UNT and the UNT Foundation, Inc. will be closed for the winter break from December 23 through January 2. If you would like to make a gift during this time and BEFORE December 31, click the button below to see more information.
1. Gift via Credit Card – quickest and easiest for the donor!!
2. Gift via Check:
3. Gift via Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT or Wire Transfer):
4. Gift of Stock:
How a Donor Makes a Gift of Stock Held in "Street Name" at Their Brokerage
Contacts:
Executive Director
UNT Foundation (940) 565-4555
Doug Wall, Deutsche Bank Alex Brown, Dallas, Texas
Broker for the UNT Foundation, Inc.
(214) 740-7731, (866) 930-7731
For any further question, please email Wesley.davis@UNT.edu.
Annual Giving is the foundation for private support in higher education. Most UNT donors support the University through renewable, annual gifts.
Private support is critical because a significant gap exists between state funded support and the cost of providing a quality education. UNT alumni and friends help make up the difference through their annual, tax-deductible gifts to scholarships, programs, learning resources, and athletics. These collective acts of generosity help ensure that a UNT education remains affordable and within reach for our students.
Endowed gifts are major gifts that create a permanent legacy which will impact generations of UNT students. Funded in perpetuity, an endowed gift ensures the long-term success of the University. Contributions can be designated to scholarships, professorships, departmental chairs, and University centers and programs. Donors may choose to contribute to an existing endowment or create a new one.
Many employers sponsor matching gift programs and will match any charitable contributions made by their employees.
If your company is eligible, request a matching gift form from your employer. Then send it, completed and signed, with your gift. We will do the rest. The impact of your gift to this organization may be doubled or possibly tripled! Some companies will even match gifts made by retirees and/or spouses.
Planned giving, sometimes referred to as gift planning, may be defined as a method of supporting nonprofits and charities that enables philanthropic individuals or donors to make larger gifts than they could make from their income. While some planned gifts provide a life-long income to the donor, others use estate and tax planning techniques to provide for charity and other heirs in ways that maximize the gift and/or minimize its impact on the donor's estate.
Thus, by definition, a planned gift is any major gift made in lifetime or at death as part of a donor’s overall financial and/or estate planning.
Cash gifts are the most common and popular means of supporting the Foundation. Making a cash gift is quick and easy, and it helps provide needed funds immediately. You can make a gift online through our secure page. Or you can make checks payable to the University of North Texas Foundation. Indicate on the memo line the specific program you wish to support (for example: scholarships, endowed chairs, etc.). If no program is specified, your gift will support the Emerald Eagles Scholarship.
We provide the convenience of fulfilling a commitment over a period of time through multiple credit card payments or automatic preauthorized withdrawals from your checking account (ACH). Please call the UNT Development Office at 940-565-2900 to arrange multiple credit card payments.
If you would like to wire your gift to the Foundation, please use (or have your banker use) the following information:
Wiring Cash Gifts*
To: Wells Fargo
ABA: 121000248
DDA Account: 5690433342
Account Name: UNT Foundation, Inc.
FBO: (Insert instructional information such as endowment account name here)
*To ensure proper handling of cash deposits, please contact Wesley Davis (940-565-4555) prior to initiating any wire transactions.
Consider investing in the The University of North Texas Foundation. Your gift of securities, especially appreciated stock, offers two tax-smart advantages—a charitable income tax deduction and the elimination of a capital gains tax. There are three ways to transfer securities to the Foundation: electronic transfer, U.S. Postal Service, or hand delivery.
You (or the registered certificate holder) should complete the back of the certificate(s), assigning the appropriate number of shares to the The University of North Texas Foundation. Place the unendorsed certificate(s) and a cover letter (including your name, address, and purpose of the gift) in one envelope. In a second envelope, place a signed, signature guaranteed, Stock Power Form (you can obtain one from your broker or local bank). The Stock Power Form must be signed, but do not complete the form.
Send the two envelopes using registered mail or drop them by the Foundation’s office. We’d enjoy meeting you and will provide you with a receipt for the securities.
The Foundation’s MAILING (different from physical address) is:
UNT Foundation
1155 Union Circle, #311250
Denton, TX 76203-5017
The Foundation’s PHYSICAL address for delivery is:
UNT Foundation
801 North Texas Blvd., Suite 149
Denton, TX 76203
For tax purposes, the date of the gift is the date on which the Foundation assumes complete control of the securities. For securities sent through the mail, the gift date is the postmark date on the envelope. For hand-delivered and non-U.S. Postal Service, the credit date is the date received. For securities held in an account, it is the day it was transferred into our account. The donor receives a full credit of the mean value of the stock on the gift date. The Foundation’s policy is to sell the securities as soon as possible and apply the funds to the purpose specified by you.
Donors transfer ownership of their securities to the University of North Texas Foundation, Inc. to create endowments or current project support at the University. By transferring publicly traded stock to the Foundation, donors bypass all capital gains and receive a charitable deduction for the average of the high and low values of the security on the date of transfer.
How a Donor Makes a Gift of Stock Held in "Street Name" at Their Brokerage
Contacts:
Executive Director
UNT Foundation (940) 565-4555
Doug Wall, Deutsche Bank Alex Brown, Dallas, Texas
Broker for the UNT Foundation, Inc.
(214) 740-7731, (866) 930-7731
How a Donor Makes a Gift of Stock over the Internet
How a Donor Makes a Gift of Stock Certificate(s) That They Are Holding
In Person:
If Mailed:
Donors will receive confirmation of the transfer from the UNT Foundation, and an official receipt from the University of North Texas for the value of the gift.
It may be to your financial advantage to give a gift of capital assets. Capital assets include real estate, art collections, insurance policies, antiques, jewelry, stamp/coin collections, etc. The advantage of a capital assets gift depends on your circumstances. For example, your estate assets may be distributed over your lifetime in order to reduce future estate taxes.
A charitable gift annuity is a great way to support the University while providing you with a quarterly income, a charitable income tax deduction, and professional investment management. A charitable gift annuity allows you to donate assets to the Foundation in exchange for a guaranteed payment for tax purposes as a combination of non-taxable income, capital gains income, and ordinary income.
A charitable lead trust is a managed trust that enables you to transfer assets to your heirs at reduced gift and estate tax costs, and transfer the full appreciated value of assets to beneficiaries with no further gift and estate tax at the termination of the trust. A charitable lead trust pays an annuity or a fixed percentage of the assets to the The University of North Texas Foundation for a specified number of years. At the end of this period, the assets are passed on to the beneficiaries named by the donor.
You may name the Foundation as an irrevocable primary or contingent beneficiary (should the primary not survive you) of a new or fully paid life insurance policy. The policy’s cash value at the time of donation is deductible as a charitable contribution. You may also continue paying the premiums after donating a policy, in which case the premiums are tax deductible as well.
Bequests often establish a named gift fund (scholarship, memorial fund, etc.) honoring the memory of yourself or a loved one while assisting the University with its programs in an area of your choosing. In addition to leaving a legacy at the University, naming the Foundation as a beneficiary (or contingent beneficiary) in your will (or your spouse’s will) can reduce the amount of federal estate tax your heirs are assessed.