EFTA01104447.pdf
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Report to Congress on
Supporting Organizations and Donor Advised Funds
Department of the Treasury
December 2011
EFTA01104447
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20220
December 5, 2011
The Honorable Max Baucus
Chairman, Committee on Finance
United States Senate
Washington, DC 20510
Dear Chairman Baucus:
As mandated by section 1226(a) of the Pension Protection Act of 2006 (the PPA), the
Department of the Treasury has conducted a study on the organization and operation of
supporting organizations and donor advised funds. Section 1226(b) of the PPA directs the
Secretary of the Treasury to submit a report on the supporting organization and donor advised
fund study to Congress.
Enclosed is our report on Supporting Organizations and Donor Advised Funds. An identical
letter is addressed to Senator Hatch.
Sincerely,
Emily S. McMahon
Acting Assistant Secretary (Tax Policy)
Enclosure
EFTA01104448
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20220
December 5, 2011
The Honorable Orrin G. Hatch
Ranking Member, Committee on Finance
United States Senate
Washington, DC 20510
Dear Senator Hatch:
As mandated by section 1226(a) of the Pension Protection Act of 2006 (the PPA), the
Department of the Treasury has conducted a study on the organization and operation of
supporting organizations and donor advised funds. Section 1226(b) of the PPA directs the
Secretary of the Treasury to submit a report on the supporting organization and donor advised
fund study to Congress.
Enclosed is our report on Supporting Organizations and Donor Advised Funds. An identical
letter is addressed to Senator Baucus.
Sincerely,
14-6744.4^-_
Emily S. McMahon
Acting Assistant Secretary (Tax Policy)
Enclosure
EFTA01104449
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20220
December 5, 2011
The Honorable Dave Camp
Chairman, Committee on Ways and Means
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, DC 20515
Dear Chairman Camp:
As mandated by section 1226(a) of the Pension Protection Act of 2006 (the PPA), the
Department of the Treasury has conducted a study on the organization and operation of
supporting organizations and donor advised funds. Section 1226(b) of the PPA directs the
Secretary of the Treasury to submit a report on the supporting organization and donor advised
fund study to Congress.
Enclosed is our report on Supporting Organizations and Donor Advised Funds. An identical
letter is addressed to Representative Sander Levin.
Sincerely,
Emily S. McMahon
Acting Assistant Secretary (Tax Policy)
Enclosure
EFTA01104450
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20220
December 5, 2011
The Honorable Sander Levin
Ranking Member, Committee on Ways and Means
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, DC 20515
Dear Representative Levin:
As mandated by section 1226(a) of the Pension Protection Act of 2006 (the PPA), the
Department of the Treasury has conducted a study on the organization and operation of
supporting organizations and donor advised funds. Section 1226(b) of the PPA directs the
Secretary of the Treasury to submit a report on the supporting organization and donor advised
fund study to Congress.
Enclosed is our report on Supporting Organizations and Donor Advised Funds. An identical
letter is addressed to Representative Dave Camp.
