An individual retirement account owner aged 70 ½ or more may be able to withdraw money from the account tax-free and use it to support favorite causes with a qualified charitable distribution (QCD).
Have you ever wished you could simply wipe away your retirement tax burden while supporting the causes you care about? It sounds too good to be true, right? Yet there's a perfectly legal strategy ...
The release of the official IRS Publication 590-B brought clarity to the issue of limitations on QCDs based on deductible contributions made to IRAs. A big change related to qualified charitable ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Empowering smarter money moves. Have you considered using a QCD vs RMD for charitable giving, reducing your tax burden and ...
Who can make this kind of gift? People seventy and a half years old and older (even when your required minimum distribution starts at age seventy-three). Yes. An IRA owner can make a one-time election ...
Support your favorite charitable organizations even in retirement. Many, or all, of the products featured on this page are from our advertising partners who compensate us when you take certain actions ...
For most people, December is the month for giving. But when it comes to taxes, January should be the time to start the planning process for maximizing the tax benefits of donating to charity. One of ...
Assets in individual retirement accounts are the best assets to give to charity, since they’re loaded with taxes. For those who give regardless, using IRAs to make the gifts can provide tax benefits — ...
This is an updated version of an article that originally published on June 3, 2019. Although the tax laws related to charitable giving have changed a bit in recent years, one strategy for gaining a ...
You can’t make QCDs directly from your 401(k), but you can use a workaround Matt Webber is an experienced personal finance writer, researcher, and editor. He has published widely on personal finance, ...