This One Mistake Can Make Your QCD Fully Taxable

March 31, 2026

Many charitably minded individual retirement account (IRA) owners use qualified charitable distributions (QCDs) to satisfy required minimum distributions (RMDs) while avoiding income tax. One simple mistake, however, can turn an otherwise tax-free QCD into fully taxable income.

After age 70 1/2, you may direct up to $111,000 in 2026 from your traditional IRA to a qualified charity; for married couples, each spouse may give that amount from their own IRA.

The QCD can count toward your RMD once you reach age 73, and the QCD stays out of your adjusted gross income. Lower adjusted gross income can help you avoid higher tax brackets, higher Medicare premiums, and taxation of Social Security benefits.

The trouble arises under the strict no-benefit rule.

You must send a QCD directly to a Section 501(c)(3) charity, not to a donor-advised fund. More importantly, you must not receive anything of value in return. If you do, the IRS treats the entire distribution as taxable. Even a small benefit can spoil the result. For example, a $250 ticket to a charity dinner will cause a $5,000 QCD to become fully taxable.

Charities must provide written acknowledgments for QCDs of $250 or more. If that acknowledgment lists goods or services received, the tax-free treatment disappears.

The IRS allows limited exceptions. You may receive insubstantial benefits without harming a QCD, such as low-value items or token merchandise, generally capped at $139 in 2026 ($136 in 2025) and subject to percentage limits. Intangible religious benefits from churches also remain acceptable.

Before you authorize a QCD, confirm that you will receive nothing of value beyond these exceptions. Careful planning protects the tax advantages QCDs can provide.

If you have any questions, please feel free to reach out to our team!

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