The notes below are general — they aren't legal or tax advice. Always check with your attorney, accountant, or financial advisor before finalizing a planned gift.
01
Bequests
A gift in your will or trust is the simplest form of planned giving. Include the appropriate language — we can provide it — and your estate plan does the rest.
Bequest language available on request. We recommend talking with your attorney as you finalize.
02
Appreciated securities
Donating long-held appreciated stock is one of the most tax-efficient ways to give — you avoid capital gains and deduct the full fair-market value.
Our brokerage details are available by phone or email — we'll send instructions to your broker.
03
Charitable IRA rollovers
If you're 70½ or older, you can give directly from your IRA — up to the IRS's annual QCD limit — and have it count toward your required minimum distribution.
Also called a Qualified Charitable Distribution. The distribution goes straight from your IRA custodian to the Symphony.
04
Retirement-account beneficiary
Naming the Cape Ann Symphony as a beneficiary on a retirement account or life-insurance policy is one of the most flexible planned gifts — no will changes required.
Your account custodian provides the beneficiary form. We can be a primary, contingent, or split beneficiary.
05
Charitable Pooled Income Fund
A charitable trust that pays you (or a beneficiary) income for life, with the remainder going to the Symphony — combining lifetime income with a future gift.
Best discussed with your financial advisor. We can connect you with attorneys familiar with the structure.