goofer44 said:
Unfortunately I don't subscribe to the online WSJ so I apologize for not providing a link to the article. Perhaps someone on the board can provide the link.
I can get the WSJ on-line, but I don't think the link will do any good unless you've got a subscription. Perhaps they'll eventually dump it into the "free" Real Estate area of the on-line WSJ.
Here is a link to a "freebie" WSJ Real Estate article that discussed it back in 2003:
Home Donation Option
The article you talked about is pretty long, but here's some excerpts:
Groups Target Property Owners
In Wake of Real Estate Boom;
Family Donates a Mountaintop
By JENNIFER S. FORSYTH
August 16, 2006; Page B1
In 1984, Raymond and Eleanor Devereaux paid $100,000 for 11 acres atop a small mountain about 35 miles from San Diego. By last year the property -- with its log home and views of Cleveland National Forest -- was worth $1.3 million.
When it came time to plan their estate, Mr. Devereaux, 90 years old, and Mrs. Devereaux, 84, decided to give their mountaintop retreat to charity. In exchange for donating the property to Consumers Union, the nonprofit publisher of Consumer Reports, they got a $60,000-a-year annuity and the right to live there for the rest of their lives. The deal also helped them avoid some capital-gains taxes, eliminated estate taxes on the property and gave them a federal income-tax deduction. And, of course, they got a free lifetime subscription to the magazine.
The Devereauxs are part of a growing wave of philanthropists looking to avoid or reduce bigger tax bites created by the rapid run-up in real estate values. Nonprofit groups, which once shied away from real-estate donations because they feared getting stuck with swamp land or lacked the expertise to handle complex land transactions, are seizing the opportunity with new marketing programs. Their target: World War II-era property owners finalizing estate planning and baby-boomers who have seen their second-home and other real-estate investments balloon in value.
Charities still turn down many offers of real estate, perhaps as high as 80%, some experts estimate. They are likely to turn down property with environmental problems, that can't be sold quickly or that has multiple owners who aren't in agreement on the donation. If a donor wishes to give property that has a mortgage, typically the charity must be willing to pay off the mortgage, known in the industry as a bargain sale, says Caroline Camougis, co-managing director of Delphi Partners, a New York-based real-estate donation advisory firm.
Property donors generally can deduct the fair-market value as an itemized deduction on their federal income taxes -- amounting to up to 30% of their adjusted gross income. However, any real-property donation of more than $5,000 must have a qualified independent appraisal and if it's worth more than $500,000, the donor must attach the appraisal to their income tax return, says Alan Weiner, a tax partner at the accounting firm of Holtz Rubenstein Reminick LLP, in Melville, N.Y
Charmaine DeNoyer, 73, whose mother died in June at age 94 after a long struggle with colon cancer, wanted to help the American Cancer Society. But donating her condo in Milwaukee to the charity also helped her out of a tax bind, though the idea first seemed ludicrous to her sister. "She said, 'Are you crazy? You're giving it away?"' recalls Ms. DeNoyer.
She owned a condo in Milwaukee, but wanted a larger one. Yet because she had spent several years retired in Florida before returning to care for her sick mother, Ms. DeNoyer could not claim the Milwaukee condo as her primary residence under tax rules.
If the condo had sold for its appraised value of about $106,000 -- up from the $28,000 she paid in 1975 -- Ms. DeNoyer would have owed taxes on capital gains of about $70,000. Under a so-called flexible charitable gift, the American Cancer Society sold the condo and set up an annuity for Ms. DeNoyer of $45,397. The rest -- $60,602 -- was considered a taxable donation that she could claim as a deduction on her federal income taxes. She will be eligible to start drawing from the annuity in 2010, at an annual amount of $9,120. That would be extra income -- in addition to her teacher's pension, her social security and another annuity she set up -- to ensure she'll never be a burden to anyone, she says.
While it's too early to say for sure, James Perlmutter, co-managing director of Delphi, believes the slowing market, particularly for second homes, could lead even more people to opt for a tax break through a charitable donation. "As people are having to lower their asking price in many cases, they may go that route when they aren't getting what they wanted," he says.