Private Foundation | Donor Advised Fund | |
Formation | Requires formation of a new corporation or trust; must apply for IRS exempt status. | Simple application and donor advised fund agreement with sponsoring organization. |
Responsibilities |
Directors and officers have fiduciary responsibilities to manage assets, keep records, prepare IRS tax returns, select charities, verify tax-exempt status of charitable recipients, make and administer grants. May delegate some activities to professional advisors. Private foundation, donors, and officers and directors subject to self-dealing rules regarding transactions with the private foundation. |
Donors are only required to make grant decisions; donors may provide direction for investing funds (investment options depend on specific donor advised fund). Donors and family members subject to certain restrictions regarding the donor advised fund. |
Tax Return/Privacy | Required. Form 990-PF must be filed annually and is made public; donors and grant recipients are made public. | Not required. Information is on sponsoring organization’s tax return, but is not identified with donor. Contribution information is generally anonymous, even to recipient organizations, if preferred. |
Charitable Contribution Deduction |
For publicly-traded stock, donor receives charitable deduction equal to fair market value (limited in certain cases where donor or donor’s family owns a significant proportion of total shares). For contribution of closely-held interests or real estate, charitable income tax deduction limited to basis. May claim charitable income tax deduction of appreciated long-term capital gain property at FMV, but deduction is limited to 20% of donor’s AGI. Can opt to take deduction equal to basis; deduction is limited to 30% of donor’s AGI. Excess may be carried forward for five years. Deduction for cash contribution limited to 30% of AGI with same 5 year carryforward. |
For publicly-traded stock, donor receives charitable deduction equal to fair market value. For closely-held interests and real estate, charitable deduction generally equal to fair market value. May claim charitable income tax deduction of appreciated long-term capital gain property at FMV, but deduction is limited to 30% of donor’s AGI. Can opt to take deduction equal to basis; deduction is limited to 50% of donor’s AGI. Excess may be carried forward for five years. Deduction for cash contribution limited to 60% of AGI with same 5 year carryforward. |
Income Tax | 1.39% annual tax on net investment income | Not subject to tax. |
Limits on Grant-making | Can award scholarships and prizes directly (after IRS approval). Can make “program related investments” where the private foundation could receive a return from investment in non-profit activity. | Distributions limited to section 501(c)(3) organizations; may make grants to organizations to fund scholarships and prizes. Can make investments in program related investments. |
Benefits to Donors | Funds cannot be used to make contributions where the donor receives a quid pro quo benefit, such as an event tickets or auction items | |
Pledges | Funds cannot be used to fulfill donor’s individual pledge. | Funds can be used to fulfill donor’s individual pledge if the DAF sponsoring organization does not reference the existence of the charitable pledge. |
Payments to Family Members for Involvement | Family members may serve as directors and officers; directors and officers may receive reasonable compensation for foundation work. | Family members may serve as advisors. Family members may not receive compensation from donor advised fund. |
Investments | Wide variety of investments | Typically, donor has access to a limited number of investments, although sponsoring organizations will make arrangements for larger funds. |
Required Grant-making | Required to make grants equal to 5% of the foundation’s assets annually. | No distribution requirement. Sponsoring organization may require certain distributions over time. |
Legal Control | Donor can retain legal control of private foundation. Control of the organization is vested in directors or trustees appointed by the donor. | Donor does not have legal control, but may make recommendations about investments and grants. Sponsoring organization almost certainly follow these recommendations unless (i) the proposed grantee is not a proper charity or (ii) the proposed grantee is outside the scope of the donor advised fund. |
Grant-making after Donor’s Passing | Directors and trustees left in place after donor’s passing generally control the distribution of assets (subject to any legally binding restrictions left by donor). | Family members (or others) may be designated as successor advisors. Sponsoring organization may limit grants to those made in accordance with donor’s overall wishes. |