How a Charitable Trust Works

Charitable Trust

A charitable trust holds assets and distributes them to charities. When you establish the trust you can specify how it will manage and invest its assets, as well as how it will make donations. There are some tax benefits to setting up a charitable trust. However, unless you are particularly wealthy, these tend to be minimal compared to other forms of tax management. In general, the best reason to establish a charitable trust is if you would like to create a long-standing form of charitable giving.

Consider working with a financial advisor as you incorporate charitable giving into your estate plan.

What Is a Charitable Trust?

Like all trusts, a charitable trust is a legal entity that you create for the purpose of holding and managing assets. The trust is wholly separate from you. It owns any assets it holds, pays taxes and requires management just like any other legally recognized entity.

A charitable trust can specifically help manage charitable giving. It distributes its proceeds and assets to charity based on your instructions, and can do so both during your lifetime and after your death. For this reason charitable trusts are often a significant portion of estate planning. Many individuals will use them to set up ongoing gifts, since a trust can manage these gifts into the future and can even ensure that an initial gift grows over time.

On occasion someone will use a charitable trust to manage real estate or other forms of non-fungible property. For example, say that you wanted to leave your house to the local town to use as a community center. You might set up a charitable trust to hold the house and oversee its use and caretaking even after your death. This is uncommon, however. Most charitable trusts sell off any assets they receive and make their transactions entirely in cash.

The IRS provides a more formal definition. A charitable trust de­scribed in Internal Revenue Code section 4947(a)(1) is a trust that is not tax exempt, all of the unexpired interests of which are devoted to one or more charitable purposes, and for which a charitable contribu­tion deduction was allowed under a specific sec­tion of the Internal Revenue Code. A charitable trust is treated as a private foundation unless it meets the requirements for one of the exclu­sions that classifies it as a public charity.

In a nutshell, a charitable trust holds and manages assets for distribution to charity.

Charitable Lead Trust vs. Charitable Remainder Trust

There are two main types of charitable trusts: charitable remainder trusts and charitable lead trusts. We explain each below:

Charitable Remainder Trust

A charitable remainder trust primarily exists to make distributions to you or other beneficiaries that you name. It makes those distributions, then it gives any remaining funds to charity.

Like all trusts, a charitable remainder trust can distribute its principal, its income or both. For example, you might set up a trust which invests and manages its money, and then only distributes any earnings from those investments. Or you might set up a trust which distributes all of its holdings over time, eventually zeroing out its accounts.

It is common for a charitable remainder trust to distribute the proceeds of its investments to named beneficiaries, then to distribute its principal to a charity after a period of years.

Charitable Lead Trust

Charitable Trust

This is the mirror opposite of a charitable remainder trust. This trust first distributes a portion of its assets to charity. It makes this distribution for a defined amount of time. At the end of the trust’s term it distributes any remaining assets to beneficiaries that you name. If you include yourself as one of the trust’s beneficiaries it is a “reversionary trust.”

Like a charitable remainder trust, you specify which charities receive these funds and how they are to be distributed.

Both forms of charitable trust are irrevocable, meaning that you cannot take back any assets that you contribute to the trust. However, you also receive a tax deduction for the assets that either one donates to charity. To qualify for this tax deduction your trust must donate its assets to a legally qualified charity (meaning one that is recognized by the IRS).

When you establish a charitable trust you can also specify who will manage and run the entity.

Charitable Trusts: Tax Management and Estate Planning

Charitable trusts have several benefits, but two in particular stand out: tax management and estate planning.

Tax Management

When you place your assets into a charitable trust you can receive several tax benefits depending on your specific circumstances. You receive a tax deduction for the value of the trust’s charitable contributions. A charitable trust can also significantly impact your capital gains taxes, although this depends significantly on how you structure the trust and your own potential tax liabilities. If you establish the trust and name yourself a beneficiary, it is relatively uncommon for this to significantly reduce your own tax liability.

Estate Planning

A charitable trust is very useful for estate planning and long-term financial distributions. With a trust, you can create a running series of gifts and instructions. This is different from a will, which typically involves a one-time series of bequests. In addition, leaving assets through a trust can often help avoid estate taxes, although this is only a concern for those with an estate worth more than $12.92 million ($25.84 million for joint couples), as of 2023.

Bottom Line

Charitable Trust

A charitable trust is a trust which you establish to distribute assets to a charity. A charitable remainder trust distributes assets to named beneficiaries first, then distributes any remaining assets to charity. Charitable lead trusts distribute money to charity, then distribute any remaining assets to named beneficiaries.

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Eric ReedEric Reed is a freelance journalist who specializes in economics, policy and global issues, with substantial coverage of finance and personal finance. He has contributed to outlets including The Street, CNBC, Glassdoor and Consumer Reports. Eric’s work focuses on the human impact of abstract issues, emphasizing analytical journalism that helps readers more fully understand their world and their money. He has reported from more than a dozen countries, with datelines that include Sao Paolo, Brazil; Phnom Penh, Cambodia; and Athens, Greece. A former attorney, before becoming a journalist Eric worked in securities litigation and white collar criminal defense with a pro bono specialty in human trafficking issues. He graduated from the University of Michigan Law School and can be found any given Saturday in the fall cheering on his Wolverines.

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