| Gifts of Life Insurance At
a glance: - Make a more meaningful gift than you might have
thought
- Provide an estate tax charitable deduction
- Replace value
of current gifts for your estate
- Can also create a current tax deduction

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There
are several ways you can use life insurance as the basis for a charitable gift.
- Making the Station a Beneficiary of Your Life Insurance Policy
You may wish to make MPT Foundation, Inc. the
beneficiary (or a contingent beneficiary) of a life insurance policy as a way
to make a sizeable future gift. You retain lifetime ownership of the policy, keeping
the right to cash it in, borrow against it, and change the beneficiary. A gift
of this nature is treated much like a bequest made through your will. Because
you retain the ownership of your asset (the policy), you will not receive an income
tax charitable deduction for this future gift or for your premium payments during
your lifetime. The policy's proceeds will be included in your gross estate, and
your estate can take an estate tax charitable deduction. - Making a
Gift of Your Policy
You may wish to transfer ownership of a policy to
MPT Foundation, Inc., or purchase a new policy with MPT Foundation, Inc. as owner and beneficiary. If you make a charity
the owner and beneficiary of a policy, you are entitled to certain tax advantages. - Wealth
Replacement Using Life Insurance
A donor may make a current gift to charity
and receive a charitable tax deduction. At the same time, the donor may purchase
life insurance to replace the donated amount or perhaps, the amount after estate
tax that the beneficiaries would have received. Depending on the circumstances,
the charitable tax savings and any life income resulting from the gift may defray
the cost of the wealth replacement insurance premiums. - Creating a Life
Insurance Trust
You may want to set up an Irrevocable Life Insurance
Trust (ILIT). An ILIT removes the life insurance from your estate to help reduce
estate tax while providing other benefits. For example, upon one's death, the
proceeds of the life insurance policy may remain in the trust to provide income
for the surviving spouse, but stays outside of the spouse's estate for estate
tax purposes. Or, the trust could be used to distribute proceeds to children of
a previous marriage. Although ILITs can be expensive and more complicated than
owning life insurance directly, they may be an attractive option in certain situations.
As with all matters concerning estate planning,
please consult your estate and tax specialists. A couple of examples of using
life insurance as charitable gift are available.
Please
note, individual financial circumstances will vary. The information on this site
does not constitute legal or tax advice. Donor stories and photographs are for
purposes of illustration only. As with all tax and estate planning, please consult
your attorney or estate specialist. All material is copyrighted and is for viewing
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