Helpful miscellaneous articles
regarding our retirement plan and planning.
Like you, I review my retirement nestegg and plan from time to
time. Recently, I went though some continued
education for some credentials I maintain and it occurred to me that we all
could use a review about these issues.
So with your help, we will share and post articles and info that may be
helpful and of interest to many of you in this section.
If you are 70 ½ you can satisfy all or part of your IRA
RMD with your QCD* donations!
*Qualified Charitable
Distributions
New Tax Law Offers Added Incentive to Make
Tax-Free Transfer of RMDs From Your IRA to Charity
QI heard that the new tax law changed some of the
rules pertaining to charitable giving. Can I still make a tax-free transfer
from my IRA to charity and have it count as my required
minimum distribution? I’m 75 and I’ve been doing that
for the past few years.
Ayes. The new tax law doesn’t change the rules for qualified
charitable distributions, or QCDs, which let people older than 70½ transfer up
to $100,000 from their IRAs to charity
each year and have it count as their RMD without being added to their adjusted
gross income. In fact, the new law is likely to make QCDs attractive to more
retirees.
The new law also doesn’t change the basic rules for charitable
deductions (other than increasing the deduction limit for cash contributions
from 50% to 60% of your adjusted gross income). But because the law nearly
doubled the standard deduction, fewer people will itemize deductions – and you
can only deduct charitable contributions if you itemize. Until Congress changed
the rules, the 2018 standard deduction was scheduled to be $13,000 for joint
filers, $6,500 for single filers and $9,550 for those filing as head of
household. But now, the 2018 basic standard deduction will be $24,000 for joint
filers, $12,000 for single filers and $18,000 for heads of household. Taxpayers
older than 65 get an even better deal. Each spouse age 65 or older gets an
extra $1,300, so if both husband and wife are 65 or older, the standard
deduction is $26,600; single taxpayers and heads of household age 65 and older
get an extra $1,600, bringing their standard deduction to $13,600 and $19,600,
respectively. It makes sense to itemize only if your itemized deductions are
larger than that threshold.
Meanwhile, the new law also limits some other itemized deductions
that make it even more difficult to cross that threshold. For example, the law
caps the itemized deduction for state and local taxes (including property,
sales and income taxes) at $10,000.
The deduction for interest paid on home-equity loans is eliminated for both new
and existing loans. And the mortgage-interest deduction will be limited to
interest on the first $750,000 of debt for home loans taken out after December
14, 2017 (interest on up to $1 million in mortgage debt is deductible for loans
taken out on or before December 14).
But the tax-free transfer
from an IRA lets you benefit from making the gift to the charity even without
itemizing. This way, you can still take the standard deduction but your
charitable gift isn’t included in your adjusted gross income and taxed. “One of
the groups that always benefited most from the QCD technique includes those who
wouldn’t have been able to deduct their charitable contributions,” says Tim
Steffen, director of advanced planning for Baird Wealth Solutions Group. “With more
taxpayers claiming the standard deduction as a result of these changes, they
won’t necessarily get a tax benefit from their charitable contributions. By
using the QCD technique, they can actually still get a benefit for those
donations.” Keeping $10,000 out of your taxable income, for example, saves
$2,200 if you’re in the 22% tax bracket.
Keeping your RMD out of your adjusted gross income could also have
other benefits. For instance, it may help keep your income below the threshold
for being subject to the Medicare Part B and Part D high-income surcharge
(which boosts premiums for people whose AGI plus tax-exempt interest is more
than $85,000 if single or $170,000 if married filing jointly). And it may hold
down the percentage of your Social
Security benefits that’s subject to taxation (for more information, see Do You Have
to Pay Taxes on Social Security Benefits?).
++++
An even better article on this topic may be this one from
Kiplinger:
(As
with any of these informative articles, anyone who needs someone to talk to
about
this
very subject contact me and I can direct you to a knowledgeable advisor).
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