• Donor-Advised Funds

    The new University of Miami Donor-Advised Fund allows donors to make charitable contributions, receive an immediate tax benefit, and recommend grants to the University and other qualified charities over time. A popular and simple vehicle for effective charitable giving.
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  • Bequests

    By designating the University of Miami as a beneficiary in your will, trust or beneficiary designation form, you’re ensuring the future of the University.
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  • IRA Gifts

    If you are 70½ or older you may be interested in a planned gift that reduces the income and taxes from your IRA withdrawals. An IRA charitable rollover is a way you can support UM while benefiting yourself. Or at any age, designating the University of Miami as a beneficiary of your IRA can be a great way to remove highly taxed assets from your estate.
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  • Beneficiary Designation Gifts

    A beneficiary designation gift is a simple and affordable way to make a gift to support the University of Miami. You can designate us as a beneficiary of a retirement, investment or bank account or your life insurance policy.
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  • Appreciated Stock Gifts

    Donating appreciated securities, including stocks or bonds, is an easy and tax-effective way for you to make a gift to the University of Miami.
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Tuesday June 16, 2026

Case of the Week

IRA to Gift Annuity, Part 11

Case:

Quentin Charles Douglas was the firstborn child in a large family. Throughout his childhood, Quentin's parents worked hard to put food on the table for their children. They also instilled in Quentin the value of hard work and saving money. Quentin took those lessons to heart, putting forth his best effort in school, finding a rewarding job and putting away as much in savings as he could. For many years, Quentin worked for a company that offered a 401(k) plan. During those years, he put as much into his 401(k) as he could afford so that he could maximize the benefit of his employer's matching contributions. Eventually, Quentin moved on to other employment and made a tax-free rollover of his 401(k) into an IRA. As he approached retirement, Quentin continued to contribute to his retirement savings by maxing out his IRA contributions each year.

With his lifelong penchant for saving money and some savvy investing, Quentin was able to retire comfortably at age 65. Quentin, age 78, is taking required minimum distributions (RMDs) from his IRA. Given his lifetime savings, investment income and social security distributions, Quentin would like to hedge his retirement security and benefit his favorite charity. He has considered creating a charitable gift annuity (CGA) with his favorite charity.

Question:

Quentin wonders whether he could use his IRA qualified charitable distributions (QCD) to fund a charitable gift annuity with his favorite charity. He sent an email to his advisor asking whether an IRA QCD may be used to fund a charitable gift annuity.

Solution:

Quentin's advisor explained that the Secure 2.0 Act allows a one-time QCD rollover of up to $50,000 from a traditional IRA to fund a life income plan. To be eligible, the donor must be 70½ or older and the distribution must be a QCD from a traditional IRA paid directly to charity.

The Secure 2.0 Act amended Internal Revenue Code Section 408(d)(8) and created a limited one-time QCD into qualified life income plans. The $50,000 IRA distribution may be to a charitable remainder annuity trust, a standard payout charitable remainder unitrust or an immediate charitable gift annuity. For charitable gift annuities, the payout must be at least 5%. The lifetime income must benefit the IRA owner, the IRA owner's spouse or both. Additionally, there is no charitable tax deduction, the income interest must not be assignable and all payments from a charitable gift annuity will be taxed as ordinary income.

If the IRA custodian does not have a specific form, the IRA owner may send a letter to the IRA custodian similar to the following:

IRA CUSTODIAN INSTRUCTION LETTER – IRA GIFT TO CHARITABLE GIFT ANNUITY

[DATE]

Subject: Request to Initiate IRA Qualified Charitable Distributions to Fund a Charitable Gift Annuity

Dear IRA Custodian,

Federal law permits the account holder of an IRA who is 70½ or older to make a Qualified Charitable Distribution ("QCD") directly from his or her IRA to create a life income gift plan with a qualified public charity. It is my intention that the gift be treated as a QCD to fund a charitable gift annuity.

As the owner of IRA Account [Account Number] that is in the custody of your organization, I request that you make a $50,000 QCD to the following organization to fund a charitable gift annuity with myself as the income recipient: $50,000 to [Name of Charity] with an address of [Address of Charity] with the following Tax ID Number: [Charity's Tax ID Number].

I understand that this is a one-time QCD election, with a maximum amount of $50,000 permitted to be transferred for the purpose of funding a life income gift plan. This letter is sufficient authorization for you to make the $50,000 QCD gift listed above. However, if you require any further documents, please forward those to me for my signature.

Cordially yours,

IRA Owner
cc: Favorite Charity

Published June 23, 2023
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Previous Articles

Gifts from IRAs, Part 10

Gifts from IRAs, Part 9

Gifts from IRAs, Part 8

Gifts from IRAs, Part 7

Gifts from IRAs, Part 6

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