Giving to Charity in your Will

It seems that people in the UK are a charitable bunch. In fact, last year, just under £3 billion was donated to charity in Wills, which is expected to rise to £3.4 billion by 2022. This figure means that 3.5% of all of the money left in estates goes to charity.
Manzurul Islam
Manzurul Islam
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What sort of charities benefit?

There is certainly no shortage of choice when it comes to picking a charity, but there are four industries that receive more than the rest. The lion’s share (38%) goes to healthcare causes, with Cancer Research UK coming out on top. After that, animal charities get the next biggest portion with 15%, followed closely by disability charities and conservation each receiving 8% of legacies.

Writing a Will

When writing a Will, the main thing you need to decide is how you will divide up your property and money. The people or organisations you leave money to are called beneficiaries.

In order to make a Will you need to have a good idea of how much your estate is worth. Some of your assets will be easier to put a value on, such as savings accounts and valuable items. However, other things will require an educated guess or formal valuation: for example, your property, investments or business.

The tax benefits of giving to charity

If you plan to leave everything to your spouse that would be tax-free, but leaving money to anyone else means your estate may be liable for inheritance tax. Often described as the ‘most hated tax’, inheritance tax is charged at 40% of estates with a value of over £325,000.

However, leaving money to charity can substantially cut or remove the inheritance tax bill.

1. Eliminate your inheritance tax bill

If your total estate is worth over £325,000, you can donate enough to bring it under this amount, meaning the amount left can be split between family and friends without being subject to tax.

2. Reduce your inheritance tax bill 

Giving at least 10% of your estate to charity means that inheritance tax is reduced down from 40% to 36%, even if the value of the remaining estate remains above £325,000.

Three types of legacy

There are three different ways to gift your money to charity:

Pecuniary 

This is the most common, and the simplest form of legacy. This is when you leave a set amount of cash to a particular beneficiary. For example, leaving £7,000 to The Donkey Sanctuary.

Specific 

This is when you leave a specific item, perhaps some stocks or shares, a valuable item or a property to a beneficiary. For example, leaving a holiday cottage to Marie Curie.

Residuary 

A residuary beneficiary is the person or organisation who receives the remaining balance of the estate when everything else has been paid (debts, gifts and taxes). For example, Oxfam could be a residuary beneficiary if they are left the balance of the estate after all other costs and gifts have been paid out.

Problems that can occur

There are several different issues that can happen when an executor is administering your estate.

1. A gift no longer exists. You could have left your house to Oxfam but you sold it when you went into a nursing home. This means the gift would fail.

2. Legacies cannot be fulfilled. Your financial situation could change between the time of writing your will and your death, especially considering nursing home funding costs more than £50,000 a year, meaning that the executor cannot fulfil all cash gifts.

3. The charity does not do with your money what you expected it to. In many cases a legacy left to a charity is not used to support the main activity of the charity for example funding research but instead is used to pay running costs or salaries.

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