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Can I use a distribution from a retirement account to make a charitable contribution without paying tax on the retirement distribution?

I want to take a significant withdrawal from my 401(k) account and then make a charitable contribution for the same amount.  How will this affect my tax liability?

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Accepted Solutions
dmertz
Level 15

Can I use a distribution from a retirement account to make a charitable contribution without paying tax on the retirement distribution?

If a charitable contribution is funded by a distribution from a 401(k), the distribution from the 401(k) will add to AGI and the charitable contribution will separately be reported as a deduction on Schedule A.  The addition to AGI can increase the taxability of Social Security income, among other things, so the Schedule A deduction might not entirely offset the income to produce a zero net change in tax liability.  The increase in AGI can also affect the amount you must pay for Medicare two years later.

A Qualified Charitable Distribution which is excludible from income can only be made from an IRA, not from a 401(k), and can only be made after the IRA owner has reached age 70½.  You can roll over amounts from the 401(k) to the IRA after satisfying any RMD from the 401(k) for the year, then make a QCD from the IRA.

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2 Replies
dmertz
Level 15

Can I use a distribution from a retirement account to make a charitable contribution without paying tax on the retirement distribution?

If a charitable contribution is funded by a distribution from a 401(k), the distribution from the 401(k) will add to AGI and the charitable contribution will separately be reported as a deduction on Schedule A.  The addition to AGI can increase the taxability of Social Security income, among other things, so the Schedule A deduction might not entirely offset the income to produce a zero net change in tax liability.  The increase in AGI can also affect the amount you must pay for Medicare two years later.

A Qualified Charitable Distribution which is excludible from income can only be made from an IRA, not from a 401(k), and can only be made after the IRA owner has reached age 70½.  You can roll over amounts from the 401(k) to the IRA after satisfying any RMD from the 401(k) for the year, then make a QCD from the IRA.

Can I use a distribution from a retirement account to make a charitable contribution without paying tax on the retirement distribution?

and remember State taxes as well, as many states have no deduction for charitable contributions.

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