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Did you know that a gift to The Salvation Army can provide you with an income for life? Our team of professionals can provide you with a no cost, no obligation consultation at a time and location convenient to you.


Estate Planning Professional...Contact The Salvation Army first to ensure your clients gift is worded correctly. Call us at 1-800-254-0229 or email with your question. Our team of professionals represent all Salvation Army centers in the Carolinas. Whether the donor wishes to make a gift to the local center or to another service location, we can answer all of your questions and ensure that the wording is correct.

What are the Advantages of Planned Giving?

Which Plan is Right For You?

Annuity Trust
Transfer cash, securities or other property into an irrevocable trust and direct that a fixed annual dollar amount be paid to you for as long as you live. At your death, the same amount can be paid to any surviving beneficiary you name for as long as they live. The principal cannot be used by The Salvation Army until these conditions are satisfied.

Unitrust
Similar to an annuity trust, except the income paid to you is variable. Instead of a fixed dollar amount, the trust agreement specifies a percentage of the trust's fair market value as determined each year, and that is the amount paid to you.

Revocable Living Trust
Allows you to revoke the trust in case of an emergency or personal desire. Experience shows that few people revoke the fund. You may set up an income payment schedule as well as invade principal as needed. After the death of all income beneficiaries, any unused principal and income becomes a gift to The Salvation Army and/or other remainder persons.

Pooled Income Fund
Your assets are pooled into a commingled fund. On the date your gift enters the fund, it is assigned a number of units proportional to its fair market value. The value of a unit will rise and fall with the market value of the fund's assets. Your income depends on how many units you hold and how much the fund earned during the year.

Charitable Gift Annuity
You donate money or securities as a gift-investment. The Salvation Army agrees to pay you and/or a loved one a fixed dollar amount for life. The amount you receive is determined by the size of the gift, your age and the age of any other beneficiary.

Gifts of Life Insurance
The Salvation Army is named owner and/or beneficiary if an existing policy is no longer needed. It is an opportunity to make a contribution more substantial than might otherwise be possible.

Wills and Bequests
Essential to good estate planning, a will allows you to decide how your assets will be distributed after your death. A will also can reduce estate taxes, leaving as much of your estate as possible intact.

Gifts of Real Estate
A personal residence, farm, unimproved land, rental property or commercial property can be given to The Salvation Army outright, to fund charitable remainder unitrust or under a life estate agreement.

Wills and Bequests
Legal documents such as Wills should always be prepared by attorneys.

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Common Questions about planned giving

What you don't know could affect you. If you don't make a will, the state will applies to you.

1 - What is a will?
2 - What if I don't have a will?
3 - What does a will do?
4 - Isn't writing a will expensive?
5 - Are your values expressed in your plans for the future?
6 - Isn't a will only for the rich?
7 - Isn't a will only for older people?
8 - Once written, does a will remain unchanged forever?

What is a will?

It is a legal document written during your lifetime that directs the distribution of your property after your death. Your Will is a testimony to your lifelong love and concern and an opportunity to secure the future for your loved ones and the ministries you have supported during your lifetime. [ Back to questions ]

What if I don't have a will?

Actually, you do have a Will? Everyone does. Either it is written for you by the state in general terms, or you write it yourself during your lifetime with careful though and planning. The big difference is personalization. Since the state Will must apply across the board to anyone who dies intestate (without writing a Will of their own), the state-written Will distributes your property under strict, legal guidelines. No thought is given to your personal wishes or desires. And, of course, under the state-written Will, no part of your estate may be given to a charitable or religious organization. Only by carefully writing your Will, with the help of a lawyer, can you be sure your personal wishes and desires will be carried out. [ Back to questions ]

What does a will do?

A Will can help you accomplish many goals. Through your Will you can:
- Direct the distribution of your property after your death.
- Provide for cost-effective and tax-effective transfer of your property to your heirs.
- Reduce estate taxes.
- Designate a guardian for your minor children.
- Designate an executor to supervise the proper settlement of your estate.
- Reduce indecision, anxiety and family conflict at the time of your death.
- Establish a financial plan for the continuing support of loved ones.
- Fulfill your lifelong dream of helping others by making a bequest to your favorite charity, school or religious institution. [ Back to questions ]

Isn't writing a will expensive?

Most people are surprised at how easy and inexpensive writing a will can be. Unless your estate is very large and your assets complicated, the legal costs of drawing up your Will should be relatively low. Your attorney will be happy to discuss fees with you before you begin.

The biggest investment in writing your Will is thought and reflection. Many people find, when evaluating their possessions in preparation for writing a Will, that their estates are worth much more than they suspected. Will planning helps you to think about your plans and goals. As you decide who you want to receive your possessions and what you want your Will to accomplish, you gain a sense of order. [ Back to questions ]

Are your values expressed in your plans for the future?

As you reflect on the reasons for your Will--your goals for the future and how you want to fulfill them--please ask yourself this important question: Are my faith, my values, my beliefs expressed in my plans? A bequest in your Will to The Salvation Army will stand as a lasting testimony to the value you place on serving others, and your belief that our services really do make a difference in the lives of people everywhere. Your bequest, either as a specified sum or a percentage after other estate obligations have been met, will help secure the future of Army services that have touched your life and been dear to your heart. [ Back to questions ]

Isn't a will only for the rich?

Definitely not! Whether your estate (the total of everything you own) is large or small, it is never insignificant. Your estate is the material representation of your life's labor. What you want done with it-who is to benefit-after you no longer need it, is the tangible representation of your love, concerns and values. [ Back to questions ]

Isn't a will only for older people?

Again the answer is a definite no! All adults, whether young or old, single or married, with children or childless, need a Will. Even married couples who own most of their assets jointly need separate, individual Wills. Couples with young children can use their Wills to name a guardian to raise their children in case both parents should die in a mutual disaster. By establishing a Trust in a Will, you can help ensure that the guardian will have the finances necessary to meet the children's present and future needs. You have close relationships with friends as well as organizations. Unless specified in a Will, these friends and organizations cannot benefit from your estate. [ Back to questions ]

Once written, does a will remain unchanged forever?

Although your Will is a legal document written during your lifetime, it is not put into effect until the time of your death. You can, and definitely should change or update your Will periodically, especially when changes in your life situation alter your goals. [ Back to questions ]

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For more information on how your donation can make a difference, contact us by phone at 919.834.6733 or by email.


The Salvation Army
215 S. Person Street
Raleigh, NC 27601
Phone 919.834.6733
Fax 919.828.0911
Click here to email us.

The Salvation Army North & South Carolina Resource Development
P.O. Box 241808
Charlotte, NC 28224
Phone: 1.800.215.0196
Fax: 704.972.3540

The Salvation Army North & South Carolina Planned Giving
P.O. Box 241808
Charlotte, NC 28224
Phone: 1.800.254.0229
Fax: 704.972.3540

*The North & South Carolina Resource Development and Planned Giving Departments represent and serve all Salvation Army centers in the Carolinas. We work for the local offices on all matters of Planned Giving.

A Gift That Gives Back To You. Click here to learn more about the Charitable Gift Annuity.