Philanthropically inclined families with donor-advised fund accounts are using them to prepare the next generation to take up the family's giving legacy, according to a new report from Fidelity Charitable.
DAFs also help donors integrate giving into their total financial plan.
A survey of more than 1,100 Fidelity Charitable donors found the following:
- 94% strongly or somewhat agreed that they were teaching or had taught their children to give
- 65% had discussed their charitable giving with family more than twice in the past year, including 17% who had discussed the topic with family more than five times a year
- 78% said the causes they supported reflected input from family members
Trends that emerged from the survey portended a more central role for charitable giving in families in the future.
Donors under 50 were one and a half times likelier that those over 70 to strongly agree they were or had taught their children to give.
Seventy-eight percent had discussed philanthropic strategies with family members at least twice a year, and 86% said their charitable choices were influenced by their family.
DAF accounts have also proved a boon for many donors, helping them integrate philanthropy into their total financial portfolio and significantly changing their approach to charitable giving, Amy Danforth, president of Fidelity Charitable, said in a statement.
"They use their accounts to more easily plan for both short- and long-term charitable giving and to track their progress toward their philanthropic goals," Danforth said.
The great majority of donors were actively recommending grants, while some were also using their DAFs to pursue longer-term giving strategies, an analysis of some 104,000 donors connected to nearly 64,000 Fidelity giving accounts showed.
The average number of grants per account rose to eight per year in 2013 from seven in 2012, while the average grant size increased by 6% to $4,017.