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You can play a part in ensuring Triangle’s tomorrow through gift planning
today. Depending on the arrangements you choose, you can also:
- reduce your income taxes
- avoid capital-gain tax
- increase your spendable income
- retain payments for life
- achieve no-cost, worry-free asset management
The Triangle Education Foundation staff welcomes the opportunity to work with
you and your legal and financial advisors to establish individual deferred gift
arrangements. Please be sure to notify the Foundation if you are planning to
include or have already included Triangle in your estate plans.
As with outright gifts, deferred gifts may be restricted and designated to
specified programs based on the donor's wishes, or they may be left unrestricted
to give the Foundation the flexibility to meet unforeseeable needs. To learn
about the various planned giving vehicles, please select from the options listed
below or contact:
Scott Bova, CFRE
President
Phone: (317) 707-9803
E-mail:
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BEQUESTS
LIFE INCOME GIFT
CHARITABLE LEAD TRUST
GIFT OF REAL ESTATE
GIFTS OF RETIREMENT BENEFITS (IRA's,
401k's, etc.)
GIFTS OF LIFE INSURANCE
Bequests
Whether your bequest to the Triangle Education Foundation is in the form of
cash, securities, real estate, or other property, the gift is deductible for
federal estate tax purposes, with no limit on the amount of your charitable
estate tax deduction. Your bequest to Triangle does not generally incur state
inheritance or estate taxes. For larger estates, a bequest will save the donor
up to fifty-five cents on the tax dollar. A gift through your estate provides
the following benefits:
The opportunity to make a major gift while preserving assets during your
lifetime;
Reduction in federal estate taxes;
Significant, and much appreciated, support for Triangle in your name and/or area
of specific interest.
To make a bequest to the Foundation you may create a new will, add a codicil to
your current will, include the Triangle Education Foundation in your revocable
trust, or name the Foundation as the residual beneficiary of your qualified
retirement plan or insurance policy.
There are two principal types of bequests: specific and residuary. In a specific
bequest, your will specifies that a dollar amount or a particular asset, such as
securities, real estate or tangible personal property. In a residuary bequest,
your will gives the Triangle Education Foundation all or a percentage of the
remainder of your estate after the payment of estate-related expenses and other
specifically named legacies.
Naming Triangle as a beneficiary of your IRA, Keogh, tax-sheltered annuity,
qualified pension or profit-sharing plan is a good way to make a bequest. If
allowed to remain in your estate, your plan will be subject to both estate and
income taxes when received by your heirs. For larger estates, heirs will receive
less than thirty cents on the dollar of retirement plan assets. Designation of
these assets to the Foundation will provide Triangle with their full value.
The laws governing bequests vary from state to state. It is important that you
review your will with your attorney or advisor to make certain that it meets all
legal requirements and adequately reflects your desires regarding the
distribution of your estate.
Life Income Gift
Charitable Gift Annuity
A charitable gift annuity is a simple contract between you and the Triangle
Education Foundation. You make an irrevocable gift of at least $5,000 and
receive a fixed, guaranteed income from the Triangle each year for your life
and/or the life of another person of your choosing. At the end of the annuity
period, the remaining value of the annuity gift will be allocated in your name
to the Foundation.
You can start drawing the income immediately or defer the start of the annuity
payments until a later date. Because the payments can be deferred, gift
annuities are a popular vehicle for supplementing retirement income. Annuity
rates are based on the age of the annuitant(s) at the time of the gift and on
whether the income payments begin immediately or are deferred.
With a current or deferred charitable gift annuity, you will:
- receive an income stream for life that will be backed by the assets of
the Triangle Education Foundation.
- receive an immediate income tax deduction upon making the gift
- reduce capital gains taxes, which can spread out over a number of years
- receive a portion of each annuity payment as a tax-free return of
principal
- leave a legacy by making a generous gift to the Triangle Education
Foundation.
Deferred-payment Gift Annuity
The deferred-payment gift annuity involves the current transfer of cash,
marketable securities, or under some circumstances, tangible personal property
or real estate, in exchange for which the charitable organization agrees to pay
the donor an annuity starting at a future date - usually at the donor’s
retirement. The gift can consist of a single transfer, a series of transfers, or
periodic transfers to the plan in high-income years.
You realize an immediate charitable deduction for the gift portion of each
transfer to the deferred gift-annuity plan. A portion of each annuity payment,
when the payments begin, will be a tax-free return of principal over the life
expectancy of the annuitant. When appreciated, long-term, capital-gain
securities are transferred, any reportable capital gain is spread out over the
donor-annuitant’s life expectancy.
Charitable Remainder Trust
A charitable remainder trust can provide you or you and your spouse with income
for life, or for a specified term of years, while providing a charitable income
tax deduction. If you fund the trust with appreciated securities, you can avoid
capital gains taxes. You also have the option of establishing and naming an
endowed fund to benefit a department or program of your preference at Triangle.