Sincerely,
Emily S. McMahon
Acting Assistant Secretary (Tax Policy)
Enclosure
EFTA01104451
Table of Contents
Chapter I: Introduction and Summary 1
Mandate and Scope of the Study
Executive Summary and Major Findings 5
Chapter 2: Description of Federal Tax Law Treatment of Charities, Supporting Organizations, and Donor
Advised Funds 9
Public Charities vs. Private Foundations
SOs 20
DAFs 21
PPA Changes 22
Changes to the Law Governing SOs 23
Changes to the Law Governing DAF Sponsoring Organizations 25
Regulatory Guidance 27
Chapter 3: Empirical Description and Analysis of SOs and DAFs 28
Public Charities and Private Foundations 28
SOs 32
DAFs 44
DAF Account Requirements at Commercial NDAFs 62
Conclusions 63
Chapter 4: Public Comments on SOs and DAFs 65
General Comments about SOs 66
General Comments about DAFs 67
Donor Advice and Control 68
Charitable Contribution Deduction 69
Distribution Requirements 71
Payout Requirement for SOs 72
Payout Requirement for Non-functionally Integrated Type III SOs 73
EFTA01104452
Payout Requirement for DAFs 73
Distribution Requirements and Perpetual Existence 74
Expected Effects of the PPA 75
Effects on SOs 75
Effects on DAFs 76
Proposals from Respondents 77
Chapter 5: Answering Congressional Questions 79
Charitable Contribution Deduction 80
Distribution Requirements 81
Other Forms of Charity 82
Conclusion 83
Appendix A: Selected Bibliography 84
Appendix B: Congressional Mandate 88
Appendix C: Data Appendix 89
Appendix D: Notice 2006-109 92
Appendix E: Notice 2007-21 104
Tables
Table 2.1: Summary of Major Distinctions among Private Foundations, Public Charities, SOs, and DAF
Sponsoring Organizations Post-PPA 16
Table 3.1: Public Charity and Private Foundation Information Returns, and Exempt Organization
Business Income Tax Returns, Selected Financial Data, 1985-2006 30
Table 3.2: Supporting Organizations, by Type, 2006 33
Table 3.3: Supporting Organizations, by Sector, 2006 38
Table 3.4: Reported Support and Related Activities of Supported Organizations, 2006 42
Table 3.5: DAF Sponsoring Organizations by Sector, 2006 47
Table 3.6: Education Sector DAF Sponsoring Organizations, 2006 53
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Table 3.7: Distribution of Aggregate DAF Values and Payout Rates of DAF Sponsoring Organizations,
2006 56
Table 3.8: Non-cash Property Donations to DAF Sponsoring Organizations, by Type of Property and
Type of DAF Sponsoring Organization, 2005 61
Table 4.1: Public Comments to Notice 2007-21, by Type of Respondent 66
Table C.1: Original Reported and Adjusted Values of DAF Information, Unweighted, 2006 91
Figures
Figure 2.1: Types of Section 501(c)(3) Organizations 10
Figure 2.2: Donor's Tradeoffs between Establishing or Contributing to a Public Charity versus a Private
Foundation 14
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Chapter 1: Introduction and Summary
Mandate and Scope of the Study
Title XII of the Pension Protection Act of 2006, Pub. L. 109-280, 120 Stat. 780 (2006) (the PPA)
made numerous changes to provisions of the Internal Revenue Code (the Code) addressing
charitable giving and tax-exempt organizations. t Particular changes to the law were made
regarding supporting organizations (SOs) and charitable giving arrangements commonly referred
to as donor advised funds (DAFs). The legislation provided a statutory definition of the term
"donor advised fund" and modified the statutory definition of "supporting organization."
Section 1226 of the PPA directs the Secretary of the Treasury to undertake a study on the
organization and operation of SOs and DAFs and submit the findings to Congress. This report
provides the results of Treasury's analysis of SOs and DAFs and responds to the questions posed
by Congress.
Tax-exempt charitable organizations perform a wide variety of activities, including providing
food, clothing, shelter, and other services to the needy; providing religious services; and
maintaining research, educational, and cultural institutions. Others engage in indirect charitable
activities, including providing support and grants to other charitable institutions. DAFs and
many SOs engage in this latter type of charitable activity. In recent years, they have become
increasingly relevant in the charitable sector, in terms of both their numbers and their assets.
The Code first defined an SO in 1969, and the PPA modified this definition. An SO is a public
charity that supports another closely related public charity—the supported organization. Support
may take the form of monetary payments or direct services to the supported organization, or
charitable activity that furthers the charitable purpose of the supported organization. The SO
derives its public charity status through its relationship with its supported organization and is
therefore not required to qualify separately as a public charity, e.g., by meeting a public support
test. An organization may be an SO to more than one supported organization.
The relationship between the SO and its supported organization may be very close, e.g., board
members of the supported organization may control the board of the SO, or more distant. Based
on the type of relationship between the SO and its supported organization, the SO is categorized
as a Type I, Type II, or Type III SO. (See the discussion below.) Familiar examples of SOs
include university alumni associations that conduct activities promoting the alma mater and
organizations that serve as the "parent organization" in non-profit hospital systems.
