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Professional Advisor Newsletter
July 2023
Background: Several people sitting around a desk working with books - Caption: How "catch-up" contributions can boost clients' giving

At the Idaho Community Foundation, we regularly work with legal, financial and tax advisors like you to help clients reach their charitable goals. 

As a professional who regularly works with charitable clients, you are no doubt well aware of the tremendous benefits to both clients and charities when a client names a charity, such as a charitable giving fund at the Idaho Community Foundation, as the beneficiary of an IRA or other qualified retirement plan.

So how can you help a client plan ahead to maximize a bequest of retirement fund assets, as well as support increased giving during the client’s lifetime? 

A great way to do this is by encouraging clients to maximize their IRA contributions — for many reasons:

  • Taxable income “suppression” in the year of the contribution. 
  • Tax-deferred growth until distribution — now not required until the account owner reaches age 73.
  • Ease of changing a beneficiary designation to name the client’s Idaho Community Foundation fund, which will remove the assets from the client’s taxable estate at death and avoid income tax. 
  • With retirement plans flowing to charity, leaning into highly-appreciated stock and other property at stepped-up values to make bequests to family or others, effectively erasing the unrealized capital gains for the recipients. 

Make sure your charitable clients don’t overlook an important tool in retirement savings maximization (and ultimately charitable giving) known as the “catch-up” contribution. This is the “extra” money that retirement savers aged 50 or older can stash away into their retirement accounts — and into more than one account as applicable. 

Advisors and clients might better think of this as a bonus opportunity rather than a “catch-up,” especially if a client has been maximizing their retirement savings all along. Additionally, of course, the catch-up contribution allowance helps a client make up for years when retirement contributions fell short due to earnings or savings interruptions due to layoffs, caregiving, high-expense years or similar circumstances.  

Thanks to the SECURE Act, catch-up contributions have created even more buzz about opportunities for retirement savings, especially as the rules are set to shift in 2024 and 2025. In any event, the effects can be impactful. For example, an extra $1,000 deposited annually from age 50 through 65 earning 6% on average could potentially deliver an extra $27,000 in retirement income at age 65. 

From a charitable giving perspective, the greater the IRA balance, the more opportunity there is for a client to give later to a fund at the Idaho Community Foundation. What’s more, higher IRA balances can motivate your clients to deploy a Qualified Charitable Distribution strategy, with its many benefits:

  • Beginning at age 70 ½, your client can make Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCDs) up to $100,000 in 2023 ($200,000 for married couples) and indexed for inflation beginning in 2024.
  • QCD assets can be distributed to a designated or field-of-interest fund at the Idaho Community Foundation or to another qualifying public charity.
  • QCDs can count toward Required Minimum Distributions for clients who are required to take them.

All in all, IRAs are the most prolific retirement savings vehicle in the United States, accounting for nearly 33% of the $33 trillion (login required) of total retirement assets as of December 2022. But regardless of the retirement savings vehicle, contribution maximization—and aided by so-called catch-up contributions — is a winning strategy for wealth building, family gifting and charitable giving. 

For more information about ICF, please contact us:

Kris Kamann Rich Ballou Background: Peter Faucher standing in front of brick building Clark Hyvonen
Kris Kamann
Senior Philanthropic Advisor
(208) 342-3535 x14
Kris@idahocf.org
Rich Ballou
Philanthropic Advisor
East
(208) 342-3535 x22
Rich@idahocf.org
Peter Faucher
Philanthropic Advisor
North
(208) 342-3535 x23
Peter@idahocf.org
Clark Hyvonen
Philanthropic Advisor
Southwest/South Central
(208) 342-3535 x28
Clark@idahocf.org

The team at the Idaho Community Foundation is a resource and sounding board as you serve your philanthropic clients. We understand the charitable side of the equation and are happy to serve as a resource as you manage the primary relationship with your clients. This newsletter is provided for informational purposes only. It is not intended as legal, accounting or financial planning advice.  

 
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Idaho Community Foundation
210 West State Street  •  Boise, ID 83702
Phone: 208.342.3535  |  Fax: 208.342.3577  |  Email: info@idahocf.org