Changing Fiscal Years

Questions about changing fiscal years with the IRS have come up several times in the last few months, this one is the most recent:

I work with a non-for-profit that uses a calendar year to file 990 but a fiscal year for budgeting. As the organization grows, we think it would be simpler to have them both the same, but a calendar year end is problematic so we want to switch our IRS filing year end. What do we need to do to make this switch?

You will have to do a short year 990 filing as well as submitting a form 1128 to the IRS (the form instructions are here), the details can be found here. You should have available your tax exempt ruling letter from the IRS as you will need to submit a copy along with the form. If your nonprofit has only had to file a 990N with the IRS, you may not have to file the 1128 form. Please read the instructions to form 1128 for more details

For the short year filing, if you need to get an extension to file your 990, you’ll have to file one by the initial due date for your new fiscal year.

You should also look over any of your organizing documents to see if they contain any mention of your current fiscal year. You may need to amend those and refile them with the relevant state agencies and the IRS.

What Restricted Means

A question came through my in-box a while ago and made me realize that I should clarify some terms that I think we hear a lot in nonprofits.  Here is the main part of the email:

When a member joins our nonprofit they are required to provide a membership fee which is refundable in full if they move out of the neighborhood. Because these fees are refundable (i.e., deposits), would they be considered restricted funds?

The short answer is no, and for several reasons. #1 – the monies received were probably not contributions with any donor restrictions on them so would not be restricted funds. #2 – These sound like deposits that they have to hold onto and not spend so they can give them back if need be. That would not be considered income so could not be restricted.

Restricted is a word we hear quite a bit in nonprofits when it comes to money. So is unrestricted, conditional, temporarily restricted among others, and with the above email in mind I thought I would define a few terms.

Restricted — as in restricted income, restricted donations, restricted revenue. The world of nonprofit accounting is made a touch more complex because donors can tell us exactly what they would like us to do with the money they give us. They can restrict the use of the funds for specific purposes. “I like your organization and I want to give you money to operate this program.” That is a restricted donation. Your nonprofit is given money for a purpose that is narrower is scope than your organizations overall purpose. You can ask for restricted donations, “Please help our organization by giving money to support this program.” The donor imposes any restrictions on the funds they give you. If they don’t the donation would be considered unrestricted. Earned revenue is unrestricted. Most government money is unrestricted – they are not giving you any money, they are hiring you to perform a service and will only pay you if you perform the service.

Conditional — not the same as restricted. Conditions are imposed by donors on funds they want to give you. Matching funds are a common example; you’ll get $20,000 if you raise $10,000. Even if you already have the $20,000 sitting in the bank it is not yours (it is in fact a liability — money you owe someone else) until you raise the other $10,000 and satisfy the conditions of the grant.

I’ll do some more terms in later posts but if you have any questions about the above items or have other questions leave them in the comments section below.

The IRS Wants To Hear From You

If you have not filed a a form 990 for the last three years you may be in trouble. If you work with a nonprofit and have just asked yourself, “what is a 990?” read this and these, then come back. But since this is the Not-For-Profit Accounting blog devoted nonprofit accounting issues I’ll assume my readers know all about 990s. But there may be folks new to the sector out there, maybe you know a new board member, so please pass this information on to them.

As this press release from Guidestar says,

The IRS will begin revoking exemptions on May 16, 2010, but will wait until 2011 to send revocation notices.

If you miss the first filing deadline for 2009 990s of May 15 2010 (the deadline for nonprofits who have calendar year fiscal years that end on December 31) the IRS will start pulling exceptions in six months or so. More about that from the IRS can be found here.