I had a couple at a workshop last spring tell me about their charitable giving. They were both 73, both retired, both had been writing personal checks to their parish, the local food bank, the Standish Memorial Hospital fund, and a couple of national charities — totaling about $12,000 a year. They were itemizing on Schedule A. They were proud of the giving — and they should be — but their CPA had never told them about the QCD. After we ran through it at the lab portion the next week, they realized they'd been overpaying federal tax by about $1,500 a year for the previous three years just by writing checks instead of using the IRA-to-charity path. Three years times $1,500 is $4,500 they didn't need to pay. Right? The fix was twenty minutes of paperwork. Let me walk you through what they learned.

What a QCD is

A Qualified Charitable Distribution — QCD — is a transfer made directly from your IRA to a qualified charity. The IRA custodian sends the check straight to the charity. You never receive the money personally. The transaction has three magic properties:

QCD Properties (Why It's Magic)

1. Excluded from your taxable income. Unlike a regular IRA withdrawal followed by a charitable check, the QCD never enters your AGI at all. It's not "deduct it" — it's "never count it in the first place."

2. Counts toward your RMD. If you're 73 or older with a traditional IRA, the QCD counts toward your required minimum distribution for the year. So you can satisfy your RMD obligation and your charitable giving in the same transaction.

3. Doesn't require itemizing. Most retirees take the standard deduction these days. A regular charitable check only saves taxes if you itemize and your itemized deductions exceed the standard. A QCD reduces taxable income directly, regardless of whether you itemize.

That third property is the one most retirees miss. With the higher standard deductions and the OBBBA-extended structure of the 2025 tax law, most retirees take the standard deduction and lose any federal tax benefit from charitable giving. The QCD bypasses that problem entirely. It's the only widely-available way for non-itemizing retirees to get a federal tax benefit from charitable giving.

The rules and limits

The math compared to writing a check

Imagine a retired couple, both 73, taking $40,000 of RMDs from their IRAs and giving $10,000 to charity from their bank account. They take the standard deduction. Their federal tax picture:

Without QCD (writing checks):

With QCD ($10,000 of the $40,000 RMD goes direct to charity):

If their marginal bracket is 22%, the tax savings is $10,000 × 22% = $2,200. They give the same $10,000 to charity. The federal government effectively pays $2,200 of the gift through the QCD mechanism. Same charity, same gift, lower tax bill.

The savings can be even larger if the QCD also pulls them under an IRMAA bracket or out of the Social Security tax torpedo zone — both of which are sensitive to AGI. A QCD that prevents an IRMAA tier increase can save thousands more in Medicare premiums two years out.

Edge cases and limitations

The "first-dollar" rule for RMDs

One important wrinkle on the timing. The IRS treats the first dollars distributed from your IRA in a given year as satisfying your RMD. So if you want a QCD to count toward your RMD, you need to do the QCD before taking other IRA distributions that year. If you take your full RMD in January and then do a QCD in November, the November QCD counts toward your RMD limit only to the extent there's an unused balance — and may instead just be a "bonus" charitable gift on top of an already-distributed RMD, with the income exclusion still applying.

Practically: if you plan to do a QCD that satisfies part of your RMD, do the QCD before the rest of the RMD. Or coordinate with your custodian.

How to actually execute

What this looks like in practice

If you're 70½ or older, give to charity, and have an IRA — using a QCD instead of writing checks from your bank account almost always saves federal tax. The savings range from a few hundred dollars (small gifts, low brackets) to several thousand dollars (larger gifts, higher brackets, IRMAA-sensitive). The mechanics take twenty minutes once per year. The CPA conversation takes another twenty. The benefit compounds across every year of your remaining retirement.

For couples already itemizing, the math is closer — but the QCD's effect on AGI (and downstream IRMAA, SS taxation, and so on) often still favors the QCD path. For non-itemizers, which is most retirees today, the QCD is essentially free money. The fact that most CPAs don't proactively suggest it is one of the small mysteries of retirement tax planning. Sleep at night, knowing your charitable giving is doing double duty.

Free QCD Strategy Review

Bring your charitable giving plan. We'll structure the QCDs.

If you're 70½+ and giving to charity, the QCD strategy is one of the highest-value tax conversations available. We do this review for free as part of a written-plan consultation, in coordination with your CPA.

The four outcomes:

  1. I never see you again. We wave at Home Depot.
  2. You take what you learned to your existing advisor or CPA. Great.
  3. You do nothing. The one I hate the most.
  4. We're a fit and we work together.
Schedule a QCD review →

The bottom line

Qualified Charitable Distributions allow IRA owners 70½ and older to give directly from an IRA to a qualified charity. The gift is excluded from taxable income, counts toward the RMD, and works whether or not you itemize. The 2026 annual limit is approximately $108,000 per individual. Donor-advised funds and private foundations don't qualify. The mechanics are simple, the savings are real, and most retirees aren't using the strategy. If you give to charity and you're 70½+, you should be doing QCDs.

Matt Forbes

Founder, Forbes Retirement. Provides retirement tax-planning analysis including QCD strategy as part of a written-plan consultation.

Sources for the rules cited in this article: IRC Section 408(d)(8) for QCD rules; IRS Publication 590-B for IRA distribution rules; SECURE 2.0 Act of 2022 for one-time CGA/CRT carve-out; IRS annual inflation adjustment guidance for the QCD dollar limit.

This article is general educational information and is not tax advice. QCD eligibility and limits depend on your specific account type and situation. Consult your tax preparer or qualified advisor before relying on any planning move described above.