This is SANDBOX. For experimenting and training.
The Chronicle of Philanthropy logo

Fundraising

More Americans Making Bequests and Other Planned Gifts, Study Finds

November 2, 2000 | Read Time: 5 minutes

By DEBRA E. BLUM

Eleven percent of Americans say they have already earmarked money for charities in their

wills or created another type of planned gift, according to a new survey.

Based on responses from 170,000 households, the survey found that another one out of four Americans is considering making such charitable bequests or gifts.

The survey was conducted by NFO Research, a market-research company in Greenwich, Conn., for the National Committee on Planned Giving, which released a report on the surveyโ€™s preliminary findings at its annual meeting last week.

A similar survey conducted in 1992 for the committee found that only 6 percent of Americans had set up bequests or other planned gifts.


Most of the new report is based on a smaller sample of households — 1,579 in all — that reported on the survey that they had either put a charitable bequest in a will or created a charitable remainder trust or gift annuity.

Influence of Advisers

One of the most significant changes over the last eight years was the growing influence of financial advisers in donorsโ€™ giving decisions. In 1992, only 4 percent of the respondents said a legal or financial adviser had suggested a bequest, and 14 percent said those advisers told them about charitable trusts. This year, those percentages rose to 21 percent and 51 percent, respectively.

The new survey found that charities, too, may be doing a better job of getting the word out about bequests and trusts. In 1992, 5 percent of the respondents said they had learned about charitable bequests through a nonprofit groupโ€™s published materials, while 13 percent said they had learned of charitable trusts that way. This year, those percentages rose to 34 percent and 26 percent, respectively.

โ€˜People Are Listeningโ€™

โ€œCharities have been more assertive, more articulate, and more active, and, in fact, people are listening,โ€ said Bruce Bigelow, senior vice president for development and external relations at Hood College, in Frederick, Md., and one of the authors of the report.

Mr. Bigelow said he also found it particularly interesting that this yearโ€™s findings indicate that, as he says, โ€œplanned giving is not just an old personโ€™s project.โ€


He notes that about one-third of the respondents who have created a charitable remainder trust, and more than two out of five of the respondents who have set up gifts to charity in their wills, are younger than 55.

For Mr. Bigelow, that finding suggests that โ€œI should target my marketing to people at their 25th reunion, not just their 50th reunion. Thatโ€™s counterintuitive from conventional wisdom.โ€

One notable similarity between the results of the 1992 and 2000 surveys is in the motivations that respondents gave for making a contribution. Top on the list in both years was the donorsโ€™ desire to support the charity and their interest in how their money would be put to use.

The National Committee on Planned Giving expects to release additional information from its survey of donors in coming weeks. A final report, containing data about bequests, trusts, and charitable gift annuities, is expected to be available by the end of the year.

To order a report when it is published, go to the committeeโ€™s Web site at http://www.ncpg.org; or contact the organization at 233 McCrea Street, Suite 400, Indianapolis 46225; (317) 269-6274; or e-mail at ncpg@iupui.edu. Each copy of the report will cost $30.



Planned Gifts: A Snapshot of Donor Trends

Donor Demographics
Bequest Charitable remainder trust
Age
18-34 3% 6%
35-44 14% 10%
45-54 26% 18%
55-64 22% 20%
65-74 20% 23%
75 or older 24%
Mean 58 62
Income
Under $20,000 11% 10%
$20,000-$34,999 12% 12%
$35,000-$49,999 13% 11%
$50,000-$74,999 22% 16%
$75,000-$99,999 14% 14%
$100,000-$124,999 12% 12%
$125,000-$149,999 5% 7%
$150,000-$174,999 4% 4%
$175,000 and over 8% 16%
Median (in thousands) $60.4 $70.7
Mean (in thousands) $75.9 $86.3

SOURCE: National Committee on Planned Giving, NFO Research Inc.
NOTE: Percentages based on data from 1,579 households that had made a planned gift.

Charitable Remainder Trust Characteristics
Fair market value when created
Under $100,000 42%
$100,000-$499,999 32%
$500,000-$999,999 11%
$1,000,000 or more 15%
Charitable remainder trust payout rate
5.49% or less 18%
5.50% to 6.99% 19%
7% to 7.99% 19%
8% to 9.99% 23%
10% or more 21%
Type of trust
Charitable remainder annuity trust 30%
Charitable remainder unitrust 48%
Income-only unitrust 22%
Assets used to finance charitable remainder trust
Publicly traded stock 41%
Cash 38%
Real estate 21%
Tangible personal property 15%
Closely held corporate stock 9%
Financial asset (e.g., mutual funds, annuities, etc.) 5%
Insurance 2%
All others 1%
No answer 5%

SOURCE: National Committee on Planned Giving, NFO Research Inc.
NOTE: Percentages based on data from 1,579 households that had made a planned gift.

How Donors First Learned About Gift Options
Charitable bequests Charitable remainder trusts
2000 1992 2000 1992*
The charity through its published materials 34% 5% 26% 13%
A legal or financial adviser 21% 4% 51% 14%
Family or friends 20% 8% 19% 17%
The charity through an individual visit 11% 2% 11% 8%
A speaker at a financial-planning seminar 8% n/a 17% n/a
General knowlege/self 7% 77% n/a 35%
Another donor 6% n/a 5% n/a
Other 6% n/a 0% n/a
Donโ€™t know/no answer 9% n/a 9% n/a
* 1992 figures include charitable remainder trusts, gift annuities, and other types of income-producing gifts.

SOURCE: National Committee on Planned Giving, NFO Research Inc.
NOTE: Percentages based on data from 1,579 households that had made a planned gift.

Reasons Donors Make Planned Gifts
Charitable bequest Charitable remainder trust
Desire to support the charity 97% 91%
The ultimate use of the gift by the charity 82% 79%
Desire to reduce taxes (income or estate) 35% 77%
Long-range estate and financial-planning issues 35% 76%
Create a lasting memorial for self or loved one 33% 44%
Relationship with a representative of charity 21% 41%
Encouragement of family or friends 13% 32%
Encouragement of legal or financial advisers 12% 48%
Avoidance of tax on capital gains 69%
Increased income 52%

SOURCE: National Committee on Planned Giving, NFO Research Inc.
NOTE: Percentages based on data from 1,579 households that had made a planned gift.

About the Author

Contributor

Debra E. Blum is a freelance writer and has been a contributor to The Chronicle of Philanthropy since 2002. She is based in Pennsylvania, and graduated from Duke University.