STEP 1: EXPLORE
Giving WiselySTEP 2: RESEARCH
Gift TypesSTEP 3: CONTACT
Request Personal Gift ProposalDiscover the Benefits of Giving Wisely
A solid financial future–it is a goal we share. You have been careful about building your assets and providing for your family. You are also committed to the teaching and research that make Berkeley great. Can you advance all of these objectives at the same time? Yes — with a planned gift to Cal.
Planned gifts provide creative and flexible strategies for you to pursue your charitable and financial goals. Among the financial benefits you may receive are lifetime income for yourself or your family, and substantial tax savings. However, the greatest benefit of a planned gift to Berkeley lies in knowing that you are supporting work that is important to you, your community, California, and the world for generations to come.
A significant lifetime gift will allow us to meet our immediate objectives. In turn, it will give you maximum tax benefits, especially attractive if you are in high earnings years. It can also be the simplest gift to arrange.
You may, however, prefer to leave your assets and cash flow alone until your death, and instead make your gift through your estate. Even though we cannot use this gift immediately, it will be critically important for long-term financial strength and will help ensure that we can meet the opportunities and challenges the future will present us.
You use a will or revocable trust to make a gift from your estate. You may also use life insurance or the balance remaining in your retirement plan. These gifts help you keep your lifetime financial planning flexible, although they provide only limited income tax benefits. You will need professional assistance to set up most estate plan gifts.
Cash. It is, of course, the easiest transaction to make. You are limited only by your cash flow and your inclination to draw from your cash reserves.
Appreciated securities. Get the same tax deduction as if you had given cash, but use stocks or bonds that cost you less than they are currently worth. Your deduction is based on market value, but you incur no capital gains liability on the transfer to us. It's one of the best tax incentives left, and we can work with your broker to make a gift of securities simple.
Real estate. Gifts of land, vacation homes or income-producing properties can bring great benefits to us. We have to review each gift proposal carefully, and sometimes it's not practical for us to accept. You can give real estate outright, transfer it in a part sale/part gift arrangement, use it to fund a life-income gift, or give your residence and reserve the right to continue to live there.
A retirement account. The balance remaining in your retirement account after your death is subject to double taxation if it passes to your heirs: it's taxed both as income and as an estate asset. Result? Over 75% of the account value may go to taxes. It's a better plan to designate the remainder of your account to Cal, and then use other assets for gifts to your family.
Appreciated property. You may be holding property like books, artwork or equipment that you no longer wish to maintain. Instead, these assets could bring real benefit to the Berkeley. There are particular IRS requirements to meet before you can deduct a gift of appreciated assets. And, we will review each gift proposal carefully to make sure that we can put the asset to good use.
Business interests. A partnership, an interest in a business, shares of closely held stock, or a limited partnership share may all hold value for us.
Life-income gifts is a family of gifts that transfers assets to the University and then returns income to you. You can use them to convert low-yielding securities to a higher income stream at a greatly reduced capital gains cost. You can receive fixed or variable income, take payments for your lifetime or for a term of years, and direct the income to yourself or other beneficiaries. In essence, you make a charitable contribution to Cal yet retain benefits from what you gave away.
Your charitable deduction is based on the full market value of the assets you gave, minus the present value of the income interest you retained. The higher the income payout, the lower the deduction.
These flexible, creative gifts address a variety of your estate planning objectives. For our part, the return of income permits a more substantial gift than you might otherwise be able to afford in an outright format. Even though we cannot use these gifts until the death of the last income beneficiary, they give us long-term financial strength that will sustain us in the future.
A charitable gift annuity is the simplest; in return for your gift to Cal, we contract to pay you and/or another beneficiary fixed income for life. The income rates and the charitable deduction tend to be higher with a gift annuity than with other life-income gifts. There is also an attractive reduction in the taxation of annuity payments. This gift plan is most appropriate if you are risk-averse in your investing and if long-term fixed income is an appropriate strategy for you.
A deferred gift annuity delays the inauguration of income payments to the beneficiaries. In return for this delay, the deferred annuity increases both the income rate and the charitable deduction above those of an annuity starting income payments immediately. If you are currently in high-earnings years, looking for tax deductions and new sources of retirement income, a deferred annuity with income set to start when you turn 65 may fit your needs.
A charitable remainder annuity trust is another option if you are seeking fixed income. The annuity trust - an individually managed trust - provides more flexibility than the gift annuity. However, its management costs often produce a lower income rate than a gift annuity could pay and require a larger initial gift. With that said, the annuity trust does have several advantages. It can pay income to multiple beneficiaries, it can pay income for a term of years (up to 20) while a gift annuity can only pay for life, and under certain circumstances an annuity trust can pay all tax-free income, especially if it was funded with tax-free securities.
The charitable remainder unitrust is the most flexible life-income gift, and it also pays you variable income. The amount received by beneficiaries is based on a fixed percentage of the value of the principal, which is revalued annually. Income in excess of the unitrust amount is reinvested, so that the unitrust's income rate can be applied against an increasing principal over time. The unitrust can pay multiple beneficiaries and can pay income for lifetime or a term of years. Like the annuity trust, the unitrust is individually managed and requires a larger gift to make the management feasible.
A special feature of the unitrust is the ability to grow principal over time, then reinvest for income, with no capital gains cost. This feature allows you to build up a fund for later needs, such as tuition for children and grandchildren.
Consider a charitable lead trust. It works in reverse from the life-income gifts discussed in Questions 3 and 4, above: your gift is placed in a trust that pays income to us for a term, then returns the principal to you or your heirs.
The lead trust is a very effective tool to remove a portion of your estate from tax liability:
If you have a growing family business or a rapidly appreciating portfolio, and children or grandchildren whom you'd like to benefit, a lead trust may be just what you're looking for.


