5 Tips to Include Charitable Giving in Your Financial Plan

Charitable giving enables you to support causes and organizations you believe in while reducing your income tax, capital gains, and estate taxes when including giving in your financial plan. Here are six tips to help you incorporate charitable giving into your financial plan:

#1 Identify your giving goals– There are so many well-deserving causes out there. Take the time to figure out which ones are most important to you and your family. You might choose to support the environment and refugees or medical research, social justice, and the arts. Think about what motivates you and how donating to specific causes reflects your values.

#2 Consider charitable tax deductions- You can deduct charitable gifts on your tax return whether you make a cash gift or donate goods or services. To do so, however, you’ll need to choose a 501c3 tax-exempt organization. Please consult a tax advisor to determine the limits to how much you can deduct and whether it makes sense for you to itemize and lock in the deduction.

#3 Gift using life insurance- Use life insurance to gift by naming a charity as the beneficiary. Often, the strategies you use to transfer wealth, which organizations you want to donate to, and the length of time you want your assets to last is simplified by using life insurance.

#4 Explore Qualified Charitable Distributions (QDCs)- If you’re 70 1/2 years of age or older, you can use a qualified charitable distribution or QCD to donate directly from your IRA to the charity of your choice. Even though the gift amount won’t qualify for a charitable deduction, it won’t count as taxable income and will allow you to simultaneously reduce your taxable income and give back.

#5 Use Donor-Advised Funds (DAFs)- With DAFs, you can immediately donate cash or other assets to a charitable investment account and claim a tax deduction. Since a DAF will grow tax-free, you may choose the fund distributions over time to organizations and causes that mean the most to you. If you time your contributions to coincide with high-income years, you’ll reap the benefits of a larger deduction.