Donor-Advised Funds: Charitable Limbo or Democratizing Giving Vehicle? - Non Profit News | Nonprofit Quarterly (2024)

Donor-Advised Funds: Charitable Limbo or Democratizing Giving Vehicle? - Non Profit News | Nonprofit Quarterly (1)

June 22, 2016; New York Review of Books and Chicago Tribune

Esteemed BU Professor Ray Madoff and lifelong philanthropist Lewis Cullman have long advocated against low payouts from charitable vehicles of all kinds. By the end of 2016, the largest pooled charity in the United States will be the Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund, with more than $2 billion in assets in 80,000 donor-advised funds managed on behalf of 132,000 fund investors. Their growth has been nothing short of phenomenal and they have been in the sights of Madoff and Cullman for some time. Their recent joint piece in the New York Review of Books takes on that industry in no uncertain terms:

Donor-advised funds have been a bad deal for American society. They have produced too many private benefits for the financial services industry, at too great a cost to the taxpaying public, and they have provided too few benefits for society at large. When we consider their overall effect, we see that rather than supporting working charities and the beneficiaries they serve, they have undermined them. Congress should enact a rule requiring that donor-advised funds be distributed to operating charities within a reasonable period of time in order to assure a regular flow of money to working charities. In addition, private foundations should not be allowed to satisfy their payout rules by making contributions to donor-advised funds.

That last point is well taken; NPQ has previously written about these kinds of transfers, the surfacing of which is made more difficult by the lack of transparency in DAFs.

As most NPQ readers know, the large investment firms, including Fidelity, Vanguard, and Schwab, offer DAFs to their customers as a method of carrying out philanthropic activities, but also as lines of their business. The IRS considers these accounts charities. Once resources are transferred into these accounts, the donor relinquishes ownership and cannot withdraw them. In return, they get an immediate tax break while buying time to actually disburse the money. After the death of the donor or donors, funds remaining in the DAF account may be advised by the donor’s heirs.

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Additionally, by transferring certain types of appreciated assets into the accounts, donors can achieve a larger deduction on their taxes than they would if the investments were sold and the proceeds donated. Fidelity and other investment firms, like community foundations, charge maintenance fees and invest the account resources in the stock market and other investment opportunities. Unlike foundations, which must distribute up to five percent of assets in grants, gifts, and administrative expenses each year in order to avoid excise taxes, donor-advised funds are not required to make any such annual distributions. But they do, at least in aggregate. Though studies of DAF payout activity are somewhat inconsistent, Schwab Charitable and Fidelity Charitable report ninety percent and ninety-two percent of assets in the accounts are distributed to charities within ten years of receipt. In 2012, the IRS placed the annual median payout rate of all of the funds at ten percent of account total value, but this estimate is low against others that hold payouts at around twice that. Even 10 percent is twice the rate of required payout at foundations, other than the odd spend-down entity.

Donor-Advised Funds: Charitable Limbo or Democratizing Giving Vehicle? - Non Profit News | Nonprofit Quarterly (2)

We cannot see into the individual funds behind the curtain, which makes concerns over transparency and accountability legitimate concern. Some use their funds as mere passthroughs while others make virtually no grants, letting the assets grow for later in the manner and image of a foundation with intentions of perpetuity but without the usual requirements for payout.

These dual problems of lack of transparency and lack of required payout from individual funds get under the skin of astute observers. In 2012, Rick Cohen comprehensively took on donor-advised funds and found them less than compelling. The article is worth a read in the face of Madoff and Cullman’s criticisms, but in it, he notes an observation of Kim Laughton, CEO of Schwab Charitable.

Schwab Charitable’s DAF payouts routinely top 20 percent. At NPT, Heisman takes pride in the fact that, in the organization’s 16-year history, it has raised $2.5 billion but given away more than $1.4 billion. These are payout ratios that are only approached in the foundation world by spend-down foundations. With payouts that high, the investments of the DAFs in mutual funds, including socially responsible funds (Schwab now offers one managed by Parnassus), move relatively quickly compared to foundation dollars that sit in banks and equities for much longer periods of time. In doing so, DAFs are part of a movement in philanthropy that stands as an alternative to ginormous foundations created by millionaire and billionaire families whose grantmaking is determined by a handful of rich board members. In contrast, DAFs are, dare we say it, an instrument toward democratizing philanthropy, putting more philanthropic decisions into the hands of ordinary Americans who may not be charter members of the one percent club. Hopefully, as technology improves and databases on charities become more widespread and functional beyond just financial measures, and as the nation becomes more aware of easy mechanisms for charitable giving, entities such as Schwab, NPT, and community foundations will attract more donors and stimulate increases in thoughtful, strategic charitable giving.

