Women's Pregnancy & Relationship Resources

Aim Legacy Society

Leave a legacy

Your estate gift can provide Aim with enduring support while offering you the opportunity to control your own legacy rather than letting the government choose it for you through the estate tax. To create a living legacy that has eternal value, simply name Aim Women’s Center as a beneficiary of your will, insurance policy, retirement plan, or trust.

Aim Women’s Center Legacy Society honors individuals and families who have named Aim Women’s Center as a beneficiary. If you would like information about how to join, or if you have already included us in your estate planning, please contact us.

Contact:
Aim Women’s Center
740-123-4567
lnicosia@aimwomenscenter.com

Below are three simple ways you can include Aim in your estate plan.

1. Bequest Gifts – Sample Language for Wills and Trusts

“I give to Aim Women’s Center, Inc. all (or a specific percentage) of the rest, residue, and remainder of my estate (or the sum of $___) to be expended by it in furtherance of its general purposes (or to be used exclusively for a specific program. If such program is not in existence at the time of my death or at any time thereafter, Aim Women’s Center, Inc. may designate another program that is continuing the goals of such program.”

If you have already completed your will, and you would like to add a charitable gift to it, a codicil may be all that is required to amend it.

2. Beneficiary Designations

To make us a full or partial beneficiary of your IRA, 401(K), annuity or life insurance policy, simply request a beneficiary designation form from your plan administrator. Our legal name is Aim Women’s Center, Inc. Our tax identification number is 34-1567102.

3. IRA Qualified Charitable Distributions

If you are 70½ or older, you may give up to $100,000 per year directly from your traditional or Roth IRA to 501(c)(3) charities. The transfer generates neither taxable income nor a tax deduction, so you still benefit even if you do not itemize deductions. It can satisfy all or part of your required minimum distribution. Married couples may each give up to $100,000 from their own IRA accounts.

Contact our office to learn how to inform your plan provider to initiate a Qualified Charitable Distribution from your IRA.