On this page
- The Giving Gap
- Why Philanthropy Belongs in Your Financial Plan
- The IRA Beneficiary Advantage: Why Retirement Accounts Are Different
- Donor-Advised Funds: Tax Bunching on Demand
- Charitable Remainder Trusts: Turning Assets Into Lifetime Income
- Bequests: The Largest (and Simplest) Avenue
- Defining a Giving Legacy
- A Complete Wealth Plan Includes Giving
The Giving Gap
Most financially successful people maintain disciplined strategies for accumulating wealth: diversification rules, rebalancing schedules, tax-loss harvesting. Yet those same people often hand-wave charitable giving—writing checks on impulse when moved, claiming deductions if they itemize, never thinking strategically about the outcomes. This asymmetry reveals something uncomfortable about American money culture: we train for accumulation, not generosity.
This gap costs money. A couple earning $480,000 annually might write $15,000 in charitable checks throughout the year to various organizations, deducting them whenever they itemize. Then a financial planner asks three questions: Who are you really trying to help? How much do you actually want to give? What structure would create the most impact? Within months, they've opened a Donor-Advised Fund (DAF), contributed $60,000 in appreciated stock that would have triggered $12,000 in capital gains taxes, generated a $60,000 charitable deduction, and—crucially—involved their adult children in grant decisions. Same annual giving amount. Fundamentally different financial outcome and family legacy.
Philanthropy isn't a separate domain from wealth management. It's the fifth dimension of a complete financial plan, sitting alongside growth, protection, spending, and inheritance.
Why Philanthropy Belongs in Your Financial Plan
A comprehensive financial strategy addresses five distinct tasks: growing wealth, protecting it, using it for living expenses, transferring it to heirs—and transferring it to causes. Most advice focuses on the first three. The last two, though, often represent the largest long-term priorities for wealthy households, yet they receive fragmented attention.
Charitable giving intersects with multiple financial domains simultaneously. On the tax side, giving strategies affect deductions, capital gains treatment, and the decision to itemize. On the estate-planning side, they shape which assets pass to heirs versus charities, influencing both federal and state tax outcomes. On the family side, giving choices transmit values—explicitly teaching the next generation what the family cares about. And on the community side, giving is the direct mechanism through which wealth creates impact outside your family.
Treating these as separate decisions—tax strategy over here, estate planning over there, "charitable values" as something you discuss at Thanksgiving—leaves money on the table and sends mixed messages to your family.
A unified approach answers three core questions:
- Who? Which causes or organizations embody what you believe matters?
- How much? What percentage of income or net worth aligns with your values and financial capacity?
- How? Which vehicle (direct gifts, DAF, charitable remainder trust, bequest) minimizes taxes while maximizing intended impact?
The IRA Beneficiary Advantage: Why Retirement Accounts Are Different
Here's a tax fact that surprises even experienced investors: naming a charity as your IRA beneficiary is often more tax-efficient than writing a charitable bequest from other assets.
The reason is straightforward. When heirs inherit a traditional IRA, they owe ordinary income tax on distributions—regardless of whether the original account holder paid taxes on the contributions decades earlier. A $500,000 IRA left to an adult child effectively costs that child roughly $150,000–$220,000 in federal and state income taxes (depending on bracket), leaving only $280,000–$350,000 for their actual benefit.
A charity, by contrast, owes zero income tax on any inherited funds. That same $500,000 IRA passes entirely tax-free to your chosen organization, undiminished.
The efficiency multiplies when you layer in estate strategy. Suppose you own a mix of appreciated stocks, retirement accounts, and real estate. You can leave the appreciated stocks and real estate to your children—assets they can hold and receive a "step-up" in basis if inherited, which substantially reduces embedded capital gains—while designating the charity as the beneficiary of your IRA. Your estate receives a charitable deduction for the full IRA value, your children avoid income tax on retirement distributions, and the charity receives an undiluted gift.
This structure works because of a mismatch in tax rules: the tax system privileges retirement accounts flowing to charities and penalizes them flowing to individuals.
Donor-Advised Funds: Tax Bunching on Demand
The 2025 tax code introduced new floors for charitable deductions—donations must exceed 0.5% of your adjusted gross income to be deductible at all. For many middle-to-upper-income households, this means standard annual giving falls below the threshold, making deductions worthless.
A Donor-Advised Fund solves this constraint through "bunching": concentrating multiple years of giving into a single contribution in a high-income year, then distributing from the fund over subsequent years.
The mechanics are simple. You open a DAF with a financial services provider like Fidelity Charitable or Vanguard Charitable, make a lump-sum contribution of appreciated securities (stock, mutual funds, real estate), and immediately claim a tax deduction for the full amount. The DAF invests the funds tax-free. Over the following years—or decades—you recommend grants to specific charities. You control the timing of distributions; the fund custodian handles the mechanics and maintains tax-exempt status.
The real power emerges with appreciated assets. If you donate appreciated stock held more than one year directly to a DAF, you avoid capital gains tax entirely. A typical scenario:
- Year 1 (high-income year): Earn a $200,000 bonus. Contribute 3 years' worth of planned charitable gifts—$45,000 in appreciated stock (original cost: $15,000) to your DAF.
