A Time-Limited Benefit of Fiscal Cliff Act: Tax-Free IRA Charitable Rollovers

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The American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (ATRA) may have marked the beginning of a new era of higher taxes for most high-income taxpayers, but it also revived the popular tax-free treatment of charitable contributions made directly from IRA accounts. This technique can allow taxpayers to reduce taxable income substantially for both 2012 and 2013.

For clients looking to ease the sting of higher tax rates and limited tax preferences in 2013, the IRA-to-charity transfer can provide an effective strategy, while simultaneously allowing these clients to further their philanthropic goals. For last year’s donations, however, the time to act is now, as the brief 2012 election period is quickly coming to a close.

Tax-Free Charitable Gifts in 2013

ATRA revived a provision that allows taxpayers aged 70½ and older to make tax-free charitable donations directly from IRA accounts. For many taxpayers, this allows them to take their annual required minimum distribution (RMD) from retirement accounts without the corresponding increase in taxable income. The RMD rules require that a taxpayer begin taking distributions from an IRA once that taxpayer reaches age 70½. Because of this, many taxpayers are required to increase their annual taxable income whether they need the extra funds or not.

The tax-free treatment of charitable donations from IRA accounts allows these taxpayers to take their RMD (up to $100,000 per year, or $200,000 per couple if each spouse has a separate IRA) without increasing their tax burden as long as the funds are transferred directly to a qualified charity. This can prevent a taxpayer from exceeding the annual income thresholds for higher tax rates and limitations on deductions and exemptions in 2013.

ATRA brought about tax changes that make minimizing taxable income more important than ever, especially for higher income taxpayers. Lower income levels in 2013 cannot only push a client into a lower tax bracket but can allow the client to avoid limitations on exemptions and itemized deductions, as well as new investment income taxes imposed under the Affordable Care Act.

A Window for 2012 Donations

The provision was made retroactive for 2012, as well, and donors who choose to make gifts in January 2013 are permitted to reflect the donation on their 2012 returns. These donations can be used to satisfy the owner’s 2012 RMD. Further, an IRA owner who waited to take an RMD until December 2012, when the tax-free contribution rule was technically not in effect, can make a cash contribution to a qualified charity in January 2013 and still qualify for this tax-free treatment.

Unless the RMD was taken in December 2012, the transfer is required to be made as a trustee-to-charity transfer, meaning that a check is written directly from the IRA to the charity to qualify for tax-free treatment. This means that the account owner has no control over the funds once they are withdrawn from the account. Further, the charity receiving the funds must be a public charity—donor advised funds and private foundations are excluded.

The gifts cannot be deducted as itemized tax deductions if tax-free treatment is elected, but the income-reducing benefits can make it a smart choice for many IRA owners regardless.

The Clock Is Ticking

As in the past, Congress extended the tax-free treatment of these charitable deductions only through 2013, meaning that it is possible that these benefits could be short-lived. For clients looking to reduce their taxable income for 2012, the election can be made only before February 1, 2013.

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About the Author
William H. Byrnes, Esq.

William H. Byrnes, Esq.

Prof. William H. Byrnes, Esq., LL.M., CWM, Fellow

Prof. William H. Byrnes, Esq., LL.M., CWM, Fellow, is the leader of Summit Business Media's Financial Advisory Publications, having been appointed July 1, 2010. He has been an author and editor of 10 books and treatises and 17 chapters for Lexis-Nexis, Wolters Kluwer, Thomson-Reuters, Oxford University Press, Edward Elgar, and Wilmington, as well as numerous commissioned, peer-reviewed, and law review articles. He was a Senior Manager, then Associate Director of international tax for Coopers and Lybrand, which subsequently amalgamated into PricewaterhouseCoopers, practicing in Africa, Europe, Asia, and the Caribbean.

He has been commissioned and consulted by a number of governments on their tax and fiscal policy from policy formation to regime impact. He has served as an operational board member for companies in several industries including fashion, durable medical equipment, office furniture, and technology. Since 1994, he has been a professional trainer for professional association conferences, government workshops, and financial service institutions in-house meetings.

Before Associate Dean Byrnes joined the administration of Thomas Jefferson School of Law, he was a tenured law faculty member at St. Thomas School of Law. He serves on the Academic Committee of the American Academy of Financial Management. He created the first online graduate program offered to wealth managers and life insurance producers without any legal background—see http://llmprogram.tjsl.edu (Graduate Program of International Tax and Financial Services, Thomas Jefferson School of Law).

Email: wbyrnes@nationalunderwriteradvancedmarkets.com

About the Author
Robert Bloink, Esq., LL.M.

Robert Bloink, Esq., LL.M.

Robert Bloink is a professor of tax for the Graduate Program of International Tax and Financial Services, Thomas Jefferson School of Law.

Previously, he served as Senior Attorney in the IRS Office of Chief Counsel, Large and Mid-Sized Business Division, where he litigated many cases in the U.S. Tax Court, served as Liaison Counsel for the Offshore Compliance Technical Assistance Program, coordinated examination programs audit teams on the development of issues for large corporate taxpayers, and taught continuing education seminars to Senior Revenue Agents involved in Large Case Exams. In his governmental capacity, Mr. Bloink became recognized as an expert in the taxation of financial structured products and was responsible for the IRS’ first FSA addressing variable forward contracts. Mr. Bloink’s core competencies led to his involvement in prosecuting some of the biggest corporate tax shelters in the history or our country.

 

Mr. Bloink's insurance practice incorporates sophisticated wealth transfer techniques, as well as counseling institutions in the context of their insurance portfolios and other mortality based exposures. 

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