Some people start a private foundation because they want to give back; they want to help out the people, institutions and communities they care about. For others, the initial interest is tax savings, perhaps inspired by a conversation with a trusted advisor.
Whatever the impetus, even people who have had a private foundation for years are often unaware of the full capabilities of this powerful and flexible philanthropic vehicle. Giving through a private foundation offers tremendous advantages over giving as an individual donor. Here are just a few.
1. Tax Savings
Private foundations offer significant tax benefits for individuals and families.
A current-year tax deduction with the ability to give over time. Although individual philanthropists often rush to get their tax deductions in at the end of the year, private foundations have the luxury of taking a more leisurely and considered approach. With a private foundation, you get the tax deduction up front, when the foundation is funded, and then you make your charitable gifts over time. The only requirement is that your foundation make “qualifying distributions” each year of at least 5% of the previous year’s average net assets. Because the previous year’s assets are the benchmark, a new foundation doesn’t have to make a grant in the year it is started.
Assets that you transfer to your foundation are exempt from estate and gift taxes, yet they remain under your control for perpetuity. Although contributions to your foundation are irrevocable and must be dedicated to charity, you and your family continue to decide how those assets will be invested, and where and how they will be granted. Moreover, because those assets are only subject to an excise tax of 1% or 2% on the net capital gains, they can grow substantially through compounding. Over time, your initial funding can become a considerable endowment.
Avoidance of capital gains on appreciated assets. You can donate appreciated assets to your foundation, such as low-basis stock that you’ve held for years, and realize a tax deduction for their full fair market value of up to 30% of adjusted gross income with a five-year carry forward.
2. Leave A Lasting Legacy
The majority of foundations are set up to exist in perpetuity. Unlike a direct gift that benefits one recipient on a single occasion, a foundation perpetuates your family’s generosity and burnishes your name far beyond your lifetime. For example, Carnegie and Rockefeller are better remembered for their philanthropic legacies than for their accomplishments in the steel and oil industries. And because gifts are made from an endowment that generates investment revenue, the total gifts made by the foundation over time can far surpass the initial funding.
3. Build A Better Family
Many people start their foundation specifically
to get their family involved. A private foundation provides a forum for different generations to work together toward a common goal. It also provides an unsurpassed way to …
Keep the family together. A private foundation provides a non-Thanksgiving reason for geographically dispersed family members to meet on a regular basis.
Transmit family values. Our culture offers very few opportunities to pass on core values to the next generation. A family foundation affords that rare opportunity to not only discuss what matters most to you, but to actually demonstrate your commitment to those principles with deeds as well as words.
Teach critical life skills. As family members take on philanthropic research, present their findings to the board, participate in the decision-making process and track results, they experience the fun of doing good work while honing skills that will serve them for years to come.
4. Sidestep Unsolicited Requests
Although an individual can just write a check, private foundations have boards that must approve funding. Even if your foundation’s board consists only of immediate family members, you’ll have
a guilt-free way to filter unsolicited requests
for financial support. You’ll be able to say, with perfect sincerity, “It’s a wonderful cause, but I’ll need to take this to my board.” Additionally, should you decide to focus your foundation on specific giving areas, your mission statement could be used to delineate the types of organizations you would consider funding, providing an easy out for declining random requests for funding that fall outside of your guidelines.
5. Put Your Dollars Where They Will Do The Most Good
Private foundations commonly grant to public charities, but that’s not all they can do. With a private foundation, you can …
Grant to individuals and families in need. While nothing prevents you from simply writing
a check right to someone in need, a private foundation allows you to provide emergency assistance to individuals and families using dollars for which you’ve already received a tax deduction. The IRS allows private foundations to provide funds to individuals for emergency relief or hardship assistance in certain circumstances, such as loss of employment, illness and temporary displacement.
