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Charitable Giving and Planning After the One Big Beautiful Bill Act

New Rules, Impact on Individuals vs. Estates and Trusts, Planning Considerations

A live 90-minute CLE/CPE video webinar with interactive Q&A

This program is included with the Strafford CLE Pass. Click for more information.
This program is included with the Strafford CPE+ Pass. Click for more information.
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Tuesday, October 7, 2025

1:00pm-2:30pm EDT, 10:00am-11:30am PDT

Early Registration Discount Deadline, Friday, September 12, 2025

or call 1-800-926-7926

This CLE/CPE webinar will provide trust and estates counsel guidance on applicable rules regarding charitable income tax deductions for trusts and estates under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA). The panel will discuss income tax charitable deductions under Sec. 642(c), new rules under the OBBBA and planning opportunities, charitable remainder interests, split-interest gifts, governing instrument and gross income requirements, and planning and reporting requirements.

Description

IRC Section 642(c) governs income tax charitable deductions for trusts and estates, which are substantially different from charitable contribution deductions for individuals and corporations under Sec. 170 and Sec. 642(c)(1). Trust and estates attorneys must have a complete understanding of these rules and reporting requirements for claiming charitable deductions and the impact on certain tax and estate planning strategies.

Section 642(c) sets forth unique rules on charitable deductions. There is no adjusted gross income limitation for trusts, and trusts can contribute to foreign charitable organizations. Since trusts can be taxed themselves or as carryout taxable income to beneficiaries, trust and estate attorneys and fiduciaries need to understand these rules to preserve these valuable deductions.

Although deductible on the estate return, specific bequests are considered deductions from the principal and do not generate a tax deduction. However, making charitable bequests with particular assets can generate significant tax savings, which must be appropriately reported to ensure deductibility.

In addition, the OBBBA introduces several changes impacting charitable deductions, particularly for trusts, such as unlimited deduction potential, specific trust requirements, and the possibility of changes to individual charitable deduction rules impacting trusts and estate planning.

Trusts and estates must adhere to various rules to obtain income tax deductions, such as the governing document and gross income requirements, charitable purpose and eligible donee requirements, and other additional planning and reporting considerations.

Listen as our panel of trust and estate tax experts explains the caveats and considerations for income tax charitable deductions under Sec. 642(c), the impact of OBBBA, deduction of the charitable remainder interest, split-interest gifts, governing instrument and gross income requirements, and planning and reporting requirements.

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Outline

  1. Governing documents requirements
  2. Internal Revenue Code requirements for trusts and estates
  3. Impact of OBBBA
  4. Reporting obligations and challenges
  5. Recent cases and planning considerations

Benefits

The panel will review these and other critical issues:

  • Charitable deduction rules and requirements
  • Impact of the OBBBA
  • Reporting of charitable deductions
  • Distinctions between contributions made from the corpus and those made from income
  • Types of trusts eligible to make deductible donations
  • Specific provisions in trust documents that allow for deductible contributions
  • Differences between allowable individual and trust contributions

Faculty

Stevenson, Lauran
Lauran L. Stevenson

Senior Counsel
Chapman and Cutler

Ms. Stevenson is a senior counsel and member of Chapman's Trusts and Estates Department. She concentrates her...  |  Read More

Attend on October 7

Early Discount (through 09/12/25)

See NASBA details.

Cannot Attend October 7?

Early Discount (through 09/12/25)

You may pre-order a recording to listen at your convenience. Recordings are available 48 hours after the webinar. CPE credit is not available on recordings. Strafford will process CLE credit for one person on each recording. All formats include course handouts.

To find out which recorded format will provide the best CLE option, select your state:

CLE On-Demand Video