“Most retirees take the standard deduction today. Because the QCD is not included in income, the QCD is the tax equivalent of making a deductible charitable contribution.”
If you do a QCD from your IRA, you can benefit a lot more than a ‘simple charitable donation’.
As you noted, most retirees take the standard deduction - unless they live in high tax states like MD or NY where real estate taxes are over $10K…and you run into the SALT limitation of only 10,000 deduction for state, local and sales taxes. Even then, you might come up with a total of $15,000…or not. So making say a $5,000 or $10,000 donation from regular income might get you over.
For those with low taxes, a $5,000 or $10,000 donation won’t even reach the $15,000 standard deduction (good to 2026 and then? drop to what? )
So… if you take your QCD from your IRA, it comes off the top. No income tax on it.
IRA RMDS are taxed at full income rate.
If you have a lot of dividend income, it’s taxed at only 15% (or less).
But RMDs ate likely going to be taxed at highest marginal rates you pay. IF you move into the 20% bracket…well, that’s what you pay.
So…unless you are WAY over your %15,000 in standard deductions, you benefit from doing the QCD from the IRA RMD rather from taxable account income.
I’d rather pay taxes on dividends and cap gains rates…and some regular income…
I haven’t exceeded the ‘standard deduction’ in years and years since they raised it. Giving money from taxable accounts would be half wasted since part of it is just reaching the $15,000 deduction…
Unless you already exceed your standard deduction limits…(without the charitable donation) it makes no sense NOT to do your charitable donations from your IRA RMD. You come out ahead tax wise.
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