The PPA added the first statutory definition of the term "donor advised fund" to the Code,
although this form of charitable giving arrangement has existed for more than 70 years. The
Code now defines a DAF as a fund or account at a qualified public charity—referred to in the
law as the "sponsoring organization" of the DAF—over which a donor or a donor-appointed
advisor retains advisory privileges regarding the investment and/or distribution of assets in the
I The text of the Act is available at http://fnvebgaie.access.gpo.govicgi-
bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=l09 cong public laws&docid=f:pub1280.109.pdf. (Last accessed December I, 2011.)
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account; thus the name "donor advised fund."2 The sponsoring organization generally heeds the
recommendations from the donor but is not compelled to do so.
In common parlance, the acronym "DAF' is sometimes used interchangeably to describe both an
individual donor account maintained by the sponsoring organization and the aggregate collection
of donor accounts at that sponsoring organization. In some cases where the sponsoring
organization does not engage in other charitable activities beyond the management of DAFs, the
acronym "DAF' has even been used to describe the sponsoring organization itself. In this report,
the term "DAF' refers to the individual donor-advised account consisting of the donor's (or
donors') contributions and any returns on those contributions credited to the account. For
expository purposes, in this report the term "Aggregate DAF' refers to the aggregate collection
of the DAFs maintained by a single sponsoring organization, which are subject to the rules and
procedures established by the sponsoring organization. A donor can establish multiple DAFs at
a single sponsoring organization.
A variety of charities sponsor DAFs, including charitable organizations formed by financial
institutions for the principal purpose of offering DAFs, community foundations, universities,
SOs, and other tax-exempt organizations that may have a range of endowment funds or
charitable activities they support. The sponsoring organization generally distributes grants from
the DAF's assets to charities engaged in direct charitable activities. The sponsoring organization
might also engage in other activities to support the grant recipients or the community in other
ways, i.e., maintaining DAFs may be the sole purpose of the sponsoring organization or one of
many things it does. However, the DAF's assets are generally used for grant-making; the
grantee organization generally provides direct charitable services.
At the time of donation, a charitable contribution deduction is generally available to the donor
for contributions to an SO or a DAF. The SO or the DAF sponsoring organization owns and
controls the donated assets and all investment returns from those assets. In some circumstances,
a donor to an SO may be in a position to exert influence over investment and distribution of the
SO's assets, e.g., if the donor serves as an officer of the SO or as a member of its governing
board. As a legal matter, however, the donor has no right to control the manner in which the SO
uses the particular funds contributed to the SO by the donor. In the case of a DAF, the donor is
explicitly permitted to advise the sponsoring organization about how the donated funds should be
invested and/or disbursed to other charities, but such advice is subject to the DAF sponsoring
organization's ultimate discretion and control.
Concerns regarding donor influence or control over SOs and DAFs culminated in changes to the
law included in the PPA, which also directed the Department of the Treasury (Treasury) to
promulgate regulations addressing SOs.3 Although the PPA focused largely on pension reform,
2
A DAF may be contributed to by more than one donor. The donor may appoint an advisor to exercise the advisory
privileges related to the DAF. When referring to advisory privileges throughout this report, the term "donor" also
refers to an appointed advisor.
3 On August 2, 2007, Treasury and the IRS issued an advance notice of proposed rulemaking, "Payout Requirements
for Type HI Supporting Organizations That Are Not Functionally Integrated" (72 Fed. Reg. 148) that described rules
Treasury and the IRS intended to propose to implement the PM changes to Type III SO requirements. The advance
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it contained a substantial subtitle on charitable reform. The charitable reforms included, among
others:
• New reporting requirements for SOs. Most SOs are now required to file IRS Form 990,
"Return of Organization Exempt from Income Tax" (Form 990), a Federal return for tax
exempt organizations, regardless of the amount of their gross receipts. An SO is required to
list its supported organization(s); indicate whether the SO is a Type I, Type II, or Type III
SO; and certify that the organization is not donor-controlled.
• Payout requirement for non-functionally integrated Type III SOs. Type III SOs that
primarily make grants to their supported organizations—referred to as non-functionally
integrated Type III SOs-will face a revised, annual payout requirement designed to ensure
that a significant amount is paid to their supported organizations. Non-functionally
integrated Type III SOs were newly defined in the PPA. (See the discussion below.)
