Charitable Remainder Trust
[Trust Name]
[Trust Type]
This [Trust Type] (the "Trust") is created on [Execution Date], by [Grantor Name], residing at [Grantor Address] (the "Grantor"), pursuant to the provisions of Section 664 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"), and the Treasury Regulations promulgated thereunder.
ARTICLE I — CREATION OF TRUST
1.1 Creation. Grantor hereby irrevocably transfers, conveys, and assigns to [Trustee Name] (the "Trustee"), as Trustee of the [Trust Name], the property described in Schedule A attached hereto, consisting of assets with an initial funding value of approximately [Initial Funding Value], to be held, administered, and distributed as a [Trust Type] in accordance with the terms of this Trust Agreement and IRC Section 664.
1.2 Assets Transferred. The following assets are hereby transferred to the Trust:
[Trust Asset Description]
1.3 Irrevocability. This Trust is irrevocable. The Grantor retains no right to alter, amend, revoke, or terminate any provision of this Trust or to reclaim assets transferred hereto.
ARTICLE II — INCOME DISTRIBUTIONS TO BENEFICIARY
2.1 Income Beneficiary. The income interest shall be paid to [Income Beneficiary] (the "Income Beneficiary").
2.2 Annual Payout. The Trustee shall pay to the Income Beneficiary, in each taxable year of the Trust, an amount equal to [Payout Rate] of the net fair market value of the Trust assets (as determined in accordance with Treasury Regulations under IRC Section 664), payable [Payment Frequency].
2.3 Four-Tier Income Ordering. Distributions shall be characterized in the hands of the Income Beneficiary in the following order, as required by IRC Section 664(b): (i) as ordinary income to the extent of the Trust's current and accumulated ordinary income; (ii) as capital gains to the extent of the Trust's current and accumulated capital gains; (iii) as other income (including tax-exempt income); and (iv) as a tax-free return of corpus.
ARTICLE III — TRUST TERM
3.1 Duration. This Trust shall continue for [Trust Term Type]. If a fixed term applies, the Trust shall terminate no later than [Fixed Term Years] years from the date of this Trust Agreement.
3.2 Maximum Term. In no event shall the Trust continue for a period in excess of twenty (20) years from the date of execution, as required by IRC Section 664(d).
ARTICLE IV — CHARITABLE REMAINDER
4.1 Distribution to Charity. Upon termination of the Trust, the Trustee shall distribute all remaining Trust assets — the "charitable remainder" — to [Charity Name] (EIN: [Charity EIN]), located at [Charity Address], a qualified charitable organization described in IRC Sections 170(b)(1)(A), 170(c), 2055(a), and 2522(a).
4.2 Contingency. If [Charity Name] is not a qualified organization at the time of distribution, or ceases to exist, the Trustee shall distribute the charitable remainder to one or more charitable organizations selected by the Trustee that qualify under the foregoing Code sections and that carry out purposes substantially similar to those of the original charitable beneficiary.
4.3 Minimum Remainder. The present value of the charitable remainder interest as of the date of contribution must be at least ten percent (10%) of the net fair market value of property contributed to the Trust, as required by IRC Section 664(d).
ARTICLE V — TRUSTEE
5.1 Initial Trustee. [Trustee Name] shall serve as the initial Trustee of this Trust.
5.2 Successor Trustee. If the initial Trustee is unable or unwilling to serve, [Successor Trustee] shall serve as Successor Trustee.
5.3 Investment Authority. [Investment Authority].
5.4 Trustee's Duties. The Trustee shall: (a) hold, manage, invest, and reinvest Trust assets with the care, skill, prudence, and diligence that a prudent person acting in a like capacity would exercise; (b) make timely and accurate distributions to the Income Beneficiary; (c) file IRS Form 5227 (Split-Interest Trust Information Return) annually; (d) account to the Income Beneficiary annually regarding trust administration; and (e) comply with all requirements of IRC Section 664 and the Treasury Regulations thereunder.
ARTICLE VI — TAX PROVISIONS
6.1 IRC Section 664 Compliance. This Trust is intended to qualify as a [Trust Type] under IRC Section 664 and the Treasury Regulations issued thereunder, and all provisions of this Trust shall be interpreted consistently with that intent. Any provision that would disqualify this Trust under IRC Section 664 shall be void and of no effect.
6.2 Tax-Exempt Status. The Trust is exempt from income tax pursuant to IRC Section 664(c)(1), except to the extent provided in IRC Section 664(c)(2) (relating to unrelated business taxable income).
