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This comprehensive estate planning kit will help you protect loved ones, organize everything in one place and save on taxes.
Download My KitIf you want to make an impact now at CARE and also provide for your family later, consider setting up a charitable lead trust. You transfer cash or other assets to a trust that makes payments to CARE for a period of time. When the term is up, the remaining trust passes to your family or other beneficiaries you select.
There are two ways that charitable lead trusts make payments to CARE:
A charitable lead annuity trust pays a fixed amount each year to CARE and is more attractive when interest rates are low.
A charitable lead unitrust pays a variable amount each year to CARE based on the value of the assets in the trust. With a unitrust, if the trust's assets go up in value, for example, the payments to CARE go up as well.
See which type of charitable trust best fits your estate plan with the FREE guide Trusts: Choose From Two Ways to Donate.
Submit a few details and see how a charitable lead trust can benefit you.
George would like to support CARE and receive tax benefits. George received a windfall amount of income and needs a large income tax deduction to offset the income. Following his advisor’s recommendation, George funds a grantor charitable lead annuity trust with assets valued at $1,000,000. George’s trust pays $60,000 (6% of the initial fair market value) to CARE each year for 15 years, which will total $900,000. After that, the balance in the trust reverts back to George. He receives an income tax charitable deduction of $614,445. Assuming the trust earns an average 8% annual rate of return, George receives approximately $1,600,286 at the end of the trust term.
*Based on a 5.2% charitable midterm federal rate. Deductions and calculations will vary depending on your personal circumstances.
This comprehensive estate planning kit will help you protect loved ones, organize everything in one place and save on taxes.
Download My Kit