• Additional excess benefit transaction rules for SOs. SOs are subject to new excess benefit
transaction rules intended to curb loans to disqualified persons and grants, loans,
compensation, and other similar payments from an SO to substantial contributors or their
related parties.
• New reporting requirements for DAFs. Sponsoring organizations are required to report on
Form 990 the total number of DAFs held, the aggregate value of assets in those DAFs, and
the aggregate contributions to and grants from those DAFs during the tax year.
• New excise taxes for DAFs. DAF sponsoring organizations are subject to a new 20 percent
excise tax on any distribution from a DAF made to an individual or to an entity either for any
non-charitable purpose or if the sponsoring organization fails to exercise expenditure
responsibility. In addition, any fund manager of the sponsoring organization who knowingly
approves a taxable distribution is subject to a five percent excise tax on the amount of the
distribution.
There is also a new 125 percent excise tax on donors, advisors, or related parties for
distributions from a DAF that benefit (more than incidentally) a donor, advisor, family
member, or certain controlled entities of the donor or advisor. In addition, any fund manager
that approves of such a distribution, knowing that it will confer a more-than-incidental
benefit, is subject to a ten percent excise tax on the amount of the benefit.
• Additional excess benefit transaction rules for DAFs. DAF sponsoring organizations are
subject to new excess benefit transaction rules intended to curb grants, loans, compensation,
and other similar payments from a DAF to donors, advisors, or their related parties.
notice also solicited comments regarding the proposed rules. On September 24, 2009, Treasury and the IRS issued
proposed regulations (74 Fed. Reg. 48672) addressing the requirements for Type III SOs. These proposed
regulations are referred to below as the "Proposed SO Regulations." The Proposed SO Regulations state that they
are proposed to be effective on the date of publication of final regulations. The text of the Proposed SO Regulations
(REG-155929-06) is found on page 665 of Internal Revenue Bulletin 200947 at http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-
irbs/irb09-47.pdf. (Last accessed December I, 2011.)
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• Application of excess business holdings rules for DAFs. The PPA extended the private
foundation excess business holdings rules to DAFs and also provided a definition of
"disqualified person" for purposes of applying these rules to DAFs.
As part of the PPA, Congress requested that Treasury undertake a study of the organization and
operation of DAFs and SOs, with specific consideration of the following:4
1. Whether the Existing Deduction Rules for Contributions to DAFs and SOs are
Appropriate: Specifically, whether the deductions allowed for income, gift, or estate tax
purposes for charitable contributions to DAFs and SOs are appropriate in consideration of the
use of the contributed assets (including the type, extent, and timing of such use) or of the use
of the assets of such organizations for the benefit of the person making the charitable
contribution (or a related person).
Donors to DAF sponsoring organizations and SOs, like donors to other public charities, are
generally allowed to claim a current year charitable contribution deduction for a larger
percentage of their income donated to these entities than if they had donated to private
foundations.
2. Whether DAFs Should be Subject to a Distribution Requirement: Specifically, whether
a DAF should be required to distribute for charitable purposes a specified amount (whether
based on the income or assets of the fund) in order to ensure that the sponsoring organization
is operating in a manner consistent with the purposes or functions constituting the basis for
its exempt status.
As discussed below, private foundations, which share some functional characteristics with
DAFs, are required to distribute five percent of their assets annually.5 Under current law,
DAF sponsoring organizations have no distribution requirement for DAF assets, either at the
individual DAF level or in aggregate.
3. Whether an Advisory Role in the Investment or Distribution of Donated Funds is
Consistent with a Completed Gift: Specifically, whether the retention by a donor of rights
or privileges with respect to amounts transferred to a DAF or an SO (including advisory
rights or privileges with respect to the making of grants or the investment of assets) is
consistent with the treatment of the transfer as a completed gift that qualifies for a deduction
for income, gift, or estate tax purposes.
Under current law, a charitable gift is not considered to be "complete"—and no charitable
deduction is allowed—if the donor maintains control over the gift, its sale, or further use.
