Charitable Giving Through Donor-Advised Fund
Contribution to a donor advised fund is a way to warehouse funds in a year in which the donor has an unusually high income (and can benefit from a large charitable deduction) to satisfy the donor's social obligations to make charitable contributions in future years, without incurring the expense of setting up a private foundation and satisfying annual filing and other private foundation requirements.
Donor-advised funds, though they may bear the donor's name,
are not separate entities, but are merely bookkeeping entries. They are components
of a qualified charitable organization. A contribution to a charity's
donor-advised fund may be deductible in the year it is made if it isn't
considered earmarked for a particular recipient. The charity must fully own the
funds and have ultimate control over their distribution. To document the
contribution, and in addition to the usual charitable contribution
substantiation rules, the taxpayer must get a contemporaneously written
acknowledgement from the fund's sponsoring organization (1) that it has
exclusive legal control over the assets contributed (Code Sec. 170(f)(18)(A)).
Though the donor can advise the charity, which generally will follow the
donor’s recommendations, the donor cannot have power to select the recipient or
decide the timing or amounts of distributions. The charity must also ensure
that all distributions from the fund are arm’s-length and do not directly or
indirectly benefit the donor.
(1) The sponsoring organization
cannot be listed in Code Sec. 170(f)(18)(A) (e.g., a war veteran's organization
or domestic fraternal lodge).