MoneygiftboxWhen it comes to taxes, never say die. As part of the "fiscal cliff" deal, Congress has resurrected a popular tax-law provision, known as the "IRA charitable rollover," that had expired at the end of 2011.

New Year’s resolutions are chock-full of attempts at healthy lifestyle changes.  And while you may not be thinking about Tax Law when you resolve to make 2013 a better year, there is at least one healthy ingredient back in the mix:  the IRA Charitable Rollover.

This may not be a new revelation, but it bears repeating. It is just that good. The reinstitution of the IRA Charitable Rollover will benefit many qualifying taxpayers and their favorite charities alike. An article in The Wall Street Journal titled “IRA Charitable Rollover Is Back” provided an excellent, brief summary of the practical points you should know.

Until the end of 2011, you could “rollover” the required minimum distribution (RMD) from your IRA directly into the charity of your choice. Consequently, you avoided income taxation on that amount. But what about tax year 2012? Until the American Taxpayer Relief Act (ATRA) was passed on January 1, 2013, and subsequently signed into law the next day, this opportunity for 2012 did not exist. It had expired.

Now that ATRA is law, however, if you are age 70 ½ or older you can once more kill two birds with one stone and rollover funds from your IRA directly to a charity for 2012. That’s right, there is a limited window open to go back to 2012 (figuratively speaking) and make a qualifying charitable rollover from your IRA.

For taxpayers who took their RMDs late in December while awaiting resolution of the “fiscal cliff” fiasco, don’t fret! You may still re-characterize that withdrawal into a rollover if you do so before January 31st.

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Reference: The Wall Street Journal (January 6, 2012) “IRA Charitable Rollover Is Back