The mandate for the study, which contains the precise language for the questions Congress posed, is found in
Appendix B.
5 Private foundations are classified as either operating or non•operating foundations. The former conduct direct
charitable activities, whereas the latter tend to be grant•making entities. Non-operating foundations comprised more
than 90 percent of private foundations in 2006, and grant•making non-operating private foundations comprised more
than 80 percent of private foundations. In common parlance, the modifier "non-operating" is often omitted when
discussing private foundations. Unless otherwise noted, the use of "private foundations" below refers to non-
operating private foundations.
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4. Other Forms of Charity: Whether the issues described in questions 1-3 are also issues with
respect to other forms of charities or charitable donations.
This report presents Treasury's analysis of the questions posed by Congress. Chapter 2 contains
a description of the Federal tax law treatment of charities, including SOs and DAF sponsoring
organizations. Chapter 3: contains a statistical overview of SOs and DAF sponsoring
organizations. Chapter 4: contains a summary of public comments that Treasury and the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS) solicited and received on topics related to SOs and DAFs. In particular,
Treasury and the IRS asked the public to provide input on the questions asked by Congress and
to evaluate the steps taken in the PPA to improve compliance and limit abuse. Chapter 5:
concludes the study with Treasury's answers to the questions posed by Congress.
Executive Summary and Major Findings
The data collected by the IRS, along with the public comments, provide the following insights:
• Charities are increasingly large and complex in terms of their operations, assets, and
activities. SOs and DAFs play an important role in the charitable sector.
— During tax year 2006, SOs received $94.1 billion in total revenue, had total expenses of
$72.5 billion—including $11.5 billion in grants paid, $4.0 billion in payments to
affiliates, and $46.9 billion in program expenses—and had a net worth of $226.7 billion
at the end of the year. SOs that support organizations that provide medical and dental
care for low-income households, work with hospital patients and employees, and conduct
health research had the largest revenue, expenses, and net worth.
— During tax year 2006, DAF sponsoring organizations received $59.5 billion in revenue,
including $9.0 billion in contributions to DAFs. These sponsoring organizations had total
expenses of $37.7 billion—including $5.7 billion in grants paid from DAF assets, $6.8
billion in other grants paid, and $20.7 billion in program expenses—and had a net worth
of $211.3 billion at the end of the year. (Assets in DAFs are a subset of these amounts.
See below.)
• Prior to tax year 2006, the data available on DAFs were very limited. Recent changes in
reporting are expected to improve the data available for analysis over time.° Beginning with
tax year 2006, the Form 990 required DAF sponsoring organizations to report the total
number of DAFs they owned, the aggregate value of assets held in their DAFs, and the
aggregate contributions to and grants from their DAFs. This will make it possible to
calculate aggregate payout rates at the sponsoring organization level, monitor certain trends
related to DAFs, and compare payout rates of Aggregate DAFs with those of private
6
When new information is requested on a tax form, taxpayers often face a learning curve in filling out the form
properly. As taxpayers work with their tax advisors and the IRS, the quality of the data submitted by taxpayers
tends to improve over time. The analysis of Form 990 for 2006—the first year for which complete data were
available for use in time for this report—indicates a similar pattern is likely to develop for information related to
DAFs. See Data Appendix C for additional discussion.
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foundations.? (Information on individual DAFs is unavailable.) Beginning with tax year
2008, sponsoring organizations report the aggregate data on their DAFs and similar accounts
in a separate section.
• IRS data indicate that in tax year 2006, the 2,398 DAF sponsoring organizations had 160,000
DAFs. The assets in these DAFs were valued at $31.1 billion as of the end of tax year 2006.
— Aggregate DAFs sponsored by the charitable arms of financial institutions (commercial
NDAFs) had an average of $424.5 million in total assets and median assets of $58.9
million, the largest among the broad categories of organizations that sponsor DAFs.8
— The average payout rate across all Aggregate DAFs in 2006 was 9.3 percent.9 Aggregate
DAFs sponsored by community foundations had an average payout rate that matched the
overall average. Among the commercial NDAFs, the average payout rate was 14.2
percent. Other NDAFs had an average payout rate of 28.7 percent.
