How to help the Wheelchair Foundation through planned giving
You can help support the work of the Wheelchair Foundation for years
to come through making a planned gift to the Wheelchair Foundation.
Planned gifts include gifts through your will, charitable gift
annuities, gifts of life insurance and charitable trusts.
(Our Federal ID number is 94-3353881)
A discussion of each of the methods of planned giving is as follows:
- Bequests – you may wish to include the Wheelchair Foundation,
as a beneficiary in your will. The federal government encourages such
gifts of bequest by allowing unlimited estate tax charitable deduction.
To make a bequest to the Wheelchair Foundation in your will the following
language may be helpful. It is strongly suggested that you show this
language to your attorney “I give, devise, and bequeath to the Wheelchair
Foundation of Danville, California the sum of $__._” (or otherwise
describe the gift and specify by percentage of estate).
There are three distinct ways you can make a bequest in your will:
- Specific Bequest. You can designate a specific dollar
amount, specific percentage, or specific property to the
Wheelchair Foundation.
- The Residual Bequest. Your estate will pay all debts,
taxes and specific requests the remaining amount, the
residue, will be transferred to the Wheelchair Foundation.
- Contingent Bequest. You can ask that the Wheelchair
Foundation receive all or a portion of your estate under
certain circumstances. For example you can name the
Wheelchair Foundation as a beneficiary to your estate if
there are no surviving family members. Childless couples
sometimes provide the entire estate to the surviving spouse
or if the spouse does not survive to the Wheelchair
Foundation.
You want to insure that the designations in your will get to the intended
beneficiaries. Please see your lawyer or your Certified Public Accountant
and discuss your specific request with them.
- Life Income Gift – you may transfer assets to the Wheelchair
Foundation now and in return you and/or survivor can receive income
for life. This is a financial planning tool that allows you to make a
meaningful gift to the Wheelchair Foundation during your lifetime without
sacrifice. You can get the current income tax and financial benefits from
this gift. It is called Life Income Gift. The way it works is simple,
you irrevocably transfer some assets to the Wheelchair Foundation now
and in return you and the survivor, if you wish, receive income for
life as a result these assets are used by the Wheelchair Foundation to
carry out our mission to provide wheelchairs to people with disabilities
throughout the world.
By making a Life Income Gift to the Wheelchair Foundation you receive
benefits in addition to the pleasure of knowing the good work your
gift will do.
These benefits include:
- A charitable deduction in the year you make the gift for the
present value of your gift to our right to eventually receive the
assets.
- Substantial income tax savings increase your effective yield.
- Your income can be taxed more favorably in some plans.
- Your probate and estate administration costs may be reduced.
The charitable gift of annuity works as follows:
The Wheelchair Foundation agrees to pay you and a survivor or other beneficiary a fixed amount for your lifetime. The transfer is part gift and part purchase of an annuity as the rate of return is attractive and the payments are guaranteed for life.
- Gift of Life Insurance – You may no longer need the life insurance
you purchased years ago for your children or other family members. If
this is your situation please consider donating the policy to the
Wheelchair Foundation. You may claim a charitable deduction for
approximately the policies cash surrender value and the proceeds
are completely removed from your estate. The Wheelchair Foundation
will insure that these funds are used to purchase wheelchairs for use
by the disabled in a developing country.
- Gift of Retirement Plans – Your IRA assets will be transferred to a
Charitable Remainder Trust, the trust will provide Life Income to the
beneficiary and then an eventual gift to the Wheelchair Foundation.
Today many individuals have large, qualified retirement plans such as an
IRA, 401K or Keogh plan. These assets have been growing tax free for years.
Once the owner begins to receive from the plan there is a taxable event and
eventually the plan will be included in the owners taxable estate. To
avoid these tax consequences a retirement plan may be donated to the
Wheelchair Foundation.
Once you make your gift of retirement plan to create a Charitable Remainder
Trust through your will it works like this: Your IRA assets will be
transferred to a Charitable Remainder Trust. There is no tax due because
the charitable remainder trust is a tax-exempt entity. The trust will
provide life income to the beneficiary for example your child with an
eventual gift to the Wheelchair Foundation. The beneficiary will pay
income tax for the distribution from the trust. Your estate will receive
an estate tax charitable deduction for the value of the Wheelchair
Foundations right to eventually receive the trust assets.
- Charitable Lead Trusts – Individuals with large estates can use a
Charitable Lead Trust to benefit the Wheelchair Foundation and pass
principal to family members with little or no tax penalties.
Charitable Lead Trusts are complicated financial instruments you should
seek the advice of your attorney or your CPA.
The Wheelchair Foundation appreciates your interest in making a planned gift
to help us with our mission to provide wheelchairs to people in developing
countries.
For more information about methods of planned giving or to answer any questions
please give Chris Lewis a call at the Wheelchair Foundation at (925) 791-2340.
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