24.01.2013 Accounting, News, Personal Finance, Personnel

Make 2012 Charitable Distributions from your IRA Now

If you are age 70½ or older and have an IRA there are two tax savings clauses in the 2012 Taxpayer Relief Act that you may want to take advantage of. First, eligible taxpayers can make a tax-free transfer from their IRA to an eligible charity by January 31, 2013 and treat the transfer as made on December 31, 2012. This strategy can help lower your Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) in future years by lowering the value of your IRA, which in turn lowers the amount of your required minimum distribution. Note the charitable distribution is limited to $100,000 per taxpayer per year. Essentially you have the ability to reduce your IRA value by $200,000 by making a $100,000 transfer by January 31, 2013 and allocating it to 2012 and then making another $100,000 transfer in February 2013 for the 2013 year. With all the tax increases and surtaxes taking effect in 2013, this can be a valuable tool to reduce your future tax liability.

A second option is for taxpayers to treat an IRA distribution received in December 2012 as a qualified charitable distribution as long as the taxpayer transfers the money to an eligible charity by January 31, 2013. This gives taxpayers a way to retroactively reduce their 2012 taxable income.

Remember, charitable IRA transfers are not included in taxable income. Additionally, a qualified charitable IRA transfer is beneficial because the charitable deduction is directly offset “above-the-line” against the IRA withdrawal. Without the charitable transfer the IRA distribution will increase your AGI, which impacts numerous other tax calculations and deduction phaseouts including how much of your Social Security is taxable, allowable deductions for charitable and medical expenses, as well as a myriad of tax credits. You must act quickly to take advantage of either, or both, of the provisions discussed above as transfers must be made by January 31, 2013 in order to qualify.

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