Retirees hear plenty about Roth conversions, required minimum distributions, and investment withdrawals. Yet one of the most powerful tax-saving strategies available to older Americans rarely gets the same attention. For retirees who give to charity, this overlooked move can reduce taxable income, help manage Medicare costs, and satisfy IRS distribution requirements all at the same time.
That's especially important for anyone reviewing a long-term retirement plan and looking for ways to keep more of their money working for them.
The strategy is called a qualified charitable distribution, or QCD. While it doesn't make headlines very often, it can create meaningful tax savings for retirees who already support charitable organizations.
Here's how it works and why it may deserve a place in your year-end planning.
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A qualified charitable distribution bypasses taxable income
A qualified charitable distribution allows IRA owners who are age 70 1/2 or older to transfer money directly from a traditional IRA to a qualified charity.
For 2026, eligible taxpayers can transfer up to $111,000 through a QCD. Unlike a normal IRA withdrawal, the amount transferred generally isn't included in taxable income.
That's the feature that makes the strategy so valuable. Rather than taking a taxable distribution and then donating the proceeds, the money goes directly to the charity and never appears as taxable income on your return.
You don't need to itemize deductions to benefit
Many charitable tax strategies have become less useful since the standard deduction increased significantly.
According to IRS data, roughly 90% of taxpayers now claim the standard deduction rather than itemizing deductions. That means many charitable gifts no longer generate a direct federal tax benefit. However, a QCD solves that problem.
Because the distribution is excluded from income in the first place, retirees can receive a tax benefit regardless of whether they itemize deductions or take the standard deduction.
QCDs can satisfy required minimum distributions
For retirees age 73 and older, qualified charitable distributions offer another advantage.
The IRS allows QCDs to count toward required minimum distributions (RMDs) for the year. That means retirees can satisfy part or all of their annual RMD obligation while simultaneously supporting a charitable cause.
This creates a potential double benefit. You fulfill the IRS withdrawal requirement without increasing taxable income, the way a normal RMD would. For retirees who don't need their full RMD for living expenses, that can be especially appealing.
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Lower income can reduce other retirement costs
The biggest benefit may extend beyond income taxes.
Because QCDs reduce adjusted gross income, they may also help lower the percentage of Social Security benefits subject to federal taxation. Depending on income levels, up to 85% of Social Security benefits can become taxable.
Lower income can also help retirees avoid Medicare's Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount, or IRMAA. These surcharges increase Part B and Part D premiums for higher-income beneficiaries and are based on income reported two years earlier.
As a result, a QCD can create ripple effects that extend well beyond a single tax return.
The money must go directly to the charity
There is one critical rule retirees need to understand.
The funds must move directly from the IRA custodian to the qualified charity. If you withdraw the money first and then write a personal check to the organization, the transaction generally won't qualify as a QCD. The receiving organization must also be an eligible 501(c)(3) charity.
Donor-advised funds, private foundations, and certain supporting organizations do not qualify for QCD treatment.
Midyear planning can make the strategy even more effective
Many retirees wait until December to think about charitable giving.
However, the summer and early fall months can be an ideal time to evaluate whether a QCD makes sense. By then, you have a better picture of annual income, potential RMD amounts, and whether you're approaching an IRMAA threshold.
That extra planning time also allows your IRA custodian to process the transfer before the Dec. 31 deadline. Waiting until the final weeks of the year may create unnecessary complications if paperwork is delayed.
Bottom line
Qualified charitable distributions remain one of the most underused tax strategies available to retirees. They can reduce taxable income, satisfy required minimum distributions, potentially lower Medicare premiums, and support causes you care about — all through a single transaction.
If charitable giving is already part of your financial life, a QCD may help you make the right moves with your IRA while improving your overall tax picture. A conversation with your financial advisor, tax professional, or IRA custodian now could help you identify opportunities before year-end planning becomes rushed.
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