Anonymous wrote:It's too bad it's happening next year because Trump changed tax laws for charitable giving for 2026. Only the portion of your annual charitable contributions that exceeds 0.5% of your adjusted gross income (AGI) will be deductible.
This “0.5% AGI floor” applies to all itemized charitable gifts, including those made to donor advised funds (DAFs). For example, if your AGI is $1,000,000, only the amount of your charitable giving above $5,000 (0.5% of $1,000,000) will be deductible.
Though, you should still open a donor advised fund and give some of the windfall to charity. Very easy to set up on Fidelity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're making sooo much money off of this, you can afford professional tax advice and don't need to get it from this silly forum.
Yeah, this is just a humble brag.
There’s nothing humble about it. A VBA maybe, but not a humble brag.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're making sooo much money off of this, you can afford professional tax advice and don't need to get it from this silly forum.
Yeah, this is just a humble brag.
Anonymous wrote:Well, time to dump losers in your portfolio if you have any.
You could do a DAF. Let's say you fund with 100k, and that gives you a major deduction this year, then you can give that away over the next couple years. At least I think that's how it works. I myself have not been in the position of having too much money
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Set up a charitable remainder trust. Put the stock in there before the deal closes. You won’t pay taxes on the capital gains and can withdraw income from the trust while you are alive or for a certain term depending on how it’s set up. Whatever is left when you die goes to the charity you designated. Win-win.
These charitable remainder trusts are not very popular, not sure why. Maybe due to their complexity? OP, I would start by doing a search over at bogleheads.
Anonymous wrote:Set up a charitable remainder trust. Put the stock in there before the deal closes. You won’t pay taxes on the capital gains and can withdraw income from the trust while you are alive or for a certain term depending on how it’s set up. Whatever is left when you die goes to the charity you designated. Win-win.
Anonymous wrote:Set up a charitable remainder trust. Put the stock in there before the deal closes. You won’t pay taxes on the capital gains and can withdraw income from the trust while you are alive or for a certain term depending on how it’s set up. Whatever is left when you die goes to the charity you designated. Win-win.
Anonymous wrote:Ask at Bogleheads.org
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