How to credit gifts from donor-advised fund, check cut by bank

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Hi there, Could you share with me what your organization's business rule is about donor-advised funds that cut their donations via their bank? For example, Joe Smith Memorial Fund Trust was advised by Joe Smith to donate to your organization. The check is written by Joe Smith Memorial Fund's bank, Bank of America. Who is hard credited in this situation? Bank of America or the Fund? In any case, I would soft credit Joe Smith's individual record. Thanks in advance, Joanne Danganan Coordinator, Development and Special Events Dr. Susan Love Research Foundation
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  • Joanne Danganan:
    Hi there, Could you share with me what your organization's business rule is about donor-advised funds that cut their donations via their bank? For example, Joe Smith Memorial Fund Trust was advised by Joe Smith to donate to your organization. The check is written by Joe Smith Memorial Fund's bank, Bank of America. Who is hard credited in this situation? Bank of America or the Fund? In any case, I would soft credit Joe Smith's individual record. Thanks in advance, Joanne Danganan Coordinator, Development and Special Events Dr. Susan Love Research Foundation
    We would hard credit the Joe Smith Memorial Fund. 
  • Joanne Danganan:
    Hi there, Could you share with me what your organization's business rule is about donor-advised funds that cut their donations via their bank? For example, Joe Smith Memorial Fund Trust was advised by Joe Smith to donate to your organization. The check is written by Joe Smith Memorial Fund's bank, Bank of America. Who is hard credited in this situation? Bank of America or the Fund? In any case, I would soft credit Joe Smith's individual record. Thanks in advance, Joanne Danganan Coordinator, Development and Special Events Dr. Susan Love Research Foundation
    We hard credit the memorial fund record and add the Bank as an address (with an address type of Address on Check). We would add a contact for the bank in the fund record if there was a contact at the bank that we needed to acknowledge (typically not, but occasionally this occurs). Heather
  • Heather Heyd:
    We hard credit the memorial fund record and add the Bank as an address (with an address type of Address on Check). We would add a contact for the bank in the fund record if there was a contact at the bank that we needed to acknowledge (typically not, but occasionally this occurs). Heather
    Thanks for the help! How about if the check was cut by e.g., Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund? Same hard credit scenario?
  • Joanne Danganan:
    Thanks for the help! How about if the check was cut by e.g., Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund? Same hard credit scenario?

    We just received a check from Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund. The funds were from one of our donor's fund at Fidelity.  The donor had an outstanding campaign pledge.  I paid off the donor's pledge with this check and soft credited Fidelity Charitable.  I sent an acknowledge letter to the donor to thank them, even though they had already received a tax deduction when they made the gift to Fidelity Charitable.

  • Jeanne Zearfoss:

    We just received a check from Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund. The funds were from one of our donor's fund at Fidelity.  The donor had an outstanding campaign pledge.  I paid off the donor's pledge with this check and soft credited Fidelity Charitable.  I sent an acknowledge letter to the donor to thank them, even though they had already received a tax deduction when they made the gift to Fidelity Charitable.

    You can't pay a pledge from a donor advised fund.  

    We would hard credit to Fidelity who issued the check, soft credit the donor and in attributes add the DAF name or whatever fund name they provided. We simply thank the donor since they we receipted by Fidelity.

  • JoAnn Strommen
    JoAnn Strommen ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Coral Henthorne:

    You can't pay a pledge from a donor advised fund.  

    We would hard credit to Fidelity who issued the check, soft credit the donor and in attributes add the DAF name or whatever fund name they provided. We simply thank the donor since they we receipted by Fidelity.

     Ditto what Coral said: Gift from DAF can not be used to pay a pledge, in part or whole.

    There are numerous post about this at www.fundsvcs.org.  This link goes directly to a paper titled who can make and pay a pledge.  Think statement about DAF not being able to do that and why is second page.  http://fundsvcs.org/modules/wfdownloads/singlefile.php?cid=19&lid=591

    I will say that I've seen it posted here that when DAF gift was unexpectedly received was to enter it as gift and delete the pledge record.  That would be legally questionable as constituent is getting benefit of having their pledge deleted.  When we think payment will come from DAF or family foundation, we do not enter pledge on personal records anymore.   Of course we sent thank you to the donor making the 'advised gift' thanking them (no $ or tax statement).

  • Coral Henthorne:

    You can't pay a pledge from a donor advised fund.  

    We would hard credit to Fidelity who issued the check, soft credit the donor and in attributes add the DAF name or whatever fund name they provided. We simply thank the donor since they we receipted by Fidelity.

    Our policy is the same as what Carol said.

    Since donors are frequently unaware of the laws about paying for pledges through their DAF, we deal with the pledge payment issue often. If I'm pretty sure the payment will be coming through a DAF, I no longer enter the pledge as a gift. Instead I enter an attribute of "Verbal Pledge" with the $$ in the description and the Appeal/Fund in the comments. Then, when the gift comes in, I delete the attribute. This means when I'm looking for unpaid pledges I need to run two reports - one regular gift one and one based on the "Verbal Pledge" attribute.

    Of course, there are still times that someone pledges and pays through their DAF. In that case we enter the gift as a regular cash gift, then write off the pledge. If their pledge was for something that was not fully tax deductible (eg. auction item, event ticket), then we contact the donor and let them know that we cannot accept the DAF check as payment for the auction item, etc. It is then up to the donor to either send an additional check covering the "benefit" portion of their gift, or to cancel the DAF check and send in a personal check for the full amount.

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