Charitable giving in an estate plan is not an afterthought, it is a design decision. Thoughtfully structured, it reduces taxes, fulfills philanthropic goals, and creates a legacy that outlives any single gift. For North Shore families who have spent decades contributing to their community, an estate plan should reflect those values.

Why Charitable Giving Belongs in Your Estate Plan

Massachusetts does not have a separate estate tax deduction for charitable gifts the way the federal system does, charitable bequests reduce the taxable estate for federal purposes, and for larger estates subject to the Massachusetts estate tax, they reduce the taxable estate at that level too. But the case for charitable giving in an estate plan is not primarily about taxes. It is about legacy: identifying the causes, institutions, and communities that mattered to you and ensuring that your estate reflects those values after you are gone.

For many North Shore families, this means gifts to local institutions, Essex and Middlesex County churches and synagogues, community organizations, schools, hospitals, and cultural institutions. A planned gift, even a modest one, can create a lasting named fund or endowment that continues your family's relationship with an institution for generations.

Charitable Giving Options

Charitable Bequest in a Will

The simplest form: a specific dollar amount, a percentage of the estate, or a specific asset given to a named charity in your will. Easy to include, easy to change during your lifetime, and requires no lifetime sacrifice of assets.

Beneficiary Designation

Naming a charity as the beneficiary of a retirement account or life insurance policy. Charities pay no income tax on inherited IRAs, unlike individual heirs, making a retirement account one of the most tax-efficient assets to leave to charity.

Charitable Remainder Trust (CRT)

The donor contributes assets to a trust, receives an income stream for life (or a term of years), and the remainder passes to charity. Provides an income tax deduction in the year of contribution and removes appreciated assets from the taxable estate.

Charitable Lead Trust (CLT)

The charity receives income for a period of years; at the end, the remaining assets pass to family members. Useful for transferring appreciating assets to heirs at reduced gift or estate tax cost.

Donor-Advised Fund (DAF)

Contribute assets now, receive an immediate tax deduction, and recommend grants to charities over time. A flexible vehicle for families who want to make charitable giving a multigenerational practice.

Qualified Charitable Distribution (QCD)

If you are 70½ or older, you can direct a qualified charitable distribution from your IRA to charity each year, $108,000 for 2025, with the limit adjusted annually for inflation. It counts toward your required minimum distribution but is not included in taxable income, a powerful tool for retirees with large IRAs.

Retirement accounts are the most tax-efficient assets to leave to charity. When an individual inherits an IRA, they generally must take distributions and pay income tax on them. A charity pays no income tax. Leaving your IRA to a charity and your other assets to your heirs, rather than the other way around, often produces a better outcome for both the heirs and the charity, with no reduction in total value distributed.

Naming Charities Correctly

One practical issue that creates problems in estate administration is imprecise charity naming. "The Red Cross" might refer to the American Red Cross, the local chapter, or an international affiliate. "Beth Israel Hospital" may not exist by that name when the estate is administered years from now. Use the full legal name of the organization, verify its current 501(c)(3) status and EIN if possible, and consider adding a clause directing the funds to the closest equivalent charitable purpose if the named organization ceases to exist or merges.

Integrating Charitable Giving With Family Bequests

Charitable giving need not reduce what family members inherit, it often replaces assets that would have gone to taxes. A thoughtful plan integrates charitable and family bequests, often using different asset types for each: retirement accounts to charity, appreciated investments in trust, cash to family. Your estate planning attorney and financial advisor should coordinate these decisions together.

The causes that mattered to you during your life can continue after it, if the plan is designed to make that happen.

Legal Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Charitable giving strategies involve complex tax and legal considerations. Please consult with a licensed Massachusetts attorney and a qualified tax advisor for guidance specific to your situation.