Core Insights - The article discusses the benefits of Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCDs) for retirees, highlighting it as a tax-efficient way to donate to charity while reducing taxable income [2][5]. Group 1: Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCDs) - A QCD is a direct transfer from a pretax IRA to a qualified charity, allowing retirees to avoid taxable income that would otherwise affect their adjusted gross income (AGI) [2][3]. - Retirees aged 70½ or older can donate up to $108,000 through QCDs in 2023, with married couples able to each contribute this amount if both qualify [3]. - QCDs are particularly beneficial for retirees who do not itemize deductions, as 91% of filers opt for the standard deduction, meaning regular charitable donations do not lower their taxable income [4]. Group 2: Tax Implications and Requirements - QCDs provide a tax advantage as the donated amount is excluded from income, which is considered "better than a deduction" [5]. - Retirees aged 73 or older are required to take minimum distributions (RMDs) from their pretax retirement accounts, and failing to do so incurs penalties from the IRS [5].
This little-known tax move takes the sting out of RMDs — yet 90% of Americans are missing it. How not to be one of them
Yahoo Finance·2025-10-28 11:00