- Tax outcome: $45,000 deduction immediately; $30,000 in capital gains tax avoided.
- Years 2–4: Recommend $15,000 annually in grants from the fund.
- Tax outcome: No additional deductions, but distributions happen tax-free to charities.
You've locked in three years of deductions in one year, avoided capital gains tax, and maintained complete control over where the money actually goes. The IRS Publication 526 permits these contributions to be deducted at up to 60% of adjusted gross income in the contribution year, with a five-year carryforward for excess amounts.
Charitable Remainder Trusts: Turning Assets Into Lifetime Income
A Charitable Remainder Trust (CRT) solves a different problem: you hold a highly appreciated asset you'd like to liquidate and diversify, but the capital gains tax is prohibitive.
Picture this: A professional inherited $800,000 in concentrated stock from a parent's estate. The original basis was $200,000; the current value is $800,000. Selling the shares directly triggers a $600,000 capital gains tax bill (assuming long-term rates around 20% plus state tax, roughly $120,000). After tax, she has $680,000 to deploy, a $120,000 drag.
A CRT works differently. She contributes the stock in-kind to an irrevocable trust, naming a charity as remainder beneficiary. The trustee sells the appreciated stock immediately—and pays zero capital gains tax. The full $800,000 is reinvested. The trust then pays her an annual income stream (either fixed dollars or a fixed percentage of annual value) for her lifetime. At her death, remaining assets pass to the charity.
Her tax benefits include:
- Zero capital gains tax on the in-kind contribution and subsequent sale
- A partial charitable deduction in the contribution year (calculated using IRS life-expectancy tables based on the remainder value flowing to charity)
- Tax-free growth of trust assets (the trust is exempt from income tax)
- Estate tax reduction (assets in the irrevocable trust exit her taxable estate)
The income stream is taxable to her—she doesn't escape income tax on distributions—but the mechanism allows full diversification without the capital gains hit.
Per Fidelity Charitable, CRTs can be structured as annuity trusts (fixed dollar payments) or unitrusts (fixed percentage of annually revalued assets), the latter providing inflation protection. The trade-off: higher administrative cost and complexity compared to simpler giving vehicles.
Bequests: The Largest (and Simplest) Avenue
Despite elaborate strategies available, bequests—gifts made through a will or beneficiary designation at death—remain the single largest source of charitable giving in America. Giving USA data shows bequests exceeded $42 billion annually in recent years, representing roughly 7–8% of total charitable giving.
A bequest requires almost no complexity. It can be as simple as adding a clause to your existing will ("I leave $50,000 to the American Heart Association") or naming a charity as beneficiary on a life insurance policy. If you own life insurance, this approach is underutilized: the death benefit passes directly to the designated charity without going through probate, without taxes if the policy isn't owned by your estate, and with full tax-deductibility for estate tax purposes.
Retirement account beneficiary designations work similarly. If you've designated a specific person as IRA beneficiary but want that to change if you predecease them, you can simply name a charity as a contingent beneficiary—or split the account, putting half in one IRA (charity beneficiary) and half in another (child beneficiary), ensuring no entanglement of beneficiaries that could shorten distribution windows.
The reason bequests dominate isn't sophistication—it's accessibility. Most people already update a will; adding a charitable provision requires no new account or legal structure.
Defining a Giving Legacy
The most meaningful philanthropic legacies arise from clarity about values. Many families accumulate significant wealth without ever articulating why they do it or what they want it to accomplish.
A simple practice: write a family giving mission statement—a brief, explicit statement of what the family believes and what it wants its resources to accomplish. This document doesn't need to be formal or lengthy. It might read:
"We believe education is a pathway to opportunity. Our giving prioritizes scholarships for first-generation college students and support for public school literacy programs. We see giving as a practice of gratitude for our own advantages and a vehicle for reducing inequality."
This clarity serves multiple purposes. It provides a framework for grant decisions across family members. It guides conversations with professionals (financial planners, estate attorneys, trustees). And it becomes a teaching document for the next generation—a concrete statement of what the family values beyond the balance sheet.
Involving adult children in grant decisions deepens this transmission. When a child evaluates funding requests from nonprofits, attends site visits, and participates in discussions about impact, they develop a relationship with money that includes capacity for impact, not only capacity for accumulation. They learn to ask whether an organization's approach is effective, whether its leadership reflects the communities it serves, whether the funding fills a genuine gap.
A Complete Wealth Plan Includes Giving
The Pattersons' story—the couple who went from intuitive giving to strategic giving—illustrates the core principle: philanthropy isn't a separate category. It's a domain of financial planning that improves when integrated with tax strategy, estate design, and family values.
A complete plan addresses all five domains: How will we grow wealth? Protect it? Spend it? Pass it to heirs? Direct it toward causes we believe in? The last question receives less attention in mainstream financial advice, yet for many households it represents a major long-term commitment. Treating it with the same intentionality you apply to investing—choosing strategies thoughtfully, structuring for efficiency, aligning with stated values—yields better outcomes across every dimension.
The vehicles exist. The tax rules are clear. What's often missing is the conversation itself: not "Should I give?" but "How much? To whom? In what way?"