6.3 Charitable Deduction. The Grantor's charitable income tax deduction for the contribution to this Trust shall be determined under IRC Sections 170, 2055, and 2522, using the applicable federal rate (AFR) as prescribed under IRC Section 7520 as of the date of contribution.
ARTICLE VII — GENERAL PROVISIONS
7.1 Governing Law. This Trust Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of [Governing State], to the extent not governed by federal law.
7.2 Severability. If any provision of this Trust Agreement is held invalid or unenforceable, such provision shall be modified only to the minimum extent necessary to make it comply with IRC Section 664, and all remaining provisions shall continue in full force and effect.
7.3 Attorney Preparation. Grantor acknowledges that this Trust document should be reviewed by a qualified estate planning attorney and tax advisor prior to execution and funding, as the tax consequences are complex and individual circumstances vary.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the Grantor and the Trustee have executed this Charitable Remainder Trust Agreement as of [Execution Date].
GRANTOR:
Signature: _______________________________ Date: _______________
Printed Name: [Grantor Name]
TRUSTEE:
Signature: _______________________________ Date: _______________
Printed Name: [Trustee Name]
STATE OF ______________________, COUNTY OF ______________________
Subscribed and sworn to before me this ______ day of _____________, 20____.
Notary Public: _______________________________ Commission Expires: _______________
Grantor
________________
Signature
Trustee
________________
Signature
What Is a Charitable Remainder Trust?
A Charitable Remainder Trust in the United States creates a fiduciary arrangement under which a trustee holds and distributes assets for the beneficiaries.
Two primary forms of Charitable Remainder Trusts are recognized under IRC Section 664 and the related Treasury Regulations. A Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust (CRAT) pays a fixed dollar amount annually — calculated as a percentage (minimum 5%, maximum 50%) of the initial net fair market value of the trust's assets at the time of creation. A CRAT is appropriate when the grantor wants certainty of income amount regardless of trust performance, but additional contributions to a CRAT after its establishment are prohibited under Treasury Regulation § 1.664-2(b). A Charitable Remainder Unitrust (CRUT) pays a fixed percentage (minimum 5%, maximum 50%) of the trust's net fair market value, revalued each year. A CRUT's income payments fluctuate with trust performance — rising when the portfolio grows and falling when it contracts. Unlike a CRAT, a CRUT permits additional contributions after establishment.
For either type of CRT to qualify under IRC Section 664, the IRS requires that the present value of the charitable remainder interest — computed using the Applicable Federal Rate (AFR) published monthly by the IRS under IRC Section 7520 — must equal at least 10% of the net fair market value of the assets transferred to the trust on the date of contribution. If this 10% minimum is not met, the trust does not qualify as a CRT, and the tax benefits are not available. CRT planning therefore involves careful mathematical modeling using the grantor's age, the chosen payout rate, the applicable AFR, and the expected term.
The charitable deduction available to the grantor in the year of contribution equals the present value of the remainder interest — the portion of the contributed assets mathematically projected to pass to charity. For transfers of appreciated property such as publicly traded stock or real estate, the trust can sell the property and reinvest the proceeds without recognizing capital gain at the time of sale. Instead, the capital gain is recognized by the trust beneficiary over time as trust distributions are received, following the four-tier ordering rules under Treasury Regulation § 1.664-1(d)(1): ordinary income, capital gain (short-term before long-term), other income, and return of principal.
A CRT must be drafted with precise compliance with the IRS model trust language provided in Revenue Procedures 2003-53 through 2003-60, which set out approved provisions for CRAT and CRUT documents. Trusts drafted using IRS model language receive a presumption of qualification, while trusts using non-standard language are subject to heightened IRS scrutiny. Every CRT must file IRS Form 5227 (Split-Interest Trust Information Return) annually and provide income beneficiaries with Schedule K-1 reporting the character of trust distributions.
When Do You Need a Charitable Remainder Trust?
A Charitable Remainder Trust is most valuable when an individual or married couple holds highly appreciated assets, wants to generate income from those assets, has charitable intent, and is seeking to minimize income and estate taxes — making the CRT appropriate at several specific life and wealth planning junctures.
A CRT is most tax-efficient when used to sell appreciated, low-yielding assets such as concentrated stock positions, rental real estate with a low tax basis, or farmland held for decades. Selling such assets outright would trigger immediate federal capital gains tax at rates up to 23.8% (20% long-term capital gains plus 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax under IRC Section 1411). Transferring the asset to a CRT before the sale defers that capital gain over the trust's distribution period, allowing the full proceeds to be invested and compounded before taxes are paid.
