惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
Latest news
Latest news
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
IT之家
IT之家
V
V2EX
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
K
Kaspersky official blog
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
小众软件
小众软件
A
Arctic Wolf
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
腾讯CDC
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
罗磊的独立博客
T
Tor Project blog
C
Cisco Blogs
美团技术团队
博客园 - Franky
月光博客
月光博客
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
Security Latest
Security Latest
博客园 - 司徒正美
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
J
Java Code Geeks
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
S
Securelist
The Cloudflare Blog
博客园 - 叶小钗
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
雷峰网
雷峰网
Project Zero
Project Zero

Forbes - Retirement

Trump Baby Wealth Accounts And The $300,000 Newborn Gap How This British Journalist Ended Up Retiring In Portugal Required Minimum Distributions Do Not Have To Be Cash New Estimate: Social Security Trust Fund’s Demise Is Accelerated Do You Want To Live To Age 100? The Sandwich Generation Is Quietly Bankrupting Its Own Retirement What Are Trump Accounts? A Guide For Parents And Families Social Security Paper Checks Out, Direct Deposit In Three Ways To Increase Your Confidence About Spending Savings In Retirement AI SpaceX Tech Millionaires Should Pause Before Buying Dream House Is That New Medicare Card You Received Legitimate? Why Consumers Don’t Buy Life Annuities And What Can Be Done About It 4 Reasons Women Appear To Be Better Investors Trump Is Leaving His Successor A Social Security Time Bomb Social Security Trustees Report Warns of 22% Benefit Cut In 2032 Social Security Won’t Go Bankrupt, But Hard Choices Are Necessary Why Longevity Is Creating A Complexity Economy Is Italy’s ‘Rule Of 103’ A Good Idea For The U.S. Retirement System? TIPS: A Better Way To Protect Retirement Savings From Inflation Purpose Trust Alternative What You Should Know As Annuity Sales Soar Ground Rules For A Happy Retirement Why Inflation May Be The Biggest Threat To Your Retirement How To Turbocharge A 401(k) Account 9 Ways Pre-Retirees And Retirees Can Address The Fear Of Running Out 529 College Saving Plans Are More Powerful Estate, Tax Planning Tools How To Move Out Of America In 2026: 10 Best Countries For The Great Escape, Per Global Citizen Solutions More Americans Plan To Take Social Security Early 62-Year Old Works His Whole Life. He Has No Savings. He’s Not Unusual. 5 Health Care Havens For American Retirees Overseas The New Retirement Squeeze: Debt Is The Hidden Risk In Your 60s How To Avoid Fears Of Growing Old The Key To Beating The Stealth Taxes On Retirees: Know What MAGI Is How To Provide For Children Who Fall Between Disabled And Independent Blocking New Medicare Home Health And Hospice Firms Won’t Stop Fraud These Social Security Hacks Could Put More Money In Your Pocket Why Argentina Could Become America’s New Plan B How To Make This Popular Retirement Strategy Work What You Need To Know About The GLP-1 Medicare Bridge, $50 Drugs The Coming Social Security Crisis And The Fight To Save It Why Your Social Network May Be Your Most Valuable Asset The Real Difference Between Bush’s Privatization Push And Trump’s Accounts Little Evidence Of A Widespread Retirement Crisis, But Don’t Get Complacent Average Retirement Savings By Age In 2026 And How To Catch Up | June Edition From Bush’s Defeat To Trump’s Retirement Accounts Anxiety Over Social Security Benefits Grows As Funding Cliff Looms Saving Vs. Investing: How These Impact Your Ability to Retire | June 2026 Cognitive Decline Is The Overlooked Risk For Pre-Retirees And Retirees The Longevity Risk Most Retirement Plans Ignore Best Places To Retire In 2026: 25 Surprisingly Affordable U.S. Spots How A Newlywed Houston Couple Found A Retirement Spot—In Raleigh, N.C. Stuck With Inherited Real Estate? How To Handle Siblings Who Won’t Sell Should An Estate Be Divided Equally? How To Decide And Execute The Plan Is That Social Security Email Legit? Here’s How To Tell Crypto Doesn’t Belong In Retirement Plans What To Do About Medicaid’s Long-Term Care Benefit? The Clock No One Set: America's Small Business Succession Crisis Seven Ways Social Security Benefits Are Unfair What I Wish I Knew About Bucket Lists When I Was Younger The Hidden Cost Of Keeping Too Much Cash In Savings What Homebuyers Need To Know About Real Housing Wealth How Changes In Immigration Affect Retiree Health How Homeownership Became America’s Most Misunderstood Investment How Homeownership Became America’s Most Misunderstood Investment What A Medicare Home Care Benefit Could Look Like How To Interpret And Use Medicare’s Nursing Home Ratings New Report Forecasts Medicare Premiums Will Double In 10 Years More Americans Plan To Claim Social Security Benefits Early Trump Accounts Are Coming. How Should Employers Prepare? The Decline Of Social Security, Medicare Trust Funds Is Accelerating Should You Cosign A Loan For Your Adult Child In Retirement? 20 Things To Know About A Medigap Policy When Eating Your Veggies And Exercising Are Not Enough For Healthy Longevity I Bet You Are Ageist And Don’t Know It Trump Administration Weighs Default Medicare Advantage Plans For Seniors Feeling Uncomfortable Is Good Says This $42 Billion California Advisor This $6.6 Billion Advisor Specializes In Entrepreneurial Exits This $1.8 Billion Morgan Stanley Advisor In Rural New York Loves Dividend Stocks This $4.4 Billion Neuberger Berman Advisor Calls Her Firm Is A Safe Space For Clients Protecting Your Nest Egg When Leaving Federal Service For Private Industry AI, Jobs And Retirement: Rethinking The New Work Contract Could Social Security Benefits Be Capped at $100K? Pre-Retirees: Don’t Plan For Your Retirement With A “Magic Number” Switching From Landline To Cellphone Can Create A Medicare Catch-22 Retirement’s Biggest Blind Spot Isn’t The Market. It’s Time. They’re Coming For Your Social Security Are Happy Retirees Oblivious To The Risks They Face? How To Build A 10-Million-Dollar 401(k) From A Wealth Manager The Surprising Habit That Leads To Happiness New Medicare Advantage Supplemental Benefits Not Very Beneficial Why "Temporary" Is The Most Expensive Word In Retirement Planning Should You Combine Finances After Marriage? Trump’s Plan On Right Track: 69 Million Workers Need Retirement Plans 20 Social Security Rules and Strategies Most People Miss How To Determine What State Law Applies To Your Trust What Can Pre-Retirees Learn From Retirees’ Money Regrets? 10 Actions To Help Retirees Prevent Regrets And Live A Fulfilled Retirement Is Financial Wellness Ready For Its Next Chapter In 2026? Understanding How Older Adults Think About AI And Related Tech Investing Assets In A Spousal Lifetime Access Trust (SLAT)
Capture The Increased Benefits Of QCDs From IRAs
Bob Carlson · 2026-06-26 · via Forbes - Retirement

