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Understanding Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) and Its Impact on Charitable Deductions
Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) is one of the most crucial numbers in your tax calculations. It serves as the foundation for calculating your taxable income and influences the tax deductions and credits you can claim, including those for charitable contributions. In this guide, we’ll break down AGI and explain how it impacts your charitable giving strategy.
What Is Adjusted Gross Income (AGI)?
AGI is your gross income—comprising wages, dividends, capital gains, business income, and other sources—minus specific adjustments like contributions to a traditional IRA, student loan interest, or alimony payments. Essentially, AGI is a snapshot of your taxable income before accounting for standard or itemized deductions.
The IRS uses your AGI as the baseline for many tax calculations, including charitable deductions, making it a pivotal figure for tax planning.
How AGI Affects Charitable Deductions
Charitable contributions can reduce your taxable income, but your AGI often limits the amount you can deduct:
Carryover Rules: If your charitable contributions exceed the AGI limits, the excess can be carried forward for up to five subsequent tax years, ensuring you don’t lose the tax benefits entirely.
Cash Contributions: If you make cash donations to qualified charities, you can typically deduct up to 60% of your AGI.
Non-Cash Contributions: Donations of appreciated assets like stocks, real estate, or art are capped at 30% of your AGI. These contributions can provide a dual benefit: you avoid paying capital gains tax on the appreciation, and you receive a deduction based on the asset’s fair market value.
How Beneficiary Type Impacts AGI Deduction Limits
The type of charitable beneficiary (e.g., public charities, private foundations, etc.) can also affect the AGI deduction limits for charitable contributions. Different types of organizations have different rules for how much of your AGI you can deduct based on your contributions.
Here’s what this could mean:
Public Charities (e.g., churches, hospitals, schools, DAFs):
Cash contributions: Up to 60% of AGI.
Non-cash contributions (e.g., appreciated assets): Up to 30% of AGI.
Private Foundations:
Cash contributions: Limited to 30% of AGI.
Non-cash contributions: Limited to 20% of AGI.
Example: Simplifying Charitable Giving with AGI (Cash Gift vs. Gifting Assets)
Let’s say your gross income for the year is $110,000. You contribute $10,000 to a traditional IRA, which reduces your taxable income as follows:
Gross Income: $110,000
Minus IRA Contribution: -$10,000
Adjusted Gross Income (AGI): $100,000
You decide to make a charitable contribution of $100,000. Let’s look at two scenarios:
Scenario 1: Cash Contribution
You contribute $100,000 in cash to a qualified public charity.
Based on IRS rules, the deduction for cash contributions is capped at 60% of your AGI or $60,000 for this year.
The remaining $40,000 ($100,000 – $60,000) is carried forward for up to five years.
Tax Savings in Action:
AGI: $100,000
Minus Charitable Deduction (Cash): -$60,000
Taxable Income: $40,000
The $40,000 excess deduction will offset taxable income in future years, ensuring full benefit from the cash contribution over time.
Scenario 2: Gifting Appreciated Assets (Stocks)
Instead of cash, you donate $100,000 worth of appreciated stocks to the same charity.
The deduction for non-cash contributions like stocks is capped at 30% of your AGI, or $30,000 for this year.
The remaining $70,000 ($100,000 – $30,000) is carried forward for up to five years.
Additional Benefit:
When you gift appreciated assets, you avoid paying capital gains taxes on the appreciation. For instance:
If the stocks were purchased for $50,000 and are now worth $100,000, donating them saves you from paying capital gains taxes on the $50,000 appreciation.
Tax Savings in Action:
AGI: $100,000
Minus Charitable Deduction (Stocks): -$30,000
Taxable Income: $70,000
The $70,000 excess deduction will offset taxable income in future years, moreover, you also avoid taxes on the $50,000 capital gain.
Choosing the Right Charitable Contribution Strategy
When deciding between cash contributions and gifting appreciated assets, it’s essential to consider your tax situation. Cash contributions allow a higher deduction limit up to 60% of your AGI, making them a straightforward way to reduce taxable income. However, gifting appreciated assets, such as stocks, offers additional tax advantages. While the deduction limit for non-cash contributions is lower at 30% of AGI, this method allows you to avoid paying capital gains taxes on the asset’s appreciation.
Conclusion
Understanding your Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) is fundamental to maximizing the tax benefits of charitable giving and structures such as Charitable Lead Annuity Trusts. AGI serves as the baseline for calculating the deduction limits for both cash and non-cash contributions, directly influencing how much of your contributions can reduce your taxable income. Cash contributions allow deductions up to 60% of your AGI, providing more immediate tax relief, whereas gifting appreciated assets like stocks caps deductions at 30% of AGI but offers additional advantages, such as avoiding capital gains taxes, complexities of tax planning, ensuring you make the most of these opportunities. Schedule a consultation today and let us simplify the process for you.
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Mani is the founder and CEO of Valur. He brings deep financial and strategic expertise from his prior roles at McKinsey & Company and Goldman Sachs. Mani earned his degree from the University of Michigan and launched Valur in 2020 to transform how individuals and advisors approach tax planning.