Gifts by Estate Note
What Is an Estate Note?
- An estate note is an irrevocable pledge or debt against the donor's estate.
- This instrument binds the donor's estate to the extent not paid during the donor's lifetime.
- Estate notes may be pledged for either one or two lives. With a two-life estate note, the obligation is binding only on the estate of the person who lives longer.
- Wentworth-Douglass recommends this option for persons 65 years of age or older.
Benefits of Estate Notes:
- You may make a charitable gift to Wentworth-Douglass Foundation after your lifetime without revising your current will or estate plans.
- There is no obligation to transfer assets during the donor's lifetime. However, the estate note offers the flexibility to make payments against the note during one's life.
- Dollar amounts of estate notes count toward fundraising campaigns, while bequest intentions sometimes do not. If Wentworth-Douglass Foundation is already in your will, an estate note may be signed for some portion of the bequest you expect to come to
Wentworth-Douglass Foundation.
- Charitable contributions from estate notes may be designated for specific purposes.
Tax Considerations:
- Signing an estate note does not qualify the donor for a charitable deduction.
- Payments against the obligation during a donor's lifetime will provide income-tax deductions in the year made (up to the full amounts permitted by the IRS tax code).
- Unpaid estate note balances will provide
the estate with an estate-tax deduction. Any amount outstanding on the estate note is deducted from the gross estate before any taxes are applied.
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