Business owners planning to sell a closely held company frequently use CRTs before the sale closes. Transferring business interests to a CRUT before a sale allows the owner to receive income from the proceeds, defer capital gains, and support a charitable cause, while the business is acquired and the CRT invests the sale proceeds.
Retired professionals and investors who have accumulated significant retirement assets in IRAs or 401(k) plans occasionally use CRTs in estate planning contexts, though transferring IRA assets to a CRT requires careful tax analysis because the rollover of pre-tax IRA funds to a CRT causes immediate income recognition.
High-net-worth individuals subject to the federal estate tax — applicable to taxable estates exceeding $13.61 million per individual as of 2024 under IRC Section 2010(c) — use CRTs to remove appreciated assets from the taxable estate while generating a current income stream. Assets held in a CRT are not included in the grantor's gross estate under IRC Section 2036, subject to specific requirements.
Philanthropically motivated donors who have identified specific charitable causes — universities, hospitals, religious organizations, community foundations — use CRTs to make a meaningful charitable gift while retaining income during their lifetime. The named charity may provide administrative support to the donor in establishing and funding the CRT as part of its gift planning program.
What to Include in Your Charitable Remainder Trust
A Charitable Remainder Trust agreement must comply with precise statutory and regulatory requirements under IRC Section 664 and the related Treasury Regulations to qualify for the associated tax benefits, and must address the full range of administrative and trustee obligations.
The grantor and initial trustee identification section names the individual or individuals creating the trust (the grantor or settlor), the trustee (which may be the grantor, an independent trustee, a bank trust department, or a community foundation), and the initial charitable remainder beneficiary. The grantor may retain the power to change the charitable remainder beneficiary under Treasury Regulation § 1.664-3(a)(4), provided the replacement is a qualified IRC § 501(c)(3) organization.
The trust type election — CRAT or CRUT — must be made explicitly. For a CRAT, the fixed annuity amount must be stated as a specific dollar amount or as a percentage of the initial net fair market value. For a CRUT, the unitrust percentage must be stated. The chosen payout rate must result in a charitable remainder interest of at least 10% of the initial contribution under the IRC Section 7520 test.
The income interest term states how long income payments will be made — either for the lifetime of one or more named individuals, or for a fixed term not to exceed 20 years. Both a lifetime term and a fixed term cannot be combined (except in some CRUT variants). For lifetime income interests, the trust must include the named income beneficiaries' dates of birth to allow computation of the present value of the charitable remainder.
The payment schedule specifies how frequently income payments are made — annually, semi-annually, quarterly, or monthly. IRS model trust language under Revenue Procedure 2003-53 requires that annual payments be made no later than 105 days after the close of the taxable year, and more frequent payments are prorated accordingly.
The trustee powers section, drawn from Treasury Regulation § 1.664-1(a)(3), grants the trustee broad investment authority: to buy, sell, exchange, lease, and manage trust assets; to invest in publicly traded securities, real estate, and other permitted investments; to retain contributed property; to distribute required payments to income beneficiaries; and to maintain records sufficient for IRS Form 5227 filing and K-1 preparation.
The charitable remainder beneficiary designation names the qualified IRC § 501(c)(3) organization(s) that will receive the trust assets upon termination. The trust should confirm the charitable organization's current tax-exempt status and EIN, and should address what happens if the named charity loses its tax-exempt status or ceases to exist before the trust terminates.
The spendthrift clause protects income beneficiaries from assignment of their income interest and from creditor claims against future distributions, consistent with IRS model trust language requirements.
The trustee compensation, accounting, and annual reporting obligations must be addressed, including the obligation to file IRS Form 5227 by April 15 of each year and to provide Schedule K-1 to each income beneficiary showing the character of distributions under the four-tier system.
Sources & Citations
Statutory citations link to official government sources.
- IRC § 501US – Cornell LII
Cite this page
Reference this free template in an article, syllabus, or research note:
Forms Legal. (2026). Charitable Remainder Trust (United States) [Legal document template]. Forms Legal. https://forms-legal.com/usa/estate-planning/trusts/charitable-remainder-trust
"Charitable Remainder Trust (United States)." Forms Legal, 2026, https://forms-legal.com/usa/estate-planning/trusts/charitable-remainder-trust.
