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Can a Charitable Remainder Trust Replace the Stretch IRA?

Kevin Nolte June 01, 2026

Can a Charitable Remainder Trust Replace the Stretch IRA?

The SECURE Act of 2019 ended a quiet but powerful estate planning tool. Before it passed, a child or grandchild who inherited your IRA could take distributions over their lifetime, allowing the account to compound for decades while spreading the tax hit over many years. That’s gone now for most heirs. In its place: a mandatory 10-year liquidation window, which tends to dump income into the years when your kids are already earning the most.

One legitimate workaround has gotten more attention in recent years, naming a Testamentary Charitable Remainder Unitrust (CRUT) as your IRA beneficiary. Instead of forcing a lump distribution into your heir’s tax return, the trust receives the IRA, then pays out a percentage of its assets annually over your heir’s lifetime. The tax hit gets spread out. Whatever remains at the end goes to charity.

This isn’t for everyone, and the math needs to work

The IRS requires that at least 10% of the trust’s projected value ultimately reach charity, meaning the structure only works if the numbers support it. Annual payouts must fall between 5% and 50% of trust assets. Naming a very young beneficiary often blows up the 10% test because their long life expectancy means too little is expected to reach the charity; a fixed term can sometimes solve that.

The more honest limitation is the wealth-transfer trade-off. Whatever reaches charity doesn’t reach your family. For clients whose only goal is maximizing what heirs receive, the plain 10-year rule often wins. A CRUT earns its place when charitable intent is genuine, not retrofitted, and when the income-smoothing benefit over a lifetime meaningfully outweighs the 10% going to the charitable remainder.

The other thing worth knowing is that distributions pay out ordinary income first. An IRA flowing into a CRUT could mean your heirs receive fully taxable income for many years before ever seeing preferential rates. That’s not a dealbreaker, but it should be modeled rather than assumed away.

The bottom line

A CRUT can be an efficient solution at the intersection of income planning, tax management, and charitable giving. But it rewards careful analysis, not enthusiasm. If you have a large retirement account, an heir in a high tax bracket, and a charity you genuinely care about, it’s worth running the numbers.

For more information on a Charitable Remainder Trust (CRUT), please visit irs.gov. All tax data sourced from IRS.gov.

20260528 – 4

Kevin Nolte

disclosure

THIS COMMENTARY HAS BEEN PREPARED BY CLEARWATER CAPITAL PARTNERS. THE OPINIONS VOICED IN THIS MATERIAL ARE FOR GENERAL INFORMATION ONLY AND ARE NOT INTENDED TO PROVIDE OR BE CONSTRUED AS PROVIDING LEGAL, ACCOUNTING, OR SPECIFIC INVESTMENT ADVICE OR RECOMMENDATIONS FOR ANY INDIVIDUAL. ALL ECONOMIC DATA IS DERIVED FROM PUBLIC SOURCES BELIEVED TO BE RELIABLE. TO DETERMINE WHICH INVESTMENTS MAY BE APPROPRIATE FOR YOU, PLEASE CONSULT WITH US PRIOR TO INVESTING. INVESTING INVOLVES RISK WHICH MAY INCLUDE LOSS OF PRINCIPAL.

This material is not intended to be relied upon as a forecast, research or investment advice, and is not a recommendation, offer or solicitation to buy or sell any securities, insurance products, or to adopt any investment strategy. The opinions expressed are as of the date of writing and may change as subsequent conditions vary. The information and opinions contained in this material are derived from proprietary and nonproprietary sources deemed by Clearwater Capital Partners to be reliable, are not necessarily all-inclusive and are not guaranteed as to accuracy. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. There is no guarantee that any forecasts made will come to pass. Reliance upon information in this material is at the sole discretion of the reader. Investment involves risks. International investing involves additional risks, including risks related to foreign currency, limited liquidity, less government regulation and the possibility of substantial volatility due to adverse political, economic or other developments. Index performance is shown for illustrative purposes only. You cannot invest directly in an index. S&P 500 is a registered trademark of Standard & Poor’s Financial Services, a division of S&P Global (“S&P”) DOW JONES, DJ, DJIA and DOW JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE are registered trademarks of Dow Jones Trademark Holdings (“Dow Jones”). NASDAQ-100 Index®, NASDAQ-100®, NASDAQ Composite Index® are registered trademarks of The NASDAQ OMC Group, Inc. The two main risks related to fixed-income investing are interest rate risk and credit risk. Typically, when interest rates rise, there is a corresponding decline in the market value of bonds. Credit risk refers to the possibility that the issuer of the bond will not be able to make principal and interest payments. Private Market investing is for Accredited Investors and Qualified Purchasers only. Private market investing involves liquidity risk as well as operational risk. Private debt is subject to credit and interest rate risk.

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