Qualified Charitable Distributions
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Qualified Charitable Distributions Individuals age 70 ½ or older may be able to exclude a qualified charitable distribution (QCD) of up to $100,000 from their income each year. A QCD is a taxable distribution paid directly from an IRA (other than an ongoing SEP or SIMPLE IRA) to a qualified charity. It cannot be paid to you as the IRA owner. You must be at least age 70½ when the QCD distribution to the charity is made. The SECURE 2.0 Act of 2022 did not change the 70½ age to be eligible to make a QCD. A QCD may also count toward your required minimum distribution for the year. A QCD does not affect your income and is tax-free if paid directly from the IRA to an eligible charitable organization, and is available regardless of whether you itemize deductions on Schedule A. If you took a distribution from your IRA and then made a charitable donation, the distribution would be taxable as ordinary income and the donation would only be deductible as an itemized deduction on Schedule A. Itemized deductions for most taxpayers don’t exceed the available standard deduction. And the increased income could affect eligibility for certain available tax credits. The financial institution reports the QCD to you on Form 1099-R. You report the QCD on Line 4a of the Form 1040 along with any other IRA distributions. Show the amount of the QCD as zero taxable on Line 4b and write “QCD” next to the Line 4b entry. Review Publication 590-B, Distributions from Individual Retirement Arrangements for more information. Find answers to many of your retirement plan or IRA questions at IRS.gov/Retirement. If you need help with an account-specific question, basic information about retirement plan forms or the status of pending applications, call our Customer Account Services at 877-829-5500. For the latest retirement plan news, connect via IRS Social Media and subscribe to this and other IRS newsletters. This message was distributed automatically from the mailing list Employee Plans News. Please do not reply to this message. |
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