When people think about providing an inheritance to children and making a significant charitable gift through their estates, a vehicle known as the “charitable lead trust” is an excellent method to accomplish both objectives.
A charitable lead trust is a trust that the estate owner establishes either during life (an inter vivos trust) or at death (a testamentary trust). The income from the trust flows to a charitable organization, like the Sedalia School District Foundation, typically for a stated number of years. After that period, the assets inside the trust are then distributed. The fact that the assets will one day be transferred to another person means that this trust has one further distinction: it is a “nongrantor” trust, as opposed to a grantor trust. “Nongrantor” means the trust assets are not owned by the person who established the trust, and the assets are not going to be returned to him or her someday. (A “grantor” trust is one in which the assets will eventually be distributed back to the donor. As a result, the donor is subject to tax on the trust earnings.)