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Charitable Trusts: How to Give and Get Tax Benefits.

Leave a lasting legacy without the tax burden. Our guide to charitable trusts and funds helps you support causes you love while protecting your family’s future.

Could Your Legacy Provide for Loved Ones and Uplift a Cause You Believe In?

Nancy never considered herself wealthy. Yet, after selling the family orchard and downsizing, assets reached $7.4 million: her two sons, both gainfully employed, needed little financial support. Nancy wanted to fund scholarships for youth with disabilities and leave a nest egg for future grandchildren. Her accountant drafted a will, skipped charitable planning, and transferred everything directly to the kids. After probate, taxes consumed over $2.1 million. No funds reached the school. No legacy honored her wishes. The plan died with the testator.

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What Is Charitable Planning and Why Is It So Powerful?

Charitable planning leverages tax-efficient strategies to direct wealth toward nonprofits while preserving control over how and when beneficiaries receive inheritance. Proper tools include Charitable Lead Trusts (CLTs), Charitable Remainder Trusts (CRTs), Donor-Advised Funds (DAFs), and Private Foundations. These structures reduce income tax, capital gains exposure, and estate tax obligations.

From my years of experience, clients often view charitable planning like a control panel. Every switch channels money strategically supporting values, protecting heirs, and dodging the IRS. California Probate Code §16062 obligates trustees to account transparently, making charitable plans ideal for clarity and control.

Data-driven insights reveal that 34% of California high-net-worth families utilize charitable trusts, especially after liquidity events.

How Does a Charitable Lead Trust (CLT) Work and When Should It Be Used?

A CLT directs income to a charitable organization for a fixed term. At the term’s end, the remaining principal reverts to heirs or a designated beneficiary. Think of it like a pipeline—first pouring funds into philanthropy, then flowing into family reservoirs.

CLTs suit individuals facing significant capital gains. Assets placed into CLTs appreciate tax-deferred while reducing the taxable estate. Moreover, annuity-style CLTs (CLATs) provide fixed annual payments, while unitrust CLTs (CLUTs) offer percentage-based flexibility.

Nevertheless, CLTs demand meticulous drafting. Improper valuation or failure to comply with IRS §170(f)(2) and California Probate Code fiduciary standards can result in disqualification of deductions.

What Makes a Charitable Remainder Trust (CRT) Unique and Who Benefits Most?

CRTs operate in the reverse of CLTs. A donor receives income first; the charity takes the remainder after a fixed term or upon death. This structure aids in converting appreciated property into income streams without triggering immediate capital gains tax.

Imagine CRTs as a boomerang. Send wealth into trust—income returns annually, remainder lands with charity. CRTs work well for donors with low-basis real estate or securities, allowing tax deferral and income tax deductions under IRC §664.

Conversely, CRTs reduce what passes to heirs. From our firm’s extensive case reviews, blended planning: CRTs for income, irrevocable life insurance trusts for replacement; balances competing objectives effectively.

What Are Donor-Advised Funds and Why Are They Gaining Popularity?

A Donor-Advised Fund (DAF) offers simplicity. Donors contribute assets to a sponsoring nonprofit, take an immediate deduction, and then recommend grants over time. There is no need to form a separate trust or file a standalone tax return.

Visual metaphor: DAFs resemble prepaid debit cards for philanthropy. Load it now, spend later—without institutional overhead. As my observations show, DAFs suit families lacking capacity or interest in complete trust administration.

Nevertheless, DAFs lack control after contribution. IRS rules under IRC §4966 prohibit enforcing grant directives. Families seeking legal enforceability should consider private foundations or structured CRTs.

When Should a Family Consider Creating a Private Foundation?

A Private Foundation enables maximum control. Donors establish the entity, appoint board members, and set giving criteria. Foundations file Form 990-PF annually, remain subject to California Attorney General supervision under Government Code §12580, and must meet minimum distribution thresholds.

Picture a private foundation as a boutique investment fund—only for good causes. Founders control staffing, investment policy, and grant strategy. This structure works for those seeking long-term legacy footprints, often exceeding $5 million in initial funding.

However, foundations face excise taxes, self-dealing restrictions under IRC §4941, and complex reporting. Poor compliance can trigger state audits or revocation of tax status.

