A gift to an endowment fund is one of the strongest ways to maximize your impact.
You may find that an endowment gift is the best way to support our mission on a long-term (often permanent) basis. It is a particularly powerful way to sustain our work because:
- It provides support during times of change and challenge.
- It facilitates long-term planning and program expansion.
- It can ensure the continuation of a particular scholarship, program, or area.
An endowment gift works like this:
- You transfer money or property to an existing endowment fund now or make a gift to the endowment fund in your will or through a beneficiary designation. You can even contribute to an endowment fund by setting up a charitable gift annuity that provides a fixed lifetime income for you and/or someone else.
- You choose a fund established to support a scholarship, program, or area close to your heart or a fund that supports our general mission.
- You qualify for an income tax charitable deduction at the time of your gift (assuming you itemize).
- The endowment fund combines your gift with the gifts of others, utilizing professional asset management to invest for growth.
- Only the income (or a stated percentage of the income) from the fund is used each year to support the designated program or area, meaning your gift becomes perpetual and self-renewing. This increases your impact and helps us accomplish our mission far into the future.
Establishing an endowment fund
Contributing to an existing endowment fund is an easy and meaningful way to make a lasting impact — but it’s not the only way. If you would like to make a large, legacy-creating gift with a sizable cash donation or, more often, with a significant gift in your will, you can create your own endowment fund. This gives you the freedom to support and sustain the area that means the most to you. If this idea interests you, please reach out to us so we can start a conversation about how to best meet your charitable goals.
My dear departed husband, Keith, and I had a savings account designed to be used for our retirement. I was faced with deciding the best use of this money. Now my mind went back to all the help I got from Miami through grants and scholarships and work programs in order to finish my music studies. This quickly led me to the beauty and magic of creating my own scholarship to help some other young persons in the future. It is truly overwhelming to realize the depth of how such a gift can change so many lives.
Joyce Ann Hayes Harn ’56
Evaluate the fit.
A gift to an endowment fund may be a particularly good option to consider if you want to:
- Qualify for an income tax charitable deduction
- Ensure the continuation of a particular part of our mission (say, a specific program or area)
- Make a lasting impact on Miami University
- Help ensure that we have a steady level of support that can help us remain fully active during difficult economic times
See how it works.
Naomi, age 80, has made regular annual gifts of $1,200 to Miami University since she retired at age 65. This year, however, she’s been thinking about her legacy. She decides to make a $25,000 gift to our endowment fund in memory of her late husband, Ken, who earned his degree at Miami. Not only will her gift generate approximately the same annual donation ($1,250, assuming fund earnings of 5%), but Naomi knows her gift will help sustain the study abroad programs that Ken always felt were life changing for the students who participated.
Because she is also passionate about Miami, Naomi talks to her family and friends about her gift. Several of them make their own contributions to the endowment in Ken’s memory, creating an even more powerful and lasting impact.
Consider your timing.
While you can contribute to an existing endowment fund easily at any time, creating a new fund will take longer.
We can help.
We would love to help you determine the best way to provide long-term support for the parts of our mission that mean the most to you. Please reach out to start a discussion!