getty

Qualified charitable distributions from traditional IRAs by those ages 70½ and older are more valuable thanks to significant changes to charitable contribution deductions made by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

It is important to take two steps now.

First, if you have not maximized your QCD benefits for 2026, do so before December 31.

Second, carefully plan how to use QCDs for your charitable giving in 2027.

Here is a summary of the OBBB changes in charitable giving.

The doubling of the standard deduction from the 2017 tax law was made permanent and indexed for inflation. Since charitable contributions can be deducted only as itemized expenses, few people take itemized expense deductions now because of higher standard deduction.

That means few people receive additional tax benefits from charitable giving.

To partly offset that, the OBBB created a new charitable contribution deduction that can be taken without itemizing expenses. The maximum deduction is $1,000 for individual taxpayers or $2,000 for married taxpayers filing jointly.

An additional change is the new floor on charitable contributions for those who itemize expenses. Charitable contributions up to 0.5% of adjusted gross income are not deductible starting in 2026. Only charitable contributions above that amount will be deductible.

Also, taxpayers in the top 37% income tax bracket don’t receive the full benefit of their deductions. They receive only the benefits of those in the 35% tax bracket.

The QCD has been one of the most powerful tax and charitable-giving tools. It probably is the best way for anyone over age 70½ to make charitable contributions, with the possible exception of donating highly-appreciated investments held in taxable accounts.

A QCD is a much better way to donate than writing a check.

QCDs are an essential tool for any charitably-inclined taxpayer who faces required minimum distributions (RMDs).

A QCD is a special way of making charitable contributions from a traditional IRA.

Suppose you want to use a traditional IRA to make a charitable gift. When the distribution is not a QCD, the distribution is included in your gross income and taxed.

It’s a different story when the gift is a QCD.

A QCD is not included in gross income. Taking a QCD instead of a regular IRA distributions reduces income taxes as well as the Stealth Taxes, such as the Medicare premium surtax also known as IRMAA.

The tradeoff is that you don’t receive a charitable contribution deduction.

Another advantage of a QCD is, if you must take an RMD from the traditional IRA that year, the QCD counts toward the RMD. You can satisfy all or part of the RMD without having to include it in gross income to the extent you have QCDs.

With QCDs, you take all or part of the year’s RMD tax free.

QCDs are a good idea even for those who don’t have to take RMDs yet. They benefit charity with the QCD and distribute money from the IRA tax free. That reduces the value of the traditional IRA, which reduces future RMDs.

