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You spent many years in college and medical school. They may have been the best years of your life or the hardest, but your
degrees opened a lot of doors. Maybe you've decided you want to give something back.
You've probably received information on planned giving from your alma mater. Do those vehicles make sense? Or are there better
ways for you to go about making a donation? We checked with development offices, CPAs, and financial advisers to find out
the most advantageous way to make a gift. (Don't forget to consult with your attorney, too, if you're concerned about coordinating
your donation with your estate plan.)
Donate to the general fund or earmark your gift?
If you don't have a specific cause in mind, then your donation will be an unrestricted gift. In fact, if your gift is under
$1,000, it'll go further if it goes into a general fund. If you're making a larger gift, however, you might want to specify
where the money is spent. For ideas, call the dean and ask where the need is greatest. "The key is to find out what's happening at your school that
really triggers your interest or pride. Find out if the school is sponsoring research or initiatives that you'd like to support,"
says Colby Collier, executive director of development at NYU Medical Center. Or maybe you'd like to direct your donation toward
your specialty. Call the director of that division at your medical school and ask, "What's going on there that's exciting?"
If you benefited from scholarship money, perhaps you'd like your gift pooled with other scholarship funds. "Young people who
intend to go into primary care are tempted to go into a subspecialty so that they can make more money and pay off their debt
quickly," says Frank Reider, director of communications for Medical Center advancement at Georgetown University, where the
most urgent need is student financial aid. "We're hoping to provide more money for scholarships so that more of these students
can continue into primary care." For more information about one program that supports this effort.
Cash or securities: Which is best?
The easiest way to make a gift is to write a check. However, for a doctor in midcareer, a gift of appreciated securities or
mutual funds that have racked up significant capital gains is probably the best bet. So check to see if you own any of these
investments. Donating appreciated securities benefits you in several ways, says tax attorney David Schiller of Norristown,
PA. He points out that if you were to sell the securities instead, you'd have to pay tax on the capital gains. However, when
you donate the securities, you pay no capital gains tax. You also get a charitable donation based on the fair market value
of the appreciated stocks or funds.
For example, say you paid $30,000 for a stock that's now worth $75,000. You donate it to your alma mater, which sells the
securities, but doesn't have to pay any capital gains tax. Nor do you owe any capital gains on the $45,000 of unrealized gain.
But you get a tax deduction based on the stock's appreciated value of $75,000.
This strategy works as long as you've owned the securities for more than one year. If you've held them for less time, your
deduction is based on the amount that you paid for the stock. So, in the example above, your deduction would be limited to
$30,000.
What if you're looking to unload a stock that's gone down since you bought it-say, you paid $50,000 and it's now worth $30,000?
In this case, you could still benefit by donating it, but it makes more sense to sell the depreciated stock first, then make
a cash gift to the school with the proceeds. That's because your charitable deduction will be limited to the stock's fair
market value at the time you sold it, which is only $30,000. By selling the stock yourself, you could claim the resulting
loss as one deduction and the charitable donation as a second one.