• Respondents to the solicitation for public comments noted that while it was generally true
that the DAF sponsoring organizations approved most donor grant recommendations,
approval was not automatic.
— In general, sponsoring organizations reported that they have specific guidelines
applicable to grants from DAFs, and they ensure that the guidelines are followed and that
their donors and grantees are made aware of the restrictions applicable to them. The
sponsoring organizations serve as intermediaries that match charitable needs with the
charitable preferences of their donors.
• Therefore, the fact that DAFs have high approval rates for donor recommendations is not in
itself indicative of donors' exerting excessive control over their donated assets. The public
comments correctly point out that high approval rates for grant recommendations are not
sufficient to support the claim that the gifts should not be considered "complete."
The insights above inform Treasury's answers to the questions Congress posed.
7 The payout rates reported for DAFs and private foundations are not strictly comparable due to computation
differences and differences in information collected on Form 990 for DAF sponsoring organizations and information
collected on Form 990•PF for private foundations.
3 DAF sponsoring organizations that have national reach and whose primary role is to serve as intermediaries
between donors and a broad range of charities providing direct charitable services by sponsoring and maintaining
DAFs and other similar charitable funds will be referred to in this study as NDAFs. The subset of NDAFs that is
sponsored by charitable affiliates of financial institutions will be referred to as commercial NDAFs, and the NDAFs
that are not sponsored by such organizations will be referred to as other NDAFs.
9 The payout rate for an Aggregate DAF is calculated by dividing the total grants from DAFs at a given sponsoring
organization by DAF assets available for grant•making at that sponsoring organization (i.e., the value of aggregate
DAF assets at year end plus the value of grants made from DAFs during the year). The average payout rate across
the Aggregate DAFs is the arithmetic mean of the payout rates across all Aggregate DAFs. For further discussion,
see page 58.
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• The PPA appears to have provided a legal structure to address abusive practices and
accommodate innovations in the sector without creating undue additional burden or new
opportunities for abuse.
• Although donors may prefer making gifts of appreciated property to SOs and DAFs, rather
than to private foundations, in order to take a larger charitable contribution deduction, they
may do so only if they are willing not only to part with control of the assets, but also to give
the assets to organizations they do not control. Because contributions to DAF sponsoring
organizations and SOs, like contributions to other public charities, are generally to
organizations the donor doesn't control, the deduction rules are appropriate.
• There may be a lag between when a donor contributes assets to a DAF sponsoring
organization or an SO—and may claim a charitable contribution deduction—and when the
donated assets are used for direct charitable activities. The issue of the lag between
contribution and final use of assets is no different at DAF sponsoring organizations and SOs
than it is for other public charities that may operate charitable funds or maintain
endowments. Thus, it is appropriate that the contribution deduction rules faced by donors to
SOs and DAF sponsoring organizations are the same as those applicable to donors to other
public charities.
• Several provisions of the Code address issues related to donor benefit. A charitable
deduction is disallowed to the extent that a donor receives benefits that are of more than
insubstantial value in exchange for the contribution. In addition, an organization's tax-
exempt status may be revoked if it operates to benefit private interests, such as those of its
donors, or if it does not further a charitable purpose. Further, the Code contains deterrents in
the form of excise taxes both on a donor who receives excess benefits from a public charity
and on the charity's managers if they knowingly approved the transaction conferring the
benefit. The PPA also enacted new provisions in the form of taxes designed to deter SOs,
DAF sponsoring organizations, and their donors from allowing donors to receive certain
payments or any improper benefits from an SO or DAF.
• Compared to private foundations, the mean payout rates for Aggregate DAFs in tax year
2006 appear to be high for most categories of DAF sponsoring organizations.10 It would be
premature to recommend a distribution requirement for DAFs at this point. As more years of
data become available, analysis of trends with respect to DAF sponsoring organizations and
the DAF assets they administer will be possible.
