IRS New Form 990 Instructions
for Tax-Exempt Organizations
Target Audience: Business Owners, Nonprofit Executive or Board Member, Boston Nonprofit Accountant, Tax-Exempt Organizations, Massachusetts Healthcare Accountant, form 990, irs form 990 instructions
On Aug. 19, the IRS issued instructions for the redesigned IRS Form 990, Return of Organization Exempt from Income Tax, which it had released in December 2007. Because the complex new 990 is designed to enhance transparency and promote tax compliance, filing it is expected to require greater public disclosure and more preparation time.
Exempt organizations generally are required to use the new Form 990 for fiscal years that end on or after Dec. 31, 2008. Smaller organizations will be allowed to phase into using the new form over a one- to three-year period, depending on annual gross receipts and total assets.
Find out how our Accounting Consulting experts can you navigate the New Form 990. Email us or call us at 1 (888) 875-9770.
Nonprofits that weren't required to file Form 990 before the new instructions were issued, such as churches and certain church-related organizations, remain exempt from the filing requirement.
IRS Form 990 Preparing For The New Reporting Requirements - May 2009
Doug McGregor, Stephen Doneski, and Edward Johnson present crucial steps your company should be taking to become familiar with the new Form 990 and its enhanced reporting requirements.
IRS Form 990 Update Presentation: Preparing for the New Reporting Requirements - December 2008
Doug McGregor presents an MHA coordinated discussion of the significantly redesigned Form 990, filed by all tax-exempt hospitals.
The new Form 990 instructions confirm that a nonprofit must potentially provide information on as many as 20 policies that it may have in place (some apply to only a small number of organizations), or disclose to the IRS — and thus ultimately the public — that it has no policies in these areas. Because of the new form's complexity and significance, nonprofits should begin gathering the information they need now, if they haven't started already.
Steps to file IRS Form 990 correctly
If you're a nonprofit executive or board member, here are two key steps you'll need to make sure your organization is taking right now. Read below for IRS Form 990 Instructions:
- Producing newly required information. This will initially make the Form 990 process more complicated. The information you may want, or need, to provide on your policies could be extensive.
- Developing explanations and descriptions required for the form that communicate your organization's mission, operation and activities in the best light. Your answers to questions about your policies and guidelines will be available for public inspection on Web sites like www.guidestar.org and to funding sources and others that require submitting Form 990. Many states require the Form 990 to be submitted for charity registration purposes. Many grantors also require the form to be submitted annually.
Revised format of the New 990 changes
The new Form 990 uses a core form that all filing organizations must complete. Important new elements — those emphasized by the IRS — include:
- Summaries of your organization's purpose, your board's independence, your organization's staffing and two years of financial information, including major income and expense categories, assets and liabilities,
- Substantial new governance and policy information, as mentioned (see listing below), and
- Greater opportunity to describe programs while disclosing revenue, program by program.
Significant new details that may not be readily available without proper planning include information on:
- Specialized assets, including donor-advised funds; conservation easements; tax, escrow and custodial accounts; endowment funds; and investments in land, buildings and equipment;
- Fundraising and gaming activities and events, including amounts paid to professional fund raisers and details about bingo and other games;
- For hospitals, information on charity care and community benefits provided — only a detailed list of "facilities" (a term specifically defined by the final instructions) is required for 2008, but the IRS will expect extensive details moving forward;
- Grants and other assistance provided by the organization to other organizations, governments and individuals in the United States — this includes scholarships, awards, traditional grants, and relief and charitable support for individuals;
- Tax-exempt bond information — limited reporting for 2008, but the IRS will expect extensive details in later years; and
- Activities outside the United States, including expenditures — country-specific information isn't required for 2008, but will be for future years.
- Some previously required information simply moves to the new schedule.
990 Form emphasizes compensation and insider transactions
The new Form 990 emphasizes compensation issues and insider transactions, and may require additional information from past years, including:
- Payments to all current and former board members, officers, key employees and highest-paid employees;
- Supplemental compensation information for many executives paid more than $150,000, and all former executives and board members regardless of amount — details will include base compensation, bonus/incentives, other current compensation, deferred compensation and nontaxable benefits, whether paid by the organization or a related organization;
- Payments to and from related organizations;
- Identification of, and policies on, executive travel; and
- Identification and descriptions of excess benefit transactions, loans and buying, selling and other business/financial exchanges with insiders.
Governance and policies
Governance issues are emphasized by the IRS, as are certain organizational policies common to many nonprofit organizations, including:
- Your board's independence, voting rights and elections,
- Your board's review of Form 990 prior to filing,
- Any conflicts of interest and your compliance-monitoring process,
- Your audit committee,
- Executive compensation, including travel, housing, clubs and discretionary accounts,
- Whistle blower protection,
- Document retention,
- Affiliate chapters,
- Joint ventures,
- Public availability of exemption application and Forms 990 and 990T,
- Gift acceptance,
- Conservation easements,
- Grant funds paid in the United States,
- Grant funds paid in foreign countries,
- Tax-exempt bond policies,
- For hospitals — charity care, community benefit and debt-collection policies, and
- For schools — racial nondiscrimination.
Smaller organization phase-in (Form 990-EZ)
The new Form 990 is being phased in for smaller organizations, which may file the simpler Form 990-EZ during a transition period as follows:
- 2008 — organizations with gross receipts under $1 million and assets under $2.5 million
- 2009 — organizations with gross receipts under $500,000 and assets under $1.25 million
- 2010 and after — organizations with gross receipts under $200,000 and assets under $500,000.
Caution: Even if your organization is eligible to file Form 990-EZ, be aware that the new version incorporates some of the new requirements from the new (regular) Form 990.
An opportunity for improvement - meeting Form 990 requirements
This alert highlights only the new requirements likely to affect most tax-exempt organizations. Check with Feeley & Driscoll's nonprofit accountants to see whether your particular nonprofit must meet additional new Form 990 requirements.
While gathering and reporting the additional information required by the new form may be a chore, it also has an upside. Preparing the new Form 990 provides an opportunity to:
Upgrade your practices and reporting. The form's questions about policies and practices may result in your organization adopting useful new policies or improving existing ones. It also may be an opportune time to step up weak or questionable reporting.
Provide more useful information to the public in a format that positively showcases your organization. Grantors and donors are likely to begin using Form 990 data to make funding decisions. The more you can show that your organization is efficiently and effectively run, the easier your fundraising will be.
Whether your organization benefits from the changes depends largely on your readiness. According to the IRS, "minor changes in format and wording" to the new form may follow, but no major changes are expected.
So don't wait until filing time to start filling in the new Form 990. call us at 1 (888) 875-9770 now to learn what your organization or nonprofit can do before the end of the fiscal year to present itself in the best public light. The sooner you act, the more you can make the new requirement a plus rather than a minus for your nonprofit.
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