More transparency and tracking are doubtlessly needed as these entities grow, but if and how growth of DAFs has affected charitable giving for the worse is unclear. According to Madoff, the amount of giving has remained at about two percent of disposable income for the last forty years. At the same time, donor-advised funds have grown from two percent of total giving among the 400 biggest charities in the U.S. in 1991 to eighteen percent in 2015.—Gayle Nelson and Ruth McCambridge

Donor-Advised Funds: Charitable Limbo or Democratizing Giving Vehicle? - Non Profit News | Nonprofit Quarterly (2024)

FAQs

Are donor-advised funds good for nonprofits? ›

Summing up: Why DAFs matter for nonprofits

They drastically simplify the process of non-cash giving for both you and your donors. It's been shown that non-cash fundraising fuels nonprofit growth. Assets contributed to DAFs are immediately liquidated, meaning there's no need for coordination with brokerages.

What is the 2024 National Study on donor Advice funds? ›

The 2024 National Study on Donor Advised Funds includes information about DAFs from 2014 to 2022, covering aspects such as account size, age, type, succession plan, donor demographics, contributions, grants, payout rates, and grantmaking speed. The report represents the most extensive independent study on DAFs to date.

How long can money stay in a donor-advised fund? ›

Donor-advised funds aggregate contributions from multiple donors and aim to democratize philanthropy by accepting contribution bases as low as $5,000. They offer tax advantages of up to 60% of adjusted gross income and can hold funds indefinitely.

What are the disadvantages of donor-advised funds? ›

However, there are drawbacks: once a donation is made, it cannot be retracted and administrative fees can reduce the amount available for grants. Additionally, donors may have limited control over the fund's investments.

What are the criticisms of DAFs? ›

Critics of DAFs say that the government should require them to regularly disburse at least some of their charitable funds. Foundations have faced that kind of obligation for more than five decades.

Can you get your money back from a donor-advised fund? ›

All DAF donations made via The Giving Block are non refundable. We are not able to give refunds if you changed your mind, sent the wrong amount, or made the wrong decision.

Who owns the money in a donor-advised fund? ›

Each account is composed of contributions made by individual donors. Once the donor makes the contribution, the organization has legal control over it.

How much money is sitting in donor-advised funds? ›

According to the NPT report, there was $229 billion sitting in the coffers of DAFs in 2022. Donors gave nearly $86 billion to DAFs, versus $45 billion to private foundations.

What are the disadvantages of DAF? ›

Disadvantages:
  • DAF treatment is not suitable for raw water with high density solids.
  • DAF treatment uses more energy than sedimentation processees because it requires air compression that requires energy.
  • Floated solids can settle in low water temperature and during rain events.
Apr 24, 2024

What happens to a donor-advised fund at death? ›

What happens to a donor advised fund at death? After death, your DAF can continue carrying on your charitable giving legacy. As stated before, your DAF can be passed on to family or a close friend for them to advise, or even divided to make multiple DAF accounts for each successor.

Who benefits from a donor-advised fund? ›

DAFs can be useful in the development of donors' philanthropic vision, strategy and philosophy. DAFs can accept as contributions a wide range of assets such as cash, stock, cryptocurrency and real estate. Donors can support international charities and NGOs and still being eligible to claim a federal tax deduction.

Does a donor-advised fund file a 990? ›

The sponsoring organization of the DAF must submit IRS Form 990 but can keep individual donor records private. Donor-advised funds offer consolidated recordkeeping and tax reporting.

What are prohibited benefits from donor-advised funds? ›

Specifically, DAF grants cannot be used to pay the tax-deductible portion of a ticket if the full cost includes both a tax deductible and non-deductible portion. Additionally, grants may not be used to pay for items or services purchased or won at a charity auction.

What is the difference between a charitable trust and a donor-advised fund? ›

In comparison to other charitable trusts, there are no required distributions, giving donor-advised funds greater flexibility in the types and frequency of disbursem*nts as well as which charities can receive them.

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