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QCD (Qualified Charitable Distribution) tax savings
Compute tax savings from a Qualified Charitable Distribution from your IRA at age 70½+ vs claiming a charitable deduction normally.
QCD vs no-QCD tax saved
Show the work
- QCD net cost to you$6,080
- Alternative (regular gift) net cost$8,000
QCD — the move post-TCJA charitable giving
Since the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act doubled the standard deduction, ~85% of taxpayers no longer itemize. Their charitable gifts no longer produce a tax benefit. The Qualified Charitable Distribution rebuilds the benefit for retirees age 70½+.
How QCD works
- You're 70½ or older
- You instruct your IRA custodian to send up to $105k/year (2024) directly to a 501(c)(3) charity
- The transfer counts toward your RMD
- The amount NEVER appears as income on your 1040
That last bullet is the key. The QCD doesn't go in as income then out as a deduction (which doesn't help if you don't itemize). It just doesn't appear at all — which lowers your AGI by the full QCD amount.
The QCD value vs no-QCD
For non-itemizers (most retirees):
- QCD: full marginal tax rate × gift = direct savings
- No-QCD: $0 tax benefit (standard deduction already covers more)
For itemizers (few retirees):
- QCD vs writing a check: similar after-tax cost, BUT QCD also reduces AGI which can lower Medicare IRMAA + Social Security taxability
The cap + restrictions
- $105,000 per individual per year (2024)
- Married couples: each spouse separately can do $105k
- Must come from a Traditional IRA or inherited IRA (NOT 401(k); roll over to IRA first if needed)
- Can satisfy ALL or part of RMD — common to use QCD to zero out RMD entirely
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