charitable lead trust


Charitable Lead Trust

An irrevocable trust into which the grantor deposits assets, with the income from the investment of these assets going to a designated charity for a certain period of time. After that time expires, the remainder of the assets and income are given to the trust's beneficiaries. A charitable lead trust allows the grantor to provide for his/her survivors after death while reducing to a minimum the estate tax because some of the assets were given to charity. See also: Charitable remainder trust.

charitable lead trust

A trust that pays an income to a charity for a specific length of time then leaves the remainder of the trust to designated beneficiaries, usually family members. The purpose of the charitable lead trust is to reduce taxes on the estate of the deceased while maintaining the family's control of the estate's assets. Compare charitable remainder trust.

Charitable lead trust.

A charitable lead trust (CLT) is an irrevocable trust that allows you to provide current income generated by assets in the trust to a qualifying charity. When the trust terminates after the period specified in the trust agreement, the trust beneficiaries you've named receive the assets.

Because of the delay in the transfer of assets to your beneficiaries, your gift is valued for tax purposes at its discounted present value, based on IRS tables. That amount may be less than the gift's market value, which affects the size of the charitable deduction you can claim.

Transferring assets in a CLT not only reduces the value of your estate for estate tax purposes but also eliminates potential capital gains tax on any increased value of the assets.