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“Did the rules change for Qualified Charitable Distributions?” The short answer is no: The One Big Beautiful Bill Act did not directly change the IRS’s rules for Qualified Charitable Distributions. Through a QCD, a taxpayer who is over the age of 70 ½ can direct up to $108,000 (in 2025) from an IRA to an eligible charity, including some types of funds at the community foundation. |
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“What else should I know if I’m 70 ½ and older?” QCDs are even more tax-savvy after the One Big Beautiful Bill Act because they bypass the new 0.5% adjusted gross income floor that will apply to itemized charitable deductions starting in 2026. Unlike other gifts, QCDs also avoid the 35% cap on deduction value for high-income taxpayers, preserving their full tax benefit. Because they reduce taxable income directly without requiring itemization, QCDs provide retirees with a simple, consistent way to maximize their charitable impact in a more restrictive tax environment. |
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“When should I call the Community Foundation if I feel I’m a good candidate for a QCD?” Anytime! Several types of funds at the community foundation are eligible recipients of Qualified Charitable Distributions, including field-of-interest funds, designated funds, and community impact funds. Although your client’s donor-advised fund is not a permissible QCD recipient under IRS rules, our team is happy to work with you and your client to establish another type of fund alongside an existing donor-advised fund and set in motion an overall strategy that meets both the client’s financial and estate planning goals, as well as the client’s goals for community impact. |
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“Remind me again why IRAs are such powerful legacy gifts to charity?” Clearly, IRAs are tax-savvy savings vehicles during a client’s lifetime because contributions to traditional IRAs may be tax-deductible. Plus, the assets inside the account grow tax-deferred, allowing returns to compound. Leaving an IRA to charity at death, such as to a client’s fund at the community foundation, is also tax-savvy. The assets avoid income tax because the charity, unlike heirs, can withdraw the funds tax-free. The assets also escape estate tax because charitable bequests are fully deductible from the taxable estate. |
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“Does the whole QCD have to go directly to the charity?” No. A special type of QCD allows your client to make a split-interest gift to either a charitable remainder trust (CRT) or a charitable gift annuity (CGA). The per-taxpayer limit for this so-called “legacy IRA” is $54,000 in 2025. Note that the CGA option may be the most attractive option for your clients because of the significantly greater administrative burdens of setting up a CRT. |




