What is a qualified charitable distribution (QCD)?
A QCD is a distribution from an IRA that goes directly to a qualifying charity and is not included in the taxable income of the IRA owner. A QCD cannot be made from an employer plan. A QCD can be up to $100,000 a year, per individual.
1.
Either an IRA owner or a beneficiary can do a QCD. The individual must be at least age 70½ at the time of the transaction. Reaching age 70½ later in the year is not enough. Both spouses can do a QCD when each spouse does the QCD from their own IRA.
2.
A QCD can be made from an IRA, an inactive SEP or SIMPLE IRA, or a Roth IRA. Only pre-tax amounts can be used for a QCD, which makes the use of Roth funds very unlikely.
The QCD must be a direct transfer to a qualifying charity. A check payable to the charity but sent to the IRA owner will qualify as a QCD, as will a check written from a “checkbook IRA” to a qualifying charity. If an IRA owner receives a check payable to him from his IRA and then later gives those funds to charity, that is not considered a QCD.
3.
A charity must be a qualifying charity. It cannot be a donor-advised fund or a private foundation. A gift to a charitable gift annuity will also not qualify. A QCD to a charity where the IRA owner has an outstanding pledge will qualify and will not create a prohibited transaction.
The QCD must satisfy all charitable deduction rules. If a distribution to a charity is more than $100,000, the amount over $100,000 is taxable to the IRA owner and is deductible on the owner’s income tax return. The excess amount cannot be carried over to a future tax year.
4.
A QCD can satisfy a required minimum distribution (RMD) but can be made before age 72. It is not limited to the amount of the RMD, but is capped at $100,000 a year. If an RMD is more than $100,000, any amounts in excess of the QCD are taxable to the IRA owner. QCDs can now be made before the first RMD year (age 72).
5.
The IRA custodian has no special tax reporting for a QCD. The QCD will be reported on Form 1099-R as a regular distribution. The IRA owner will need to report the QCD on his tax return. The amount of the QCD is excluded from the owner’s taxable income. The IRA owner also cannot take a charitable deduction for the QCD amount.
For more information about QCDs or to learn about Wonderfully Rich Retirement® planning, contact Charles W. Rawl.
Typical retirement planning touches only the tip of the iceberg. We go below the surface to put our clients in control of the forces that impact life in retirement: managing risks, ensuring a reliable retirement income stream, and reducing tax rates toward zero.
We are on a mission to help protect our clients from taxes and volatile markets, while maximizing lifelong income and establishing a legacy.
Copyright © 2022 Ed Slott and Company, LLC | Reprinted with permission | Ed Slott and Company, LLC takes no responsibility for the current accuracy of this information.