> You're considering a lifetime gift in
partnership with the UT Health Science Center
> Your
planning objective is increased income
> Your
preference is a variable income payout
> You want to
retain flexibility in the management of your
gift

A planned gift to the Brown
Foundation Institute of Molecular
Medicine for the Prevention of
Human Diseases could help provide
the advanced technology needed
for scientists like Dr. Rick Wetzel
and Ph.D. student Travis Hollmann
to conduct mouse stem cell
research to generate models of
human
disease.
The Charitable Remainder Unitrust is the most flexible gift plan that The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston offers. The unitrust addresses multiple financial and family needs, unlocking your ability to make a significant gift to us.

The unitrust is designed to pay you income as a fixed percentage of gradually increasing principal. We offer an alternative version designed to hold a temporarily illiquid asset or a portfolio of growth securities for a period of time, while it pays the beneficiaries the lesser of the unitrust amount or the trust's actual net income. Called a net-income unitrust, this option is especially useful to donors who want to make a gift and secure a tax deduction now but who don't need income back immediately
Who Should Be Trustee?
A unitrust is a separate legal entity administered by a trustee. The Health Science Center can serve as trustee of your unitrust, or you or another person or institution can serve as trustee. We currently administer several charitable trusts and do not charge you a fee for our services. (We do ask a minimum gift of $50,000 to establish a unitrust for which we will serve as trustee.) Alternately, you may wish to follow your or your advisors' investment strategies. Whichever option you choose, our Office of Gift and Estate Planning can share sample trust forms and discuss the details of establishing the unitrust with you and your advisors.
A net-income unitrust can continue in that format for its entire term, or it can make up the accrued difference between actual income payments and the unitrust amount in years when it earns surplus income. An attractive option is the flip unitrust, which changes from an income-only payout to a fixed-percentage distribution when a pre-arranged event occurs – such as the beneficiary turning 65 or the building in the unitrust being sold.
A net-income unitrust can change its investments to income instruments with no capital gains liability. Therefore, it is an attractive tool for younger donors to build a supplementary retirement or tuition fund that will grow tax-free, then distribute income when they and their family need it most.
The Office of Gift and Estate Planning can assist you and your advisors in considering the alternative of a net-income unitrust.
You're considering a gift to the UT Health Science Center of $250,000, but you're concerned about the capital gains consequences of liquidating assets, and about reducing your and your spouse's cash flow. Indeed, you're looking for increased income, since you've committed to helping with your grandchildren's tuition. Your portfolio contains a small commercial building that has grown in value and which has generated several offers to purchase. You decide to place the building into a net-income unitrust which will pay lifetime income (initially the rental income from the building, then a percentage of the proceeds of its sale) to you and your wife. The remainder of the unitrust will go to the Health Science Center.
What are your benefits?
Donors: Husband and Wife, 70 and
68 |
|||
Comparison |
Unitrust |
Private Sale |
|
Amount transferred |
$250,000 |
$250,000 |
|
Capital Gains Tax (@20%): |
0 |
$25,000 |
|
Net for reinvestment |
$250,000 |
$225,000 |
|
Income rate |
5% |
5% |
|
First year's income |
$12,500 |
$11,250 |
|
Charitable deduction |
$102,255 |
0 |
|
Tax savings @ 35% rate |
$35,789 |
0 |
|
Total benefit, first year |
$48,289* |
$11,250 |
|
* Unitrust payment plus tax savings
from charitable deduction |
|||
Note: The unitrust is not the only gift plan that pays you lifetime income. Compare its benefits with those of the annuity trust. |
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How Do You Create a Charitable Unitrust?
Setting up a charitable remainder unitrust is not particularly difficult, but you should be advised by an attorney with expertise in the area of charitable trusts and estate planning. To save you time and expense, we can provide you with an initial draft of the unitrust agreement for review by you and your attorney. Once your trust agreement is signed, you can "fund" your unitrust by transferring assets to your trustee.
The University of Texas Health Science Center at
Houston
7000 Fannin, Suite 1200
Houston, TX
77030
713-500-3200 | 713-500-3216 (fax)
E-mail: Shirley.Druggan@uth.tmc.edu