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title = {Charitable Remainder Trust (United States)},
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howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/usa/estate-planning/trusts/charitable-remainder-trust}},
note = {Free legal document template. Based on Uniform Trust Code}
}Frequently Asked Questions
A charitable remainder trust (CRT) is an irrevocable trust that provides income to the donor or other beneficiaries for a period, with the remaining trust assets passing to one or more charities at the end. The donor transfers assets into the trust, and the trust pays an income stream to the named non-charitable beneficiaries, such as the donor or family members, for life or for a term of years, after which the remainder goes to the designated charity. A CRT offers several benefits: the donor may receive an income tax deduction for the present value of the charitable remainder, the trust can sell appreciated assets without immediate capital gains tax allowing more to be reinvested for income, the assets are removed from the donor's taxable estate, and the donor supports a charitable cause. CRTs come in two main forms, the charitable remainder annuity trust, which pays a fixed amount, and the charitable remainder unitrust, which pays a percentage of the trust's value. Because a CRT is irrevocable and involves complex tax rules, it requires careful planning. A charitable remainder trust combines income for beneficiaries with a future charitable gift and tax advantages.
The tax benefits of a charitable remainder trust (CRT) include a charitable income tax deduction, deferral or avoidance of immediate capital gains tax on appreciated assets, and estate tax reduction. When the donor funds the irrevocable trust, they may claim an income tax deduction for the present value of the charitable remainder interest that will eventually pass to charity, calculated under IRS rules. Because the CRT is tax-exempt, it can sell appreciated assets, such as stock or real estate, without paying immediate capital gains tax, allowing the full value to be reinvested to generate income for the beneficiaries, although the income distributions to beneficiaries are taxed under specific tiered rules. The assets transferred to the CRT are also removed from the donor's taxable estate, which can reduce estate taxes. These benefits make CRTs attractive for donors holding highly appreciated assets who want income, a charitable legacy, and tax advantages. Because the tax rules governing CRTs are complex, including the calculation of the deduction and the taxation of distributions, professional guidance is important. A charitable remainder trust offers significant tax benefits while providing income and supporting charity, but it must be properly structured.
Income from a charitable remainder trust (CRT) is paid to the non-charitable beneficiaries for the trust's term, with the amount determined by the type of CRT chosen. A charitable remainder annuity trust (CRAT) pays a fixed dollar amount each year, set as a percentage of the initial value of the trust assets, providing predictable income that does not change with the trust's performance. A charitable remainder unitrust (CRUT) pays a fixed percentage of the trust's value as revalued each year, so the income varies with the trust's investment performance, potentially providing a hedge against inflation if the assets grow. The payout rate must meet IRS requirements, generally at least 5 percent and within certain limits, and the term can be for the lives of the beneficiaries or a term of up to 20 years. The distributions to beneficiaries are taxed under tiered rules based on the trust's income character. At the end of the term, the remaining assets pass to the charity. Because the income structure differs between a CRAT and a CRUT, the donor chooses the type that fits their goals. A charitable remainder trust provides an income stream to beneficiaries before the charitable remainder is distributed.
A charitable remainder trust is irrevocable, meaning that once the donor creates and funds it, they generally cannot revoke it or reclaim the assets, which is an essential feature of how it works and provides its tax benefits. The irrevocable nature is what allows the donor to receive the charitable income tax deduction, remove the assets from their taxable estate, and have the trust sell appreciated assets without immediate capital gains tax, because the donor has made a completed, binding charitable commitment. While the trust is irrevocable, the donor retains the income interest for the term and, in some cases, may retain certain limited powers, such as the ability to change the charitable beneficiary among qualified charities. Because the donor cannot undo the trust or recover the principal, funding a CRT is a significant, permanent decision that requires careful consideration of the donor's financial needs and goals. The irrevocability ensures the charitable remainder will ultimately benefit the charity. A charitable remainder trust is irrevocable, so donors should be certain of their intent and consult professionals before creating one, since the assets and the structure cannot be reversed once established.
Setting up a charitable remainder trust requires professional assistance, typically including an estate planning attorney and often a tax or financial advisor, because CRTs involve complex legal and tax rules and are irrevocable. An attorney drafts the trust to meet the strict IRS requirements that qualify it as a charitable remainder trust, including the payout rate, the trust term, and the provisions ensuring the charitable remainder, since errors can disqualify the trust and forfeit the tax benefits. A tax or financial advisor helps determine whether a CRT fits the donor's situation, models the income and tax consequences, and assists with funding the trust, particularly when transferring appreciated assets. Because the CRT is irrevocable and the tax treatment of the deduction, the trust's sale of assets, and the distributions to beneficiaries are intricate, mistakes can be costly and cannot be easily undone. Given the complexity and the significant financial and charitable stakes, donors should not attempt to set up a CRT without professional guidance. A charitable remainder trust should be established with the help of an estate planning attorney and tax advisor to ensure it is properly structured, qualifies for the tax benefits, and meets the donor's goals.
This template is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change over time. Consult a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation.Full disclaimer
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