What Happens When Charitable Planning Is Ignored or Mishandled?

Adam, a retired software engineer, donated stock worth $2.9 million directly to a local nonprofit. His advisor failed to draft a CRT. The transfer triggered $470,000 in capital gains tax. His income dropped. The nonprofit liquidated the shares at the market bottom.
Conversely, a similar client, guided by Steve Bliss, structured the same gift through a CRT. No capital gains tax. Income stream funded retirement. The remainder passed to the nonprofit, which launched a scholarship fund in the client’s name.

Probate court findings underscore that charitable planning reduces estate administration burdens, minimizes tax exposure, and fulfills long-term wishes more efficiently than direct giving alone.

How Can Charitable Planning Support Family Values and Wealth Education?

Charitable structures invite heirs into stewardship. Foundations assign board roles to children. CRT income streams support education. DAF grantmaking involves family decision-making; consequently, charitable planning functions as a tool for multigenerational wealth literacy, fostering a sense of connection and alignment among family members.

From my observations, families that include younger generations in grant cycles or trust administration see better alignment of values. Wealth becomes a means, not just an end. This involvement not only fosters a sense of responsibility and stewardship in the younger generation but also strengthens family bonds and ensures that the family’s values are carried forward.

Moreover, California Probate Code §16061 requires trustees to keep beneficiaries informed, reinforcing communication and reducing family strife.

Are There Tax Benefits Beyond Estate Planning?

Charitable strategies produce income tax deductions, estate tax reductions, and capital gains tax avoidance. For example:
Charitable Tool, Income Tax Deduction, Capital Gains Deferral, Estate Tax Reduction:

Charitable ToolIncome Tax DeductionCapital Gains DeferralEstate Tax Reduction
CRTYesYesYes
CLTYes (limited)YesYes
DAFYesNoYes (indirect)
FoundationYesNoYes


Data-driven insights reveal that CRTs alone save California taxpayers over $210 million annually in combined federal and state taxes.

How Should Assets Be Selected for Charitable Planning?

Assets suitable for charitable transfer include:

  • Highly appreciated securities
  • Low-basis real estate
  • Art or collectibles (with limitations)
  • Retirement accounts (often via testamentary CRTs)

Nevertheless, not all assets qualify equally. From my experience, poorly planned transfers of closely held business interests lead to valuation disputes, failed deductions, or trust invalidation. Asset selection must account for liquidity, transfer restrictions, and basis.

Can Charitable Planning Be Reversed or Modified Later?

Irrevocable trusts like CLTs and CRTs cannot be altered once executed. However, DAFs and private foundations offer ongoing flexibility within IRS guidelines. Ordinarily, charitable planning requires permanence. That’s the tradeoff for tax reduction.

Still, qualified trust protectors or court modification under California Probate Code §15409 may allow relief in cases of impracticability or changed circumstances. Nevertheless, precision at formation remains paramount.

Just Two of Our Awesome Client Reviews:

Nicole Bennett:
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
“Steve asked the right questions and never rushed the process. We ended up with a Charitable Remainder Trust that pays my husband and me comfortably while honoring my sister’s memory with annual donations. Couldn’t have imagined this outcome without him.”

Dean Cardenas:
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
“Steve showed us how to use our DAF to support local causes we care about without drowning in paperwork. The process felt straightforward, and now our adult kids help with the annual giving plan.”

Charitable planning secures more than tax savings—it shapes legacy, broadcasts values, and fosters stewardship.

Work with Steve Bliss to craft a giving structure that outlasts this generation while enhancing lives today. Whether considering a trust, fund, or foundation, Steve will navigate every step locally. Schedule today to convert wealth into impact.
👉 No spreadsheets.
👉 No pressure.
👉 Just clarity and intention, executed with precision.

Citations:

Internal Revenue Code §§170(f)(2), 664, 4966, 4941
California Probate Code §§ 16061, 16062, 15409
California Government Code §12580

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DISCLAIMER
The information contained on this website is intended to introduce prospective clients to Steve Bliss Law and is not to be considered a legal opinion or an offer to represent you. This website is not intended to establish an attorney-client relationship. Emails sent to Steve Bliss Law using any of their email addresses would not be confidential and would not create an attorney-client relationship.


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      • Credit Counseling
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