As many of you know, Section 1201 of the Pension Protection Act of 2006 (H.R. 4) authorizes taxpayers who are at least age 70½ to make direct charitable contributions from their IRAs. This opportunity offers many potential tax benefits to those who elect to do it. By doing what it allows, a taxpayer can benefit in one or more of the following ways:
This is not some "loophole" for only the rich, either. Many "ordinary" retirees will benefit in one or both of the first two ways in the above list. This is such a nice little benefit for people who qualify that it would behoove them to make all their charitable contributions via this method ... within reason of course.
Those who send out regular tax tip newsletters to their clients may wish to include this in an upcoming issue. Others may wish to write a separate letter about this matter alone and mail it to all their clients who qualify to use it.
Once this new provision becomes more widely known by taxpayers as a whole, its use may become so widespread that IRA trustees will start imposing fees for such transfers, in part to recover the nuisance cost of complying and in part to inhibit its use for small (under $100...$250...$500?) or frequent contributions.
- Receive tax-free income if his charitable contribution would otherwise be lost because he does not itemize.
- Avoid receiving income that would result in the taxation of 50%/85% more of his social security benefits.
- Lower his AGI, increasing his net medical and miscellaneous itemized deductions.
- Lower his AGI, reducing the loss of itemized deductions due to the phase out.
- Lower his AGI, reducing the loss of personal exemptions due to their phase out.
- Lower his AGI, reducing the loss of various other deductions and/or credits due to their phase outs.
- Bypass the 50% deduction limit on charitable contributions.
This is not some "loophole" for only the rich, either. Many "ordinary" retirees will benefit in one or both of the first two ways in the above list. This is such a nice little benefit for people who qualify that it would behoove them to make all their charitable contributions via this method ... within reason of course.
Those who send out regular tax tip newsletters to their clients may wish to include this in an upcoming issue. Others may wish to write a separate letter about this matter alone and mail it to all their clients who qualify to use it.
Once this new provision becomes more widely known by taxpayers as a whole, its use may become so widespread that IRA trustees will start imposing fees for such transfers, in part to recover the nuisance cost of complying and in part to inhibit its use for small (under $100...$250...$500?) or frequent contributions.
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