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WHO Charitable Bequests

“Let your legacy live on – consider a charitable bequest to the WHO Foundation.”

Charitable bequests or planned giving are contributions that donors make to non-profit organizations through their wills or other legal documents regulating what happens to their money and property after they die. It is not an uplifting topic, but it is an important one. Deciding what you leave behind can help you, your family, and perhaps your favorite charity organization, such as the WHO Foundation.

It is always best to work with a trust officer at a bank or law firm to ensure that your belongings go to whom they are intended. Here are a few options that you have when it comes to estate planning:

  • Make an outright bequest in your will: The easiest and most direct way to make a charitable gift is by an outright bequest of cash in your will. Making an outright bequest requires only a short paragraph in your will that names the charitable beneficiary and states the amount of your gift. The outright bequest is especially appropriate when the amount of your gift is relatively small, or when you want the funds to go to the charity without strings attached.

  • Use a charitable trust: Another way for you to make charitable gifts is to create a charitable trust. There are many types of charitable trusts, the most common of which include the charitable lead trust and the charitable remainder trust.

    • A charitable lead trust pays income to your chosen charity for a certain number of years after your death. Once that period is up, the trust principal passes to your family members or other heirs. The trust is known as a charitable lead trust because the charity gets the first, or lead, interest.

    • A charitable remainder trust is the mirror image of the charitable lead trust. Trust income is payable to your family members or other heirs for a period of years after your death or for the lifetime of one or more beneficiaries. Then, the principal goes to your favorite charity. The trust is known as a charitable remainder trust because the charity gets the remainder interest.

Source: http://www.toalfinancial.com/cg.php