Planned Charitable Gifts

Planning charitable gifts is a great way for you to meet your charitable giving goals along with your estate-planning goals. You may want to consider with your estate-planning advisor some of the following tools that could help you accomplish your financial objectives.

  • An outright gift of cash, securities, or personal property is a quick and easy way to make a gift, allows for tax deduction, and, in the case of securities, could allow for you to avoid capital gains taxes.
  • A bequest in a will exempt a portion of your estate from federal estate taxes.
  • Life Insurance gift – By purchasing a life insurance policy that names Jefferies Family Scholarship as the beneficiary, you could make a large gift with little cost. You may also obtain the benefit of a yearly income-tax deduction and future deductions so long as you are paying premiums.
  • Retirement plan gift – You could name Jefferies Family Scholarship as a beneficiary on the remainder of your retirement assets after your lifetime and avoid a heavily taxed gift to heirs.
  • Charitable trusts – Some trusts allow you to pay an annuity to yourself, designating a remainder as a gift, pay a percentage of the trust value annually, or pay income to the scholarship program for a set term, thus reducing the size of your taxable estate. Such trusts allow income planning and immediate income-tax benefits.


I am thankful to Jefferies Family Scholarship for giving me the support and tools to succeed at SUNY Cortland and the opportunity to study abroad at the University of the Sunshine Coast in Queensland, Australia. Academically, my grades have vastly improved due to my rigorous study habits and your belief in my ability to succeed.

Marc Rolla, JFS Alumni






  • The average total cost for just one year at a private four-year college exceeds $33,000, according to CollegeBoard.com.
  • For the last two years, forty percent of JFS recipients' parents reported total family incomes under $100,000 and many of our scholarship winners are being raised by single parents.
  • Nineteen percent of Jefferies' employees make less than $75,000 per year.