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Smart Charitable Giving: Tax Strategies That Maximize Impact

How to give more to charity and pay less in taxes — donor-advised funds, QCDs, appreciated securities, and bunching. The strategies that increase both.

Kike Faúndez
Written by
Founder of CashControlly
Published on 7 min read
Tools7 min read

The standard deduction increase from the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act reduced itemizers from 30% to 10% of filers. But strategic charitable giving can still generate meaningful tax savings — and sometimes more giving for the same after-tax cost.

Strategy 1: Donate appreciated securities (not cash)

If you own stock worth $10,000 that you paid $2,000 for: selling it triggers $8,000 capital gains taxed at 15–23.8%. Instead, donate the shares directly to charity. You avoid the capital gains entirely AND deduct the full $10,000 fair market value. Net effect: same charitable gift, $1,200–$1,904 more tax savings.

Strategy 2: Donor-advised fund (DAF)

A DAF lets you contribute assets (cash, stock, cryptocurrency) now, get the full tax deduction immediately, and grant the funds to charities over time (months or years later). Useful for "bunching" — giving 2–3 years of planned charitable donations in one year to exceed the standard deduction threshold.

Major DAF providers: Fidelity Charitable (no minimum), Schwab Charitable ($5,000 minimum), Vanguard Charitable ($25,000 minimum).

Strategy 3: Qualified Charitable Distribution (QCD) for IRA owners 70½+

If you're 70½ or older with a traditional IRA: you can transfer up to $105,000/year (2026) directly from your IRA to charity. This QCD satisfies your RMD requirement and is excluded from income — the charitable deduction is built-in. For people who don't itemize, this is a way to get the equivalent of a charitable deduction regardless.

The bunching strategy

Standard deduction: $15,000 (single) / $30,000 (MFJ). If your charitable giving is $5,000/year: you typically can't itemize. Instead, donate $10,000 every other year. In giving years, you itemize ($10,000 donations + other deductions). In off years, you take the standard deduction. Net effect: same total giving, potentially $1,500–$2,500 more in deductions over 2 years.

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About the author

Kike Faúndez
Kike Faúndez
Founder of CashControlly · Santiago, Chile

Enrique 'Kike' Faúndez is an Information Systems and Management Control Engineer from Universidad de Chile, with master’s degrees in Finance from Universidad de Chile and Industrial Engineering from Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. He has 15+ years of experience in regulated financial services across finance, operations, and digital product development. He founded CashControlly in Santiago, Chile, with the conviction that personal financial control should not be a privilege, but an accessible and well-designed tool.

Credentials
  • Master's in Finance, Universidad de Chile
  • Master's in Industrial Engineering, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
  • Information Systems and Management Control Engineer, Universidad de Chile
  • AI and ITIL certifications
  • 15+ years in regulated financial services
Learn more about the founder

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