For taxpayers who regularly contribute to charitable organizations, the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act created an unexpected challenge. With the standard deduction nearly doubling, many generous donors found themselves unable to itemize their deductions: effectively eliminating the tax benefit of their charitable giving. However, a strategic approach known as charitable bunching offers a solution that allows taxpayers to maximize their deductions while continuing to support the causes they care about.

Understanding the Charitable Bunching Strategy

Charitable bunching is a tax planning technique that consolidates multiple years of charitable contributions into a single tax year. The goal is straightforward: exceed the standard deduction threshold in one year to claim itemized deductions, then take the standard deduction in subsequent years when fewer charitable contributions are made.

This alternating approach transforms donations that would otherwise provide no incremental tax benefit into fully deductible expenses. Rather than spreading contributions evenly across years: where they may fall short of the itemization threshold each time: taxpayers concentrate their giving to create measurable tax savings.

Example: A taxpayer who typically donates $2,000 annually could instead contribute $4,000 in one year and $0 in the following year. The average annual giving remains $2,000, but the bunched year allows for itemized deductions that would not have been possible with smaller, spread-out donations.

Modern home office workspace with financial charts and documents illustrating charitable bunching tax strategy

Why Bunching Has Become Essential for Charitable Givers

The relevance of charitable bunching has grown substantially since the 2017 tax reform. Prior to these changes, more taxpayers could itemize their deductions with relatively modest charitable contributions. The current landscape presents different parameters:

  • Standard deduction for married filing jointly: $31,500
  • Standard deduction for single filers: $15,750

These elevated thresholds mean that many regular donors: those giving consistent but moderate amounts: fall just short of the itemization threshold each year. Without strategic planning, their charitable contributions provide no additional tax benefit beyond the standard deduction they would receive regardless of their giving.

Charitable bunching addresses this gap directly. By concentrating donations, taxpayers can surpass the standard deduction threshold in their bunching year, claim the full value of their charitable contributions, and then return to the standard deduction in non-bunching years.

Quantifying the Tax Savings

The financial impact of charitable bunching can be substantial. Consider a taxpayer planning to donate $60,000 over three years:

Without bunching: Spreading $20,000 across each of the three years may result in approximately $11,550 in total tax savings, assuming the taxpayer cannot itemize in any individual year.

With bunching: Concentrating the full $60,000 into a single tax year could yield approximately $18,725 in tax savings: a difference of over $7,000.

These figures demonstrate why charitable bunching has become an essential component of comprehensive tax planning for philanthropically-minded taxpayers.

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Implementation Methods for Charitable Bunching

Taxpayers have several options for implementing a charitable bunching strategy. The most appropriate approach depends on individual circumstances, giving preferences, and the desired level of flexibility.

Direct Giving

The most straightforward implementation involves making larger gifts directly to charitable organizations during the bunching year. Taxpayers identify the charities they wish to support and contribute their consolidated amount in a single tax year.

Advantages:

  • Simple execution with no intermediary accounts
  • Immediate support for chosen organizations
  • No additional administrative requirements

Considerations:

  • Charities receive irregular funding patterns
  • Requires advance planning to identify recipient organizations
  • Less flexibility once funds are distributed

Donor-Advised Funds (DAFs)

Donor-advised funds represent a particularly effective vehicle for charitable bunching. A DAF allows taxpayers to contribute a lump sum in their bunching year, claim the full charitable deduction immediately, and then recommend grants to specific charities over multiple subsequent years.

Advantages:

  • Full tax deduction claimed in the bunching year
  • Continued consistent support for charities through regular grant recommendations
  • Investment growth potential on contributed funds
  • Flexibility to direct grants to different organizations over time
  • Simplified record-keeping for tax purposes

How DAFs work:

  1. Taxpayer contributes a lump sum to the donor-advised fund
  2. Contribution qualifies as a charitable deduction in the year of contribution
  3. Funds are invested and may grow tax-free
  4. Taxpayer recommends grants to qualified charities at any time
  5. Charities receive support on a schedule determined by the taxpayer

This approach allows taxpayers to maintain their regular giving patterns to favorite organizations while capturing the full tax benefit of bunched contributions.

