Charitable Giving in 2026: What Donors Should Know

Tax changes may feel national in scope, but the choices families make because of them are deeply local. As the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) reshapes the federal landscape in 2026, many individuals and families across San Luis Obispo County are taking a fresh look at how they structure their giving. For those committed to strengthening our region this moment offers an opportunity to plan with intention.

Why this matters for San Luis Obispo County
With OBBBA now in effect, the “math” behind charitable giving has shifted. The new 0.5% Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) floor means that the earliest portion of a gift is purely about supporting the cause, with tax benefits beginning only after that threshold is met.

At the same time, the new Universal Deduction allows non‑itemizers to deduct up to $1,000 ($2,000 for joint filers) in cash gifts. Whether you’re a long‑time philanthropist or someone who gives when you can to the nonprofits you love, these changes influence the timing and structure of your generosity.

A new “cap” provision adds another layer of complexity. For donors in the 37% federal income tax bracket, itemized charitable deductions are now capped at the 35% tax rate. In simplified terms, depending on other factors, a $10,000 gift may now yield a $3,500 tax benefit instead of $3,700. Together, the floor and the cap reshape how donors plan their charitable contributions.

Planning strategies to consider
Every donor’s situation is unique, but these shifts may spark new conversations around:

● Timing gifts across multiple years: “Bunching” charitable contributions into one tax year may help donors meet the new AGI floor and maximize deductions. Some donors use a donor advised fund to make several years’ worth of charitable gifts at once, receive the deduction upfront, and support nonprofits over time.

● Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCDs): For donors age 70½ and older, giving directly from an IRA remains one of the most tax‑efficient ways to support local causes and it bypasses AGI entirely.

● Donating appreciated stock: This approach allows donors to avoid capital gains taxes while supporting community needs at full market value.

● Establishing a donor‑advised fund: A DAF at a local foundation can secure a deduction in a high‑income year while providing steady, ongoing support to the nonprofits and students you care about.

Ensuring a thriving Central Coast
These strategies are about more than tax planning. They’re about ensuring that the generosity of our neighbors continues to uplift the programs and people who make San Luis Obispo County vibrant, from housing and mental health services to education, youth programs, and community initiatives.
Thoughtful charitable planning helps shape what happens here, in our own backyard. By aligning your 2026 giving strategy with your values, you help ensure that our region remains strong for years to come.
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Sources & Further Reading
● “Charitable Giving Strategies Under OBBBA” – JD Supra
● “The Tax-Saving Charity Funds Wealthy People Are Buzzing About” – The Wall Street Journal
● “Wealthy Tax Planning: Navigating the 2026 Bills” – CNBC
● “Bill Gates’ Stock Donations and Tax Benefits in 2026” – MoneyWise
● “Wake Up Call: OBBBA Changes and Client Conversations” – Community Foundation of Greater Birmingham
● “How Talking to Clients About Philanthropy Benefits Advisors” – ThinkAdvisor
● “The 2026 Billionaire Tax Act” – Lexology
The information provided is for educational purposes and does not constitute tax, legal, or accounting advice. Please consult your professional advisors regarding your individual situation.

Philanthropy is Evolving and Your Community Foundation is Responding

At The Community Foundation, we believe philanthropy must continue evolving alongside this moment. Over the past year, we have made several strategic changes designed to help unlock more charitable capital, reduce barriers to giving, strengthen nonprofit sustainability, and support long term community resilience.

Reduced Minimums for Donor Advised Funds

This year, we reduced the minimum required to establish a donor-advised fund, helping make organized, strategic philanthropy accessible to more individuals and families across our region. Donors can open a non-endowed fund with a gift of $5000.

For many donors, charitable giving today looks different than it once did. Families want to involve the next generation, respond quickly to emerging issues, support multiple causes over time, and create giving plans that reflect their values. Lowering the minimum helps open the door for more people to engage in long term philanthropy in a meaningful way.

We believe philanthropy should feel approachable, actionable, and connected to community impact. Donor advised fundholders can also choose investment strategies that align with their giving goals, whether they plan to grant funds quickly to address immediate needs or grow charitable assets over time to support future community impact.

Increasing Our Endowment Spending Policy

We also approved an increase to our endowment spending policy, allowing more funding to flow into grants and scholarships during a period of heightened community need.

Nonprofits throughout San Luis Obispo County continue to face increased demand for services alongside rising operational costs and uncertain funding streams. In response, we felt it was important to thoughtfully balance long term investment stewardship with the urgency of supporting organizations and students today.

Reduced Fees to Maximize Community Impact

As The Community Foundation continues to grow, we remain committed to evaluating how we can create greater value for fundholders and nonprofit partners. Recent fee reductions are part of that effort.

We reduced fees for our donor advised funds, agency funds, and scholarship funds to help maximize charitable impact and keep more resources working in the community.

