Gifts by Will or Trust

A charitable gift from your estate is a favored method of giving that enables you to achieve your financial goals and benefit Walnut Hill School for the Arts. No other planned gift is as simple to make or as easy to change should you ever need the assets during your lifetime.
A bequest may be right for you if:
- You want to make a gift to Walnut Hill School for the Arts.
- You want the flexibility to change your mind.
- You want continued access to your wealth, should you need it.
- You are concerned about outliving your resources.
How Your Gift Helps
Your gifts to Walnut Hill School for the Arts help to educate talented, accomplished, and intellectually engaged young artists from all over the world. It will provide Walnut Hill with the resources to . . .
- develop new arts programming, enhance our facilities, and recruit talented and dedicated faculty;
- promote our core values of community, creativity, excellence, growth, and respect;
- invest in today’s Walnut Hill students, and those of future generations to come.
Will & Trust Details
Remembering Walnut Hill School for the Arts in your will is a wonderful way for you to make a lasting gift. Large or small, your bequest will make an important contribution to our long-term strength and our ability to carry on with our activities.
But what if you don't have a will or living trust? You are not alone. Most Americans don’t have a will.
Without a will, the laws of your state will decide how your estate is divided. Typically, the probate court will divide your estate among your closest surviving family members according to a formula, and none of your estate can go to Walnut Hill School for the Arts or any other charity. If you wish to have a say in how your estate is distributed, you must have a will or living trust. We encourage you to work with an experienced attorney to create a will or living trust that accomplishes your goals for your estate.
Example
Courtney Robertson, a widow, has been a supporter of Walnut Hill School for the Arts for many years. Courtney is in good health now, but does not want to be a financial burden to her children should she require expensive health care in the future.
Walnut Hill School for the Arts is one of two charities to which she has been most dedicated. She would like to make a lasting gift to each of them in memory of her husband. After discussing her options with her estate planning advisor, she decides to create a residuary bequest in her will for each of her two favorite charities. Each charity will receive 50% of the remainder of her estate after all other obligations, such as taxes and bequests to her children and grandchildren, have been taken care of.
Benefits
- Courtney’s assets will remain available to her should she need them.
- The revocable nature of her gift will minimize the possibility that she will ever need financial help from her children.
- If her estate is worth what she expects when it is settled, she will be able to provide generous legacy gifts to the two charities that have meant the most to her and her late husband.