• Current law disallows a charitable contribution deduction for a contribution to any charity
that does not meet the standard of a completed gift, including in the case of a gift to a DAF or
SO. However, as is the case with gifts to other charities, if all existing tax and other legal
requirements are met, donations to a DAF or an SO may be completed gifts and become the
property of the donee organization. Although donee organizations may feel an obligation to
10 This is relative to the roughly five percent payout rate observed for private non-operating foundations. However,
note that while these percentages provide some perspective on payout policy and practice, payout rates for DAFs
and private foundations are not directly comparable because of differences in definitions of qualified expenditures,
distributions, and assets reported by DAF sponsoring organizations and private foundations, which affect
calculations of payout rates.
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use donated funds in a manner preferred by the donor, especially when subsequent
contributions may be desired, there is nothing unique about DAFs or SOs in this regard and,
in fact, they have no legal obligation to follow the preference of the donor.
• As the effects of the PPA and the new regulations become clearer over time, Treasury looks
forward to working with Congress to determine whether additional legislation or reporting is
necessary.
8
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Chapter 2: Description of Federal Tax Law Treatment of Charities,
Supporting Organizations, and Donor Advised Funds
An organization that meets the requirements of section 501(c)(3) of the Code may be recognized
as exempt from Federal income tax." The requirements include that the organization must be
organized and operated exclusively for religious, charitable, scientific, testing for public safety,
literary, or educational purposes; to foster national or international amateur sports competition;
or for the prevention of cruelty to children or animals. In addition, the organization must serve a
public rather than a private interest." No part of the organization's net earnings may inure to the
benefit of organizational insiders," and only incidental private benefits may accrue to others.
Lobbying must not be a substantial part of the organization's activities, and the organization may
not participate or intervene in political campaign activities.
The Code also confers a benefit on individuals and corporations who donate to section 501(c)(3)
organizations in the form of a charitable contribution deduction. The rules for charitable
contribution deductions are set forth in section 170 of the Code and distinguish between types of
donors (individuals or corporations), types of donees (public charities or private foundations),
and types of prorrty contributed (e.g., cash, capital gain property, ordinary income property,
and inventory).'
It is important to keep in mind that both donors—through the charitable contribution
deduction—and section 501(c)(3) organizations—through the income tax exemption—receive
benefits under the Code. The PPA's provisions largely affect the rules under which SOs and
DAF sponsoring organizations must operate to avoid excise taxes and maintain their tax-exempt
status. However, the questions Congress posed relate both to these rules and to the rules
governing the tax benefits donors receive.
The legal treatment of charitable organizations in general, and SOs and DAF sponsoring
organizations in particular, provides background and guidance for Treasury's answers to the
Congressional questions. This chapter provides an overview of the Federal tax law treatment of
the wide variety of charities—in terms of their organizational structure and charitable activity—
covered by section 501(c)(3) of the Code and associated regulations. Figure 2.1 displays the
classification of these charities and serves as a roadmap for the first part of the chapter. The
second part of the chapter outlines the provisions of the PPA that affect SOs, DAFs, and their
donors.
To operate as a section 501(c)(3) organization, the organization generally must apply for and receive recognition
of tax-exempt status by the IRS and comply with all applicable rules governing reporting and activity. Generally,
houses of worship are presumed to be exempt and are not required to apply for IRS recognition of their exempt
status.
12 See Treas. Reg. § 1.501(c)(3)-I.
13 In this context, inurement means private benefits resulting from the use of the assets of the exempt organization.
14 Contributions made to public charities are generally subject to more favorable deduction rules than are
contributions to private foundations. These rules are discussed in more detail in the following section.
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Figure 2.1: Universe of Section 501(()(3) Organizations
501(()(3)
Organizations
(Operated for
Charitable
Purposes)
509(a) Private
Public Charities Foundations
(a)(1) (a)(2) (a)(3) Operating
Churches, `:lore than one- Supporting (Primarily Non-operating
schools, third public Organizations provides dire(' (Primarily grant-
hospitals, support charitable making)
substantial parr. services)
public support
I Qualifying dist. C..jualifying dist.
