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Charitable Remainder Unitrusts
(Complete gift description)
This is the gift plan that makes partnering with JDRF more productive. By addressing more of your and your family's financial planning needs than any other life-income gift, the charitable remainder unitrust unlocks your ability to make a significant gift to JDRF.
The unitrust is an individually managed trust paying its beneficiaries – you, your spouse, family members, or other individuals – income as a fixed percentage of the value of its principal, which is revalued annually. Here's how a unitrust works:
What are the tax advantages of a unitrust?
Planning tip grow your gift and your income
The unitrust is designed to pay you income as a fixed percentage of gradually increasing principal. We offer an alternative version designed to hold a temporarily illiquid asset or a portfolio of growth securities for a period of time, while it pays the beneficiaries the lesser of the unitrust amount or the trust's actual net income. Called a net-income unitrust, this option is especially useful to donors who want to make a gift and secure a tax deduction now but who don't need income back immediately.
A net-income unitrust can continue in that format for its entire term, or it can make up the accrued difference between actual income payments and the unitrust amount in years when it earns surplus income. An attractive option is the flip unitrust, which changes from an income-only payout to a fixed-percentage distribution when a pre-arranged event occurs such as the beneficiary turning 65 or the property in the unitrust being sold.
A net-income unitrust can change its investments to income instruments with no capital gains liability. Therefore, it is an attractive tool for younger donors to build a supplementary retirement or tuition fund that will grow tax-free, then distribute income when they and their family need it most.
We can assist you and your advisors in considering the alternative of a net-income unitrust. Click here to see additional planning tips.
How do you create a charitable remainder unitrust?
Setting up a charitable remainder unitrust is not particularly difficult, but you should be advised by an attorney with expertise in the area of charitable trusts and estate planning. To save you time and expense, we can provide you with an initial draft of the unitrust agreement for review by you and your attorney. Once your trust agreement is signed, you can "fund" your unitrust by transferring assets to your trustee.
For more information
Email us, complete the personal illustration form, or call us at 1-877-533-4483 so that we can assist you through every step of the process.
Alan Berkowitz
National Director of Planned Giving
Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation International
120 Wall Street
New York, NY 10005-4001
1-877-533-4483
plannedgiving@jdrf.org
JDRF recommends that you consult your tax or legal advisors
prior to making a planned gift.
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