Make international donations. Private foundations can grant directly to overseas charitable organizations, even when there is no IRS-recognized 501(c)(3) entity to serve as an intermediary. For example, some foreign charities are automatically recognized by the IRS because of their special status (e.g., the United Nations); others have set up a U.S.-based “friends of” organization that is a recognized 501(c)(3) public charity that can accept funds on their behalf.
Give awards and prizes to spur progress. One effective and often-overlooked method of driving innovation and creating buzz around one’s field of interest is to offer a prize. For example, the first non-government-supported spaceflight was the product of competition created by the $10 million XPrize. Prize-based philanthropy spurs innovation by enabling donors to leverage the creativity of many people to innovate or solve a problem without having to support each person individually.
Award scholarships. With advance approval from the IRS, foundations may run scholarship programs and choose the recipients. This capability allows you to give back to your community in a profoundly personal and powerful way. Some foundations choose to reward not just high-achieving students, but also those who exhibit the values and potential that they wish to promote in their community.
6. Run Charitable Programs Without Setting Up A Separate Non-Profit.
A private foundation can run its own programs, in addition to making grants to fund someone else’s. Direct charitable activities (DCAs) are IRS-approved programs that permit foundations to directly fund and carry out their own projects. This brand of “hands-dirty” philanthropy suits entrepreneurial types who want to contribute both financial and human capital to the causes they care about. For ideas big and small, direct charitable activities allow private foundation donors to use their unique resources and skills to produce results that dollars alone wouldn’t buy. Here are a few examples of successful direct charitable activities Foundation Source has helped facilitate:
• Providing highly durable soccer balls to kids in war-torn countries.
• Running a small mathematics museum to teach children the importance of math in everyday life.
• Purchasing business attire and paying for the removal of gang tattoos to help paroled prisoners rejoin the workforce.
7. Make Loans Instead Of Grants
Would you like to extend credit to a local bakery employing homeless people? Perhaps you’d like
to purchase stock in a documentary film company that educates others about your favorite charitable cause. Instead of an outright grant, you might consider giving a low-interest loan to a nonprofit (such as a charter school or church) to begin construction on a new facility while conducting a capital campaign. With a private foundation, you can do all of these things and much more.
Loans, loan guarantees and equity investments, when made by a foundation specifically to support a charitable purpose, are called Program-Related Investments (PRIs). These financing mechanisms, historically associated with banks or private investors, enable private foundations to get a return on their investments, either through repayment or return on equity. And because PRIs are repaid (potentially with interest), you are able to recycle your philanthropic capital for another charitable cause.
8. Pay Charitable Expenses
When you have a private foundation, all legitimate and reasonable expenses incurred in carrying out the foundation’s charitable aims count toward your minimum distribution requirement. For example, conferences, office supplies and travel expenses for site visits and board meetings count as “qualifying distributions.”
9. Hire Staff (Even Family Members)
If you have a foundation, it’s permissible to
pay qualified staff for their foundation-related work—even if your foundation is staffed by family members. Federal tax law permits foundations to pay “reasonable compensation” for personal services.
For example, one family appointed their daughter, an art school graduate, to serve as the executive director of their foundation.
Because the foundation was active in the region’s arts and culture scene, she was able to make valuable connections, get an insider’s perspective on grantee organizations, and eventually land her dream job of assistant curator at a local museum.
10. Train The Next Generation For Success
Many families of wealth want to give their children “enough to do something, but not enough to do nothing.” They don’t want their wealth to kill their children’s ambition—especially if that wealth passes to their children before they’ve had a chance to develop sufficient maturity and personal goals. For these families, a foundation is the perfect fit.
A private foundation enables children to participate in wealth and understand both its power and responsibility—all without taking control of it. By seeing how the foundation manages its investments, deliberates over its grants and expenses, and impacts the communities it serves, children learn the value of money in ways no lecture can ever hope to match.
Page Snow is chief philanthropic officer at Foundation Source, a firm that offers administrative and consulting services to private foundations.