IRS tax-free IRA distribution available through Dec. 31

PHOENIX — Certain owners of individual retirement arrangements have a limited time to make tax-free transfers to eligible charities and have them count for tax-year 2015, the Internal Revenue Service said Wednesday.

IRA owners age 70 1/2 or older have until Dec. 31 to make a direct transfer of part or all of their IRA distributions to an eligible charity.

The Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes Act, enacted Dec. 18, made permanent the provision authorizing these qualified charitable distributions. This means that this provision of law, which had expired at the end of 2014, is now available for 2015 and future years. With this retroactive renewal, any eligible IRA distribution during 2015 properly transferred to a qualified charity counts as a QCD.

As a result, older IRA owners once again have a different way to give to charity. An IRA owner age 70 1/2 or over can directly transfer, tax-free, up to $100,000 per year to an eligible charity. This option, first available in 2006, can be used for distributions from IRAs, regardless of whether the owners itemize their deductions. Distributions from employer-sponsored retirement plans, including simple IRA plans and simplified employee pension plans, are not eligible.

To qualify, the funds must be transferred directly by the IRA trustee to the eligible charity. Distributed amounts may be excluded from the IRA owner’s income — resulting in lower taxable income for the IRA owner. However, if the IRA owner excludes the distribution from income, no deduction, such as a charitable contribution deduction on Schedule A, may be taken for the distributed amount.

Not all charities are eligible. For example, donor-advised funds and supporting organizations are not eligible recipients.

Amounts transferred to a charity from an IRA are counted in determining whether the owner has met the IRA’s required minimum distribution.

Where individuals have made nondeductible contributions to their traditional IRAs, a special rule treats amounts distributed to charities as coming first from taxable funds, instead of proportionately from taxable and nontaxable funds, as would be the case with regular distributions.

QCDs are reported on Form 1040 Line 15. The full amount of the QCD is shown on Line 15a. Do not enter any of these amounts on Line 15b, but write “QCD” next to that line.

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