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Thursday June 4, 2026Private Letter RulingEducational Center's Transfer Constitutes Unusual Grant
GiftLaw Note:
Organization made a request to recognize a proposed transfer from its supporting organization (Organization B) as an unusual grant under Reg. 1.170A-9(f)(6)(ii). Organization is a Sec. 501(c)(3) public charity that operates as an educational center offering equine therapy and related programming to the public. Organization B is a Type I supporting organization exempt under Sec. 509(a)(3) and formed to hold, receive, administer, manage and dispose of monies and property in support of Organization. Organization plans to merge with Organization B, with Organization as the surviving entity. As part of the merger, Organization B will transfer all its assets to Organization which is mostly comprised of real property. The transfer is a one-time restructuring event and is significantly larger than Organization’s typical contributions. The transfer will be used to continue Organization’s exempt activities and to fund a board-designated endowment. Large bequests from a single donor can threaten a public charity’s status; however, certain donations may be excluded from the public support test. Regulation 1.170A-9(f)(6)(ii) explains that a contribution can be excluded from the public support test if it (1) is attracted by reason of the publicly supported nature of the organization, (2) is unusual or unexpected in size and (3) would, by reason of its size, adversely affect the organization’s publicly supported status. The facts and circumstances test found in Reg. 1.509(a)-3(c)(4) provides considerations for determining if a contribution may be excluded as an unusual grant. Many of the factors relate to the donor’s relationship with the organization, the type of contribution made and the amount of public support the charity has historically solicited and received. Here, the Service determined that the proposed grant satisfies Reg. 1.170A-9(f)(6)(ii) and related provisions. Therefore, it is an unusual grant and will not adversely affect Organization’s publicly supported status. PLR 202539017 Educational Center’s Transfer Constitutes Unusual Grant 9/26/25 (7/3/25) Dear * * *: We have considered your * * * request for recognition of an unusual grant under Treasury Regulation Section 1.170A-9(f)(6)(ii) and related provisions. Based on the information provided, we concluded that the proposed grant constitutes an unusual grant under Treas. Reg. Section 1.170A-9(f)(6)(ii) and related provisions of the regulations. The basis for our conclusion is discussed below. Facts:You are tax exempt under Internal Revenue Code (IRC) Section 501(c)(3). You are currently classified as a public charity described in IRC Sections 509(a)(1) and 170(b)(1)(A)(vi). You operate as an educational center that offers equine therapy and other related programming to the public. You also conduct a robust fundraising program that includes solicitation of grants, fundraising events, and individual donors. Your website informs the public of your activities and notifies them of your volunteer and donation opportunities as well. You hold elections to fill your eleven-member board with a diverse group of professionals who possess knowledge, skills, and personal expertise relevant to your exempt purposes and activities. You are supported by B, a Type I supporting organization exempt under IRC Section 509(a)(3). B was formed to hold, receive, administer, manage, and dispose of monies and property in support of, and to further your, exempt purposes. B holds real property directly used in your operations and activities, along with an endowment consisting of readily marketable securities and cash. You plan to merge with your supporting organization, B, on C; you will be the surviving entity. You anticipate several benefits from this merger. First, the assets held by B will be more efficiently used by you directly, requiring less administrative time and costs. Second, the anticipated merger will allow you to develop stronger and more direct ties to the public that donates directly to you and participates in your programs. As part of the merger, B will transfer its held assets to you. The amount of the transfer, which will constitute all of B's assets, is approximately x dollars, and is largely comprised of real property used directly by you. You anticipate you will receive these assets when the merger becomes effective on C. After the transfer of assets, you will continue to use the real property the same way you did before the merger. The non-real property investments and funds transferred to you will be used to support your general operations. You intend to operate a board-designed endowment. You have never received a contribution of this size or value. The majority of the contributions and donations you have received have been less than y dollars. This transfer of assets is also unusual because it will result from a one-time restructuring to merge B into you. Therefore, you are seeking a determination that the transfer of assets from B to you, resulting from your anticipated merger by operation of law, constitutes an unusual grant under Treas. Reg. Section 1.170a-9(f)(6)(ii) and Treas. Reg. Section 1.509(a)-3(c)(3). Prior to this anticipated contribution, you have been able to meet the public support test without the benefit of any exclusions of unusual grants. Law:Two sections of the Treasury Regulations set forth the criteria for an unusual grant. They are: Treasury Regulation Section 1.170A-9(f)(6)(ii) This section states that, for purposes of applying the 2% limitation to determine whether the 33 1/3% of-support test is satisfied or the 10% support limitation is met, one or more contributions may be excluded from both the numerator and the denominator of the applicable percent-of-support fraction. The exclusion is generally intended to apply to substantial contributions or bequests from disinterested parties which:
Treasury Regulation Section 1.509(a)-3(c)(4) This section states that all pertinent facts and circumstances will be taken into consideration to determine whether a particular contribution may be excluded. No single factor will necessarily be determinative. Such factors may include:
A contribution made by a person described in bullets a through e is ordinarily given less favorable consideration than a contribution made by others not described above.
Application of Law:Revenue Ruling 76-440 states a large inter vivos gift of undeveloped land from a disinterested donor to a normally publicly supported organization exempt under IRC Section 501(c)(3), conditioned on the land's being used in perpetuity to further the exempt organization's purposes of preserving natural resources, constitutes an unusual grant and, therefore, did not adversely affect the organization's status as a publicly supported organization under IRC Sections 509(a)(1) and 170(b)(1)(A)(vi). Although the transfer of assets from B to you is not an inter vivos gift as described above, you similarly anticipate receipt of a large contribution in the form of a transfer of assets from N to be used to further your exempt purposes. Therefore, based upon the facts and circumstances of this case, we find the contribution meets the general requirements of Treas. Reg. Section 1.170A-9(f)(6)(ii). Specifically, the transfer of assets is unusually large compared to your typical public support and would, by reason of its size, adversely affect your organization as normally being publicly supported. Further, we find the contribution satisfies the facts and circumstances test of Treas. Reg. Section 1.170A-9(f)(6)(iii), although not all the factors listed in Treas. Reg. Section 1.509(a)-3(c)(4) are present. General factors which we find are satisfied under these regulations include:
Accordingly, given all the pertinent facts and circumstances, the anticipated transfer of assets from B to you will qualify as unusual for purposes of exclusion from the numerator and denominator of the public support test under IRC Sections 509(a)(1) and 170(b)(1)(A)(vi) in the tax year in which you receive it. We'll make this determination letter available for public inspection after deleting personally identifiable information, as required by IRC Section 6110. We've enclosed Letter 437, Notice of Intention to Disclose — Rulings, and a copy of the letter that shows our proposed deletions.
We've sent a copy of this letter to your representative as indicated in your power of attorney. If you have questions, please contact the person listed at the top of this letter. Sincerely, Stephen A. Martin Enclosures: Published October 10, 2025
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