Sponsoring Type I SO Type II SO Type III SO Must expend 85% 5% of assets
organization c.t: arent/Subsidiary Brother/Sister Operated in of net income (up
DM:1- I pAationship with relationship with connection with to 4.25% of
supported supported supported assets) actively
4 ganization(s) organization(s) organization(s) conducting its
exempt activities
and either expend
3 1/3% of fair
market value of
assets on such
Functionally Integrated Non-functionally Integrated activities or meet
Type III SO Type Ill SO an assets test
No expenditure requirement Payout: 85°A of adj. net income
'Subject to certain restrictions, most organizations described in section 509(a) of the C ode may be a DAF sponsoring organization, although m ost sponsoring
organisations are described by section 50 9(aXI ) of the Code
10
EFTA01104464
Public Charities vs. Private Foundations
Since 1969, a tax-exempt charity described in section 501(c)(3) is classified as either a private
foundation or a public charity.° In general, a public charity is distinguished from a private
foundation by the level of public support or oversight the organization receives. The greater the
degree of public support or oversight, the greater the likelihood the organization is a public
charity. Organizations that are funded and controlled by only a few donors—an individual,
family, or corporation—tend to be classified as private foundations.
Section 509(a) defines the organizations that qualify for public charity status. A charitable
organization that is not described in section 509(a)(1), (2), (3), or (4), outlined below, is, by
default, classified as a private foundation.
• 509(a)(1): Organizations described in Code section 170(b)(1)(A) (other than in clauses (vii)
and (viii)).
— Churches, educational institutions, hospitals, medical research organizations, and
organizations that normally receive a substantial part 16 of their support from direct or
indirect contributions from the general public or a governmental unit.
• 509(a)(2): Organizations that normally receive more than one-third of their support from
gifts, grants, contributions, membership fees, and gross receipts from the performance of
activities related to their exempt function and not more than one-third of their support from
investment income.
— Museums, theaters and other organizations with support from numerous donors or
government grants, or that generate revenue from their exempt function.
• 509(a)(3): Organizations that are organized and operated exclusively for the benefit of, to
perform the functions of, or to carry out the purposes of one or more specified organizations
described in section 509(a)(1) or 509(a)(2).
— This defines SOs. An SO qualifies as a public charity through its relationship with the
public charity (or charities) it supports. SOs are discussed further below.
• 509(a)(4): Organizations organized and operated exclusively for testing for public safety.
A charity's classification as a private foundation or a public charity has important consequences
in terms of the rules under which it must operate and the tax benefits its donors receive. Private
IS See the Tax Reform Act of 1969, Pub. L. 91.172 (the 1969 Act), which enacted Chapter 42 of the Code.
IS The regulations under section 170 of the Code provide that an organization is treated as normally receiving a
substantial part of its support from public sources if it meets either a one-third public support test or a facts and
circumstances test. The facts and circumstances test requires that an organization receive at least ten percent of its
total support from public sources and that it be organized and operated so as to attract new and additional public or
governmental support on a continuous basis. The regulations set forth a number of factors that will be taken into
account in the facts and circumstances analysis, including, for example, whether the organization's governing board
represents the broad interests of the public or is dominated by a single donor or family. See generally Treas. Reg.
1.170A-9T(f).
11
EFTA01104465
foundations "—typically controlled by their donors and persons related to their donors—are
subject to more restrictions on their activities than public charities, including an excise tax on net
investment income and mandatory distribution requirements. More specifically:
• Excise taxes are imposed on acts of "self-dealing," including sales or exchanges, or leasing
of property; lending of money; and the furnishing of goods, services, or facilities between a
private foundation and a disqualified person, e.g., a foundation insider. Public charities are
permitted to engage in insider transactions as long as there is no excess benefit to the insider
(i.e., the transaction is at fair market value).
• Private foundations are subject to an excise tax on their net investment income at a rate of
two percent (reduced to one percent if certain requirements are met). Private foundations are
also subject to excise taxes if they have excess business holdings; make jeopardizing
investments; or make taxable expenditures, e.g., expenditures for lobbying or political
activities and expenditures for non-charitable purposes.
• Generally, private foundations are required to pay out five percent of the fair market value of
their assets (other than assets devoted to direct charitable use) as qualifying distributions to
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