income with make-up charitable remainder unitrust. That mouthful means
the trust must pay out all net income generated by the trust, and if
it doesn’t pay it all out in a given year it has to make up the
shortfall in subsequent years.
With either version of charitable
remainder trust, the tax treatment of the income payout is determined
by a complex “four tier” first-in, first-out accounting regime.
This column is produced by the Financial Planning Association, the membership organization for the financial planning community and is for general use. It is not intended as specific advice to any individual.
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