Anonymous wrote:If you donate appreciated stock to a donor advised fund you can deduct up to 30% of your adjusted gross income. So, if your AGI is $300k you can deduct up to $90k.
Separately, if you have losses elsewhere you can take them and use them as an offset to the gain.
Anonymous wrote: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.
Trump didn't change any tax laws. Congress did.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Looking for some ideas. One of my stocks, Exact Sciences (EXAS), that I have a large position in is being bought out by Abbott Labs (ABT) in an all-cash offer expected to close Q2 2026. I will have a very large capital gain when this buy-out closes. Looking for ideas for what I can do in 2025 and 2026 before the deal closes to reduce my taxes. Right now I'm looking at 20% LTCG plus the 3.8% NIIT for investment gains above $250K plus most likely getting hit by the AMT for the half that is in a taxable brokerage account. Fortunately, the other half in a Roth IRA. Serious responses only please. I don't want this to turn into a debate about the benefits of capitalism vs paying my fair share. Thanks.
Suck it up and pay, you greedy glass bowl. Oh boohoo you have a windfall and you have to play 24% tax. How devastating.
Anonymous wrote:I am confused about how one benefits personally by making the donations. Donations are great! So, make them! But how does it save you money if you are giving the money away anyway?
Now reading that OP made millions of dollars, I agree that they should be paying for a professional and then telling everyone here what they learned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am confused about how one benefits personally by making the donations. Donations are great! So, make them! But how does it save you money if you are giving the money away anyway?
Now reading that OP made millions of dollars, I agree that they should be paying for a professional and then telling everyone here what they learned.
Donating appreciated stock gives you the same ($0) take-home pay as selling first and then donating it, but if you donate without selling, then the charity gets all the money instead of the government getting some.
Anonymous wrote:I am confused about how one benefits personally by making the donations. Donations are great! So, make them! But how does it save you money if you are giving the money away anyway?
Now reading that OP made millions of dollars, I agree that they should be paying for a professional and then telling everyone here what they learned.
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: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.
Trump didn't change any tax laws. Congress did.