What is Charitable Planned Giving?
Charitable planned giving refers to the process of making a charitable gift of estate assets to one or more nonprofit organizations, a gift that requires consideration and planning in light of the donor's overall estate plan. The most effective way of making a charitable gift is to plan the gift so that it achieves as many personal objectives as possible.
Benefits to the Donor:
Make possible a more significant gift than would otherwise be possible.
Provide free estate planning information of a general nature.
Shelter current income through substantial tax deductions.
Opportunity to establish a living memorial for yourself or someone special to you.
May provide retirement income.
Reduce federal estate taxes and probate expenses.
The satisfaction of leaving a legacy of saving lives.
Benefits to the Brazos Animal Shelter:
Result in larger gifts to support our vision of ending euthanasia of adoptable animals.
Help in planning realistically for the future.
Build endowment to fund growth and expansion.
Secure operation by stabilizing future budgets during lean years.
Assure that unwanted animals will continue to have an opportunity for a second chance at life in the years ahead.
Provide the satisfaction of having helped others to effectively plan their estates and care for the animals.
Benefits to the homeless animal community:
Freedom from abuse and neglect.
A chance to be adopted into a loving and caring family.
Types of Charitable Planned Gifts
Bequest
A person could include a provision in his or her will or living trust to make a bequest to a charitable organization. That arrangement would be a "planned" gift. A gift in a will, will codicil or trust could be in the form of cash, securities, real estate or personal property, or as a percentage of the estate. If you currently have a will, you can make arrangement to add a gift through a will codicil.
Gift Annuity
One deferred gift instrument is the charitable gift annuity. This is popular with many donors because it represents a lifetime contract between the donor and a charity, and because it is relatively simple to understand and establish. Simply, it's an irrevocable transfer of cash or appreciated property to WHS and in return the donor receives a guaranteed lifetime annuity of a fixed amount each year.
Charitable Trusts
A person might establish a charitable trust that could provide income to the donor (or someone else) for a period of time (often for life). After this gift-deferral period, the trust would mature and the remaining assets would go to one or more charitable beneficiaries.
Appreciated Property
This is a gift of securities, real or personal property, held long-term which has increased in value since date of acquisition, given outright to BAS or as the funding asset for a lifetime income plan.
Life Insurance
A person may wish to name BAS as the beneficiary of an existing policy which is no longer needed for the donor's original purpose, or to purchase a new policy making BAS the owner or beneficiary.
Did You Know…
If you would like information sent to you by mail, or wish to speak to us about your will, please contact:
Brazos Animal Shelter
PO Box 392
Bryan, Texas 77806