Quantel Pulse

Essential Instruments for Philanthropic PLANNING

Written by Irman Singh | May 28, 2025 6:01:00 PM

Philanthropic planning is a broader and more holistic approach than traditional charitable planning. It focuses not just on making donations, but on aligning your personal values, legacy goals, and wealth with impactful, long-term contributions to society. It’s often used by individuals, families, and businesses who want to make a meaningful difference through strategic giving—both during their lifetime and beyond.

Philanthropic Planning’s key goals are aligned towards –

  • Creating meaningful and lasting change in causes you care about.
  • Engaging family members in shared philanthropic values and missions.
  • Supporting institutions or communities through structured and sustained giving.
  • Integrating charitable goals with long-term wealth, tax, and estate planning

Philanthropic planning can be a powerful way to pass on values, not just wealth. Many families:

  • Involve children or grandchildren in foundation boards.
  • Create family mission statements or giving guidelines.
  • Use philanthropy to teach financial stewardship and community responsibility.

Hence philanthropic planning enables you and your future generations to elevate wealth from a tool of consumption to a vehicle of positive change.

Tools for Streamlined Planning 

There are various strategies and tools that can be used for efficient philanthropic planning while optimizing tax savings. Such as

  • Donor Advised Funds (DAFs)
  • Private Foundation
  • Charitable Reminder Trust (CRT)
  • Charitable Lead Trust (CLT)
  • Bequests/Wills
  • Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCD’s)
  • Appreciated Assets
  • Charitable Gift Annuity (CGA’s)

 

1) Donor -Advised Funds (DAFs)

A Donor-Advised Fund is like a charitable investment account. You get an immediate tax deduction when you donate, but can give to charities over time. These accounts are offered by (Fidelity Charitable, Schwab Charitable, Vanguard Charitable). DAFs are powerful when you have a high-income year (e.g., selling a business, large bonus, stock options) or a desire to support charities over time, not all at once.

Advantages:
  • Reduce income in high-tax years
  • Avoid capital gains
  • Maintain control over timing and recipients
  • Investment growth inside the DAF is tax-free
Who it works for
  • Those who have received Big bonus, stock option exercise, or equity vesting . It Offset large income spike
  • Business owners who have sold their business or those who have had capital gain.-  It shelters proceeds with a large charitable deduction
  • Roth IRA conversion - Reduce the tax cost of conversion
  • Retirement transition - Use DAF in final high-income year before Social Security or RMDs
  • Inheritance or windfall- Reduce sudden spike in taxable income
  • Estate planning - Reduce future estate size while directing giving

 

2) Private Foundation

A private foundation is an independent legal entity (typically a nonprofit corporation or trust) set up and funded by an individual or family. The family donates assets to the foundation which in turn makes grants to the cause of choosing. The biggest advantage is it offers high degree of control, visibility and the complete family involvement.

Who it works for
  • Donors with significant wealth ($5M+ recommended).
  • Families seeking a long-term, hands-on philanthropic legacy.
  • Complex giving goals or international donations.
Considerations:
  • High startup and annual administrative costs.
  • Subject to IRS rules, 5% annual payout requirement, and excise taxes.

3)  Charitable Remainder Trust (CRT)

A CRT is an irrevocable trust that provides income to you or others for a set period, with the remaining assets going to charity. Once the assets are transferred, a partial tax deduction is received. This way you can also avoid immediate capital gain and receive income for life or term of years.

Who it works for
  • High-income earners with appreciated assets.
  • Retirees seeking income and tax savings.
  • Planning for legacy gifts while maintaining lifetime benefit.
Considerations:
  • Irrevocable structure.
  • Legal and administrative complexity.
  • Trust income is taxable to recipients.

 

4) Charitable Lead Trust (CLT)

A CLT is the reverse of a CRT: it gives income to a charity first, and then the remainder to heirs or others. The trust is set up first and charity receives income from a set term. The remaining assets are passed to the beneficiaries.

 Who it works for
  • Those looking to reduce estate and gift taxes.
  • Those passing wealth to heirs in a tax-efficient way.
  • Donors who want to give now but preserve family wealth long term
Considerations:
  • Irrevocable.
  • Complex setup and ongoing administration.

 

5) Bequests and Wills

A bequest is a simple way to leave a gift to charity through your will or trust. you designate a charity to receive a specific amount, percentage, or asset upon death.

Who it works for
  • Donors wanting to include philanthropy in their estate plan.
  • Simple, low-cost legacy planning.
Considerations:
  • No tax benefit during life.
  • Must ensure documents are updated and legally valid.

 

6) Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCDs)

QCDs allow individuals aged 70½ or older to donate directly from their IRA to charity. You donate up to $100,000/year directly from your IRA to a qualified charity. QCDs count toward your Required Minimum Distribution (RMD) and don’t count as taxable income. This is especially helpful if you're not itemizing

Who it works for
  • Retirees seeking to lower taxable income.
  • Those who don’t itemize deductions.
Considerations:
  • Must be a direct transfer to a qualified charity.
  • Cannot donate to DAFs or private foundations via QCD.

 

7) Gifts of Appreciated Assets

Instead of giving cash, donate stocks, real estate, or other appreciated assets.

Benefits:
  • Avoid capital gains tax.
  • Get a charitable deduction for fair market value (if held for 1+ year).
  • Boosts overall tax efficiency of giving.
 Who it works for
  • Donors with long-held investments or low-basis assets.

 

8) Charitable Gift Annuity (CGA)

A CGA is a contract between a donor and a nonprofit where the donor makes a gift in exchange for fixed lifetime income. A lump sum is paid toa non profit and they pay you fixed income for life. The Remaining funds go to the nonprofit after your death.

Who it works for:
  • Retirees seeking stable income.
  • Donors looking for simpler alternatives to CRTs.

Philanthropic planning empowers you to transform generosity into lasting impact. By aligning your charitable goals with thoughtful financial strategy, you can support the causes you care about, involve future generations, and leave a legacy that reflects your deepest values. Whether you’re just beginning your giving journey or refining an established plan, strategic philanthropy ensures your contributions make a meaningful difference—today and for years to come.

At Quantel, we offer specialized philanthropic planning services designed to help you secure your legacy and make a lasting impact.