Our goal is simple: keep more charitable dollars working in the community while continuing to provide strong governance, donor services, investment oversight, and grant administration.

Launching Agency Investment Funds

One of the most significant developments this year was the launch of our new Agency Investment Funds, designed specifically to help nonprofit organizations strengthen long-term sustainability.

These flexible, non-endowed funds provide nonprofits with access to professional investment management, diversified investment pools, and oversight from the Foundation’s Investment Committee. Organizations can invest reserve funds and long-term assets in ways that align with their financial goals and timelines, while still maintaining full flexibility and access to their funds.

Unlike traditional endowments, nonprofits retain the ability to retrieve a portion or the entirety of their fund balance at any time, giving organizations greater financial flexibility while still benefiting from long term investment management and stewardship.

Too often, nonprofits are forced to focus solely on short term survival. We believe philanthropy can also help create pathways toward stability, resilience, and future growth.

Expanding Collaboration Around Complex Community Challenges

We also recognize that today’s biggest challenges cannot be solved by any one organization acting alone.

Issues like housing affordability, workforce development, childcare, access to healthcare, nonprofit sustainability, and the impacts of federal and state policy changes are deeply interconnected and require coordinated regional responses. Increasingly, our role is not only to fund important work, but to help convene partners, align resources, and create space for collaboration across sectors.

We’ve expanded partnerships with local governments, nonprofit leaders, funders, and regional stakeholders to better respond to emerging community needs and long-term systemic challenges.

Through Together for SLO County: A Critical Response Fund, public agencies, private philanthropy, and community donors came together to respond to significant cuts impacting our local safety net and the nonprofit organizations providing essential services across the county. The initiative distributed more than $2.25 million in unrestricted support to 27 organizations, while also investing in sustainability support to help strengthen long term operational health.

We are also deepening partnerships around housing and economic mobility through mission related investments and regional collaboration. Since 2019, the Foundation has invested nearly $1 million in recoverable, low interest loans through the SLO County Housing Trust Fund to help leverage larger state and federal funding opportunities that support affordable housing development across the county.

As community needs become more complex, philanthropy must become more connected, adaptive, and collaborative.

How Your Community Foundation Is Responding

Community foundations are uniquely positioned to help communities navigate moments like this because we are built for the long term. We are deeply rooted in the regions we serve, connected across sectors, and able to bring together donors, nonprofits, public agencies, businesses, and community leaders around shared solutions.

At The Community Foundation, our role is evolving beyond traditional grantmaking. We are helping convene partnerships, move charitable resources more strategically, support nonprofit sustainability, and invest in long term community resilience.

Philanthropy today is not simply about preserving charitable assets. It is about activating them thoughtfully and strategically for public good. It is about removing barriers, responding to changing realities, and building stronger pathways between generosity and community impact.

The future of our region will depend on strong collaboration, coordinated leadership, and continued investment in the long term health of our communities.

We are proud to continue evolving alongside our community and deeply grateful to the donors, nonprofit partners, volunteers, and supporters helping shape what philanthropy can become moving forward.

 

Generosity in Action Event Recap 4/29/26

On April 29th, we hosted our first annual Generosity in Action event, bringing together past and present board members, committee members, fundholders, and supporters to celebrate the impact of community philanthropy. During the evening, we announced an exciting milestone: The Community Foundation has officially surpassed $100 million in charitable assets under stewardship. We also honored two remarkable leaders – Dr. Anneka Scranton, recipient of the Spark Award for her work with the Together for SLO County initiative, and founding board member Warren Sinsheimer, who received the 2026 Community Catalyst Award for more than 50 years of visionary service.

We reflected on a year of meaningful impact, driven by strong investment performance and steady donor support. In 2025, the Foundation awarded $6.59 million through 412 grants to 170 organizations, along with scholarships for 123 students. Our largest impact to date!

Looking ahead, we shared our continued focus on three strategic pillars:

Give – activating more capital for local impact

Lead – strengthening the nonprofit sector through collaboration and leadership

Solve – addressing emerging needs like housing and healthcare through regional partnerships

Thank you to everyone who joined us. Your partnership and generosity made the evening truly meaningful.

To see the full event photos click here

Investing in Futures: $460,148 Awarded in Local Scholarships

San Luis Obispo County students are pursuing big dreams — and thanks to the generosity of local donors, more of those dreams are becoming possible.

This year, The Community Foundation awarded more than $460,000 in scholarships to students across the county, supporting future nurses, engineers, pilots, tradespeople, teachers, scientists, and community leaders. Behind every scholarship is a donor who believes in investing in the next generation and helping remove financial barriers to education.

The impact goes far beyond tuition support. These scholarships recognize leadership, resilience, service, and potential while strengthening the future of our community for years to come.

Read the full announcement  to learn more about this year’s scholarship recipients, program growth, and the lasting impact of donor generosity.

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Heidi H. McPherson Chief Executive Officer (805) 543-2323