Charitable Planning

If you support a cause and also hold appreciated assets, the right structure can let charity, your family, and your tax position all benefit at the same time. A Charitable Remainder Trust, a Charitable Lead Trust, or both can coordinate giving, income, and inheritance.

What you should know

  • A Charitable Remainder Trust (CRT) lets you transfer appreciated property to the trust, receive an income stream for life or a term of years, take a charitable income tax deduction, and have the remainder go to charity — generally without capital gains tax at the sale.
  • A Charitable Lead Trust (CLT) reverses the order: charity receives income for a defined term, then the remainder passes to your family — often at a reduced gift tax cost, depending on the rate environment.
  • The two main CRT types are the CRAT (fixed dollar payments) and the CRUT (fixed percentage of trust value, which can adjust over time).
  • A CRT paired with an Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT) can replace the charitable remainder to your family with a tax-free life insurance benefit — preserving family inheritance while still capturing the charitable structure’s benefits.
  • Charitable structures are most effective with appreciated assets and a real charitable intent. They are not a tax-shelter shortcut — they are a way to do more of something you already want to do.

CRT or CLT — which fits your charitable plan?

Five short choices. Brent reads your answer back to you at the end.

A 30-second guided quiz. Get a personal read on whether a CRT or CLT fits your goals.

Talk with Brent about coordinating your charitable interests with your family’s plan.