Gifts of Retirement-Plan Benefits
You may consider using retirement-plan benefits to make a significant gift that will support a program or scholarship fund at Eastern Michigan University. 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 That means that, as these assets are withdrawn during retirement by the account owner or the account owner's spouse, they are subject to income tax.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 60 percent or more of the retirement-plan benefits.
For example, Bill accumulates $1 million in retirement-plan assets. Upon his death at age 73, he leaves his assets to his two children. Because of the tax bite, however, the amount Bill's children receive, after taxes, could be less than $360,000.
By contrast, Bill could have left the $1 million to Eastern Michigan University, and the entire amount would have been available to create a scholarship or to fund another of his favorite programs.
Planning pointer: Retirement-plan benefits can also be used to fund a qualified charitable remainder trust for the benefit of a spouse. If the surviving spouse is the designated beneficiary of the trust payments for his or her life, then the entire value of the trust, regardless of its size, will be deductible for estate-tax purposes. Because a qualified charitable remainder trust is a tax-exempt entity, it does not have to pay any income tax on the receipt of the retirement-plan benefits. Thus, the full value of the retirement-plan benefits will be available to provide payments to the surviving spouse.
The discussion herein is general in nature and may not apply to all individuals. Prospective donors are urged to consult their personal tax and financial advisors concerning the specific consequences of making gifts to Eastern Michigan University. We would be pleased to discuss, in confidence, ways in which you may support Eastern Michigan University. These measures may also have an impact on your estate planning.