Glass jars with coins symbolizing donor-advised funds and strategic charitable giving for tax deductions

Maximizing Benefits Through Appreciated Assets

Taxpayers seeking to optimize their charitable bunching strategy should consider donating appreciated assets rather than cash. Contributing appreciated securities, real estate, or other assets provides dual tax benefits:

  1. Charitable deduction: The taxpayer claims a deduction for the full fair market value of the donated asset
  2. Capital gains avoidance: Neither the taxpayer nor the charity pays capital gains tax on the appreciation

Example: A taxpayer owns stock purchased for $5,000 that has grown to $15,000. Donating the stock directly to charity (or to a donor-advised fund) allows the taxpayer to claim a $15,000 charitable deduction while avoiding capital gains tax on the $10,000 appreciation.

This strategy is particularly valuable during bunching years when larger contributions are being made, as it maximizes both the charitable deduction and the capital gains tax savings.

Strategic Timing Considerations

Effective charitable bunching requires coordination with broader tax planning strategies. Taxpayers should consider the following timing factors:

High-income years: Concentrating deductions in years with higher taxable income provides greater marginal tax benefit. The value of itemized deductions increases as the taxpayer's marginal tax rate rises.

Low-income years: Taking the standard deduction during lower-income years when its value is relatively higher compared to potential itemized deductions.

Multi-year planning: Most charitable bunching strategies operate on two- to five-year cycles. Taxpayers should work with tax professionals to determine the optimal cycle length based on their specific financial situation.

Coordination with other strategies: Charitable bunching should be integrated with other tax planning approaches, including qualified charitable distributions from IRAs for taxpayers over age 70½.

Important Changes Coming in 2026

Taxpayers planning charitable bunching strategies should be aware of significant tax changes taking effect in 2026:

  • New 0.5% AGI floor: Starting in 2026, a floor equal to 0.5% of adjusted gross income will apply to charitable deductions
  • Expanded non-itemizer deduction: Non-itemizers will be able to deduct up to $1,000 (individual) or $2,000 (joint) for charitable contributions

These changes affect the calculus of charitable bunching. Implementing bunching strategies before 2026 can help taxpayers avoid the new AGI floor during their bunching years. Analysis indicates that waiting until 2026 to implement bunching could reduce potential tax savings by over $1,300 compared to bunching in 2025.

Financial advisor holding tablet with growth graph, demonstrating tax planning for charitable bunching deductions

Who Benefits Most from Charitable Bunching

Charitable bunching is most effective for specific taxpayer profiles:

  • Households whose itemized deductions typically fall just short of the standard deduction
  • Regular givers who have not previously been able to itemize
  • Taxpayers with variable income who can coordinate giving with high-income years
  • Individuals with appreciated assets that could be donated
  • Philanthropically-minded taxpayers seeking to maximize the impact of their giving

Taxpayers who already significantly exceed the standard deduction each year may find less incremental benefit from bunching, as they are already capturing the full value of their charitable contributions.

Next Steps for Implementation

Taxpayers interested in charitable bunching strategies should take the following actions:

  1. Review current giving patterns and total annual charitable contributions
  2. Calculate itemized deductions to determine proximity to the standard deduction threshold
  3. Evaluate timing to identify optimal bunching years based on expected income
  4. Consider donor-advised funds as a vehicle for implementing the strategy
  5. Assess appreciated assets that could be donated for additional tax benefits
  6. Consult with tax professionals to develop a customized multi-year plan

For assistance with charitable bunching strategies and comprehensive tax planning, taxpayers may contact TIG Tax Services to schedule a consultation with certified tax professionals who can evaluate individual circumstances and develop appropriate strategies.