Leaving Your Legacy

Including The Community Foundation in your will helps you leave a legacy for future generations. Planning today can help those in the future have the quality of life we would all treasure. The types of planned charitable gifts include:

 

  • Bequest: A bequest can be made by naming The Community Foundation as a charitable beneficiary in a new will, or adding a codicil to an existing will. The bequest can be in the form of a stated dollar amount or specific property, a percentage of the estate, or a portion of or the entire residue.

 

The following language would be appropriate for a bequest

(a) I give and bequeath ______ percent of my adjusted gross estate (as that term is defined in the federal estate tax laws) to establish the “_________ Fund” of The Community Foundation for Greater Atlanta, Inc., subject to its governing instruments, policies and procedures, as amended from time to time.

(b) I bequeath _______ percent of my adjusted gross estate (as that term is defined in the federal estate tax laws) to The Community Foundation for Greater Atlanta, Inc. This gift shall be devoted to the general charitable purposes of The Community Foundation as set forth in its governing instruments, as amended from time to time.

 

  • Life Insurance: Donors may give a life insurance policy no longer needed, take out a new policy or name The Community Foundation as a beneficiary of an existing policy. A gift of life insurance may provide valuable income and estate tax savings.

  • Charitable Remainder Trust: A Charitable Remainder Trust (CRT) allows a donor to establish a trust for the ultimate benefit of his or her fund at the Foundation, retain a lifetime income generated by the contributed assets, receive a current income tax deduction and defer the capital gain recognized on the sale of the contributed asset. A CRT may help you eliminate capital gains taxes, reduce or eliminate gift and estate taxes, improve lifetime cash flow and when coupled with an asset replacement trust, provide for heirs as well.

  • Charitable Gift Annuity: A Charitable Gift Annuity allows donors to contribute assets to The Community Foundation and receive an income tax charitable deduction and a guaranteed income for life. This vehicle can ease the worries of outliving financial resources by providing a high income coupled with numerous tax advantages.

  • Retirement Accounts: Retirement plan accounts and IRAs may be subjected to layers of taxation – both estate and income tax. A charitable gift of these funds at death, however, can provide a donor’s fund with the full 100 cents on the dollar.

  • Charitable Lead Trust: This allows donors to provide income to their fund at the Foundation for a specified number of years. The remainder is then returned to the donor or his or her named beneficiary. Benefits may include the transfer of assets to others free of estate, gift and income taxes.

  • Life Estate: If a donor owns valuable property and is interested in using it during his or her lifetime but makes arrangements to give it to The Community Foundation upon death, he or she may receive a current income tax deduction and future estate tax deduction.
     
Highlights

Planning Philanthropy for the Future

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“Each of us has special talents and interests that we’re meant to share to benefit those in need. If we neglect to share our gifts, we cheat everyone, including ourselves, because there’s nothing like the joy of knowing you’ve made a difference. I believe that I’m meant to be a good steward of all that’s given to me—my health, my freedom, my talents and resources. The Community Foundation is my partner in this.”


Deenie McKeever’s support of The Community Foundation—and her reliance on the Foundation’s guidance—dates back more than 10 years.


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