At the time of the trust’s termination, the principal becomes part of Triangle
Education Foundation’s endowment. Charitable remainder trusts offer the greatest
flexibility of all the different types of planned gifts. The chief benefits
include:
- life income to one or more beneficiaries
- increased income on low-yielding assets
- a substantial charitable income tax deduction
- capital gains tax avoidance on the transfer of appreciated securities or
real estate
- reduced estate taxes
- professional investment management
- the opportunity to establish an endowed fund at Triangle Education
Foundation or to provide a substantial benefit to Triangle upon termination
of the trust.
Retained Life Estate
One of your valued possessions, your home, can become a valued gift to the
Triangle Education Foundation even while you are still living in it, and even if
you want your spouse or other person to live there for life. This arrangement is
called a retained life estate.
By deeding your home to us now, you can obtain a sizable income tax deduction
this year. The amount depends on the value of the property and your age (and the
age of any person given life use). In addition, you retain the right to rent
your home or make improvements to it. You continue to have responsibility for
maintenance, insurance and property taxes.
Any personal residence qualifies for this tax deduction including a farm (with
or without the house), vacation home, condominium, even stock in a cooperative
housing corporation. Your gift to us must be an irrevocable remainder interest
where after your life use and that of any survivor, Triangle receives the
property outright.
Charitable Lead Trust
A charitable lead trust allows you to transfer substantial assets to your family
at greatly reduced estate and gift tax cost. The concept is simple. You make a
gift to a lead trust. The lead trust makes payments to the Triangle Education
Foundation for a term of years. At the end of the term, the assets are
transferred to your family. However, you make the gift to your family in the
year the trust is created. Therefore, you are entitled to a substantial
deduction because of the charitable interest and the time delay before your
family enjoys the assets. A trustee independently manages the trust. With a
charitable lead trust, you will:
- reduce estate tax liability because the trust assets will be removed
from the donor’s estate
- benefit from expert trust management provided by the same professionals
who manage the Institution’s endowment
- make a generous gift to the Triangle Education Foundation
Gift of Real Estate
You can make a gift of residential or commercial real estate to the Triangle
Education Foundation and receive substantial financial benefits. It is important
to discuss the proposed gift of real estate with the development staff at
Triangle to make certain that the property is marketable and debt-free. We can
provide you with a detailed illustration of how a proposed gift of real estate
might work for you under nearly any given circumstance.
Gifts of Retirement Benefits
Tax-deferred retirement plan benefits are great sources of retirement income,
but not always a good choice for making gifts to children and grandchildren. You
may consider using retirement plan benefits to make a significant gift that will
support Triangle. And because of the estate and income tax treatment of
retirement plan benefits, the cost of your gift to your estate and heirs is
often relatively small.
Retirement-plan benefits include assets held in Individual Retirement Accounts
(IRAs) and assets held in accounts under 401(k) plans, profit-sharing plans,
Keogh plans, and 403(b) plans. Income taxes on retirement-plan benefits are
deferred but not avoided. That means as these assets are withdrawn during
retirement by the account owner or the account owner’s spouse, they are subject
to income tax. In addition, retirement-plan benefits left to children,
grandchildren, and other beneficiaries at the death of the account owner are
subject to both income tax and estate tax. This combination of income taxes and
estate taxes can result in a tax-hit equal to 75% or more of the retirement-plan
benefits.
The Pension Protection Act of 2006 & Triangle Education Foundation
A new tax-saving opportunity was signed into law by President Bush on August 17,
2006. The Pension Protection Act of 2006 gives new tax incentives for charitable
gifts for donors who are 70½ or older, or will turn 70½ on or before December
31, 2007.
The new law allows you to use funds from your IRA to make a lifetime charitable
gift, tax free.
The benefits to you:
• You may be receiving minimum distributions from an IRA as part of your
retirement income since you turned 70½. You may not need these IRA
distributions, but by law you have to take them and pay income tax on them.
Under the new law, if you transfer those minimum distributions to your favorite
charity, you will avoid paying income tax on them.
• Your transfer will not generate a tax deduction, so you do not have to itemize
this tax deduction to receive the benefit.
A couple of rules apply:
• You are currently aged 70½ or older, or will be on or before December 31st,
2007
• You make your gifts on or before December 31st, 2007
• Your gifts do not total more than $100,000 per year (thus you have a maximum
allowance of $200,000 by December 31st, 2007)
• Your funds are transferred directly from an IRA or Rollover IRA
• You make your gift to a public non-profit charity (such as Triangle Education
Foundation)
Making a gift to the charitable organization of your choice is easy – please
contact your IRA custodian for the necessary transfer forms.
Gifts of Life Insurance
A gift of life insurance can take several forms. You may wish to name the
Triangle Education Foundation as the beneficiary of a group policy or a policy
you own. In that case, the proceeds of the policy would pass to Triangle at your
death.
If you hold a fully paid-up life insurance policy that you no longer need, you
may transfer ownership of the policy to the Foundation. You then are entitled to
an immediate charitable income tax deduction for a portion of the value of the
policy.
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