Skip To Main Content

Retirement Assets

Your IRA, 401(k), 403(b), or other Qualified Retirement Plan can provide a tax-smart way to make an impact on Walnut Hill School for the Arts either now or after the end of your lifetime. The Qualified Charitable Distribution or QCD (sometimes called an “IRA Charitable Rollover”) is a great way to make a tax-free gift now to Walnut Hill School for the Arts and satisfy your Required Minimum Distribution (RMD) too.

A gift of retirement plan assets could be right for you if:

  • You have an IRA or other Qualified Retirement Plan such as a 401(k) or 403(b).
  • You do not expect to need all of your retirement plan assets during your lifetime.
  • You have other assets, such as securities and real estate, that you want to pass to heirs.
  • You want to provide income or payments to loved ones after you are gone.
  • You would like to make a charitable bequest to Walnut Hill.

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.

Retirement Assets Details

Example

Janet Sengura, 75, is a retired business executive who has accumulated $500,000 in the retirement plan that she set up through her company years ago. She takes minimum distributions from her plan in order to preserve as much tax-free growth inside the plan as she can. At this rate, she expects that her account may still be worth $500,000 when she dies.

Janet has reached the time in her life when she has begun thinking about the legacies she wants to leave behind after she is gone. She decides to leave a bequest to Walnut Hill School for the Arts to create an endowed fund that will perpetuate generous support in her name. To accomplish her goals, she designates 40% of the final balance in her retirement account for Walnut Hill School for the Arts.

Benefits

  • There will be no income tax or estate tax on the 40% of Janet's retirement plan assets that are transferred to Walnut Hill.
  • Assume the balance in Janet's IRA when it ends is $500,000 and he donates 40% of that balance ($200,000) to Walnut Hill.  If Janet were to pass the same amount to her family, that distribution would be subject to ordinary income tax. His family would owe income tax of $74,000 (37% bracket) on the IRA assets, leaving only about $126,000 for their own use. If Janet’s estate is subject to estate tax the tax savings would be even greater since his estate would be entitled to an estate tax charitable deduction of $200,000.
  • Janet has the immediate satisfaction of knowing that she has put a gift plan in place that will keep her name alive and support Walnut Hill School for the Arts long after she is gone.