Non-IRA money that would have been donated to charity is available to pay other expenses.

QCDs are such a good deal that, of course, Congress requires you to jump through certain hoops for a distribution qualify as a QCD.

The first rule is the traditional IRA owner must be at least age 70½ on the date of the transfer from the IRA to the charity.

The charitable contribution must be made directly from the traditional IRA to a charity.

The IRA owner can instruct the IRA custodian to transfer the money to a named charity or charities. Or the IRA custodian can give the owner a check made payable to the charity that the owner delivers to the charity.

Some custodians give checkbooks to IRA owners. The owners take IRA distributions by writing checks against their IRAs. A QCD can be made by making such a check payable to a charity.

A transaction is not a QCD when you take a distribution from a traditional IRA and separately contribute the same amount to charity during the year. The money or property must go directly from the IRA to charity to be a QCD.

There’s a potential timing problem when writing a check against the IRA. In its annual report to the IRS, the IRA custodian will report the check as a distribution in the year the check cleared. If you write a check in late December and it doesn’t clear until early January, the custodian could report it as a distribution made in January.

If the QCD was intended to be part of your RMD the previous year, you’ll miss taking all or part of your RMD by December 31 and could be liable for penalties.

QCDs can exceed your RMD for the year. If your RMD is $10,000, and you want to give $20,000 to charity during year, the entire $20,000 contribution can be made from the IRA as a QCD. But only $10,000 will count as an RMD. There’s no carryover of the additional QCD to satisfy next year’s RMD.

It’s important to plan QCDs and RMDs early in the year to avoid potential traps in the tax code for those who aren’t careful.

When you are subject to RMDs, the first distributions from traditional IRAs for the year are considered RMDs and included in gross income.

Some people take distributions from their IRAs early in the year. Later, they learn about QCDs or decide they want to make QCDs.

They cannot reverse those earlier RMDs (except in limited cases within 60 days of a distribution) or turn them into QCDs.

The distributions early in the year are RMDs and must be included in gross income. If the year’s RMDs have not been fully satisfied, QCDs can be taken to satisfy the rest of the year’s RMD.

Making QCDs early in the year also is a good idea when you’re planning to convert all or part of a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA and are subject to RMDs.

The rule is that when you convert IRA assets, you first must take any RMD for the year. If you take the RMD as a regular distribution, it’s included in gross income. Then, the converted amount also is included in gross income. The RMD effectively adds to the tax cost of the conversion, because you take the RMD first.

But when you take the RMD as a QCD, it isn’t included in gross income. The QCD effectively reduces the cost of the conversion, plus you benefit charity.

There’s an annual limit per taxpayer (not per IRA) on QCDs that now is adjusted annually for inflation. The maximum QCD is $115,000 in 2026.

In a married couple, each spouse has a separate limit. They may not share the limits or split the QCDs.

If one spouse wants to make more than $115,000 of charitable donations in 2026, he or she can’t use part of the other spouse’s QCD limit. If the couple wants to have $230,000 of QCDs in 2026, each must donate $115,000 from his or her traditional IRA.

Even if your RMD for the year exceeds $115,000, no more than $115,000 of distributions can be QCDs.

Charitable contributions from a traditional IRA that exceed the year’s QCD limit will be non-QCD distributions that are taxable as described earlier.

Unused portions of the annual limit don’t carry forward to future years. The annual ceiling is a use-it-or-lose-it limit.

Only pre-tax money can be used to make a QCD. That means any nondeductible contributions (after-tax money) in a traditional IRA cannot be used to make QCDs. You can instruct the custodian to use only pre-tax money to make QCDs and leave after-tax money in the IRA.

In general, QCDs can be made only from traditional IRAs. They can be made from simplified employee pensions (SEPs) and SIMPLE IRAs only when the plan has not received an employer contribution in the plan year that ends with or during the calendar year in which the charitable contribution is to be made. In other words, the SEP or SIMPLE IRA must be inactive.

Other retirement plans, including 401(k)s, don’t qualify for QCDs.

Inherited IRAs may be used to make QCDs.

A distribution is not a QCD if the IRA owner receives any benefit from the donation. Any small gift or reward from the charity makes the entire contribution ineligible for a QCD.

Also, you must follow the rules for proving charitable contributions. You need an acknowledgement in writing from the charity regarding the amount and date of the contribution. For large donations, additional proof might be required.

Only donations to public charities qualify. Contributions to private foundations, donor-advised funds, and tax-exempt groups other than public charities aren’t QCDs.

The SECURE Act permits contributions to traditional IRAs after age 70½. It also prohibits an individual from combining a QCD with deductible IRA contributions made after age 70½.