Every organization exempt from federal income tax under section
501(a) must file an annual information return except:
- A church, an interchurch organization of local units of a
church, a convention or association of churches, or an integrated
auxiliary of a church (as defined later under Religious
Organizations in chapter 3),
- A church-affiliated organization that is exclusively engaged
in managing funds or maintaining retirement programs,
- A school below college level affiliated with a church or
operated by a religious order, even though it is not an integrated
auxiliary of a church,
- A mission society sponsored by or affiliated with one or
more churches or church denominations, more than half of the society's
activities are conducted in, or directed at, persons in foreign
countries,
- An exclusively religious activity of any religious
order,
- A state institution, the income of which is excluded from
gross income under section 115,
- A corporation described in section 501(c)(1) [a
corporation that is organized under an Act of Congress and is:
- an instrumentality of the United States, and
- exempt from Federal income taxes],
- A black lung benefit trust described in section 501(c)(21)
[Required to file Form 990-BL, Information and Initial
Excise Tax Return for Black Lung Benefit Trusts and Certain Related
Persons. See chapter 4 for more information.],
- A stock bonus, pension, or profit-sharing trust that
qualifies under section 401. [required to file Form 5500,
Annual Return/Report of Employee Benefit Plan],
- A religious or apostolic organization described in section
501(d) [required to file Form 1065, U.S. Return of
Partnership Income],
- A foreign organization described in section 501(a)
[other than a private foundation] that normally does not
have more than $25,000 in annual gross receipts from sources within
the United States and has no significant activity in the United
States. For further information, see Revenue Procedure 94-17,
1994-1 C.B. 579,
- A governmental unit or an affiliate of a governmental unit
that meets the requirements of Revenue Procedure 95-48,
1995-2 C.B. 418,
- An exempt organization (other than a private foundation,
discussed in chapter 3) having gross receipts in each tax year that
normally are not more than $25,000. (See the instructions for Form 990
for more information about what
constitutes annual gross receipts that are normally not more than
$25,000.), or
- A private foundation exempt under section 501(c)(3) and
described in section 509(a). (Required to file Form
990-PF).
Forms 990 and 990-EZ.
Exempt organizations, other than private foundations, must file
their annual information returns on Form 990, or Form 990-EZ.
Political organizations that are required to file Form
1120-POL (discussed later under Political Organization
Income Tax Return) are also required to file Form 990 or
990-EZ and Schedule B (Form 990 or 990-EZ) for tax years
beginning after June 30, 2000. Organizations with gross receipts of
less than $25,000 are not required to file Form 990 or 990-EZ
and Schedule B (Form 990 or 990-EZ).
Form 990-EZ.
This is a shortened version of Form 990. It is designed for use by
small exempt organizations and nonexempt charitable trusts.
An organization may file Form 990-EZ, instead of Form 990, if
it meets both of the following requirements.
- Its gross receipts during the year were less than
$100,000.
- Its total assets (line 25, column (B) of Form 990-EZ)
at the end of the year were less than $250,000.
If your organization does not meet either of these conditions,
you cannot file Form 990-EZ. Instead you must file Form 990.
Group return.
A group return on Form 990 may be filed by a central, parent, or
like organization for two or more local organizations, none of which
is a private foundation. This return is in addition to the central
organization's separate annual return if it must file a return. It
cannot be included in the group return. See the instructions for Form
990 for the conditions under which this procedure may be used.
In any year that an organization is properly included as a
subordinate organization on a group return, it should not file its own
Form 990.
Schedule A (Form 990 or 990-EZ).
Organizations, other than private foundations, that are described
in section 501(c)(3) and that are otherwise required to file Form 990
or 990-EZ must also complete Schedule A of that form.
Schedule B (Form 990 or 990-EZ).
Organizations that file Form 990 or 990-EZ use this schedule
to provide required information regarding their contributors.
Form 990-PF.
All private foundations exempt under section 501(c)(3) must file
Form 990-PF. These organizations are discussed in chapter 3.
Due date.
Form 990, 990-EZ, or 990-PF must be filed by the 15th
day of the 5th month after the end of your organization's accounting
period. Thus, for a calendar year taxpayer, Form 990, 990-EZ, or
990-PF is due May 15 of the following year.
Beginning in 2001, use Form 8868 to request an automatic 3-month
extension of time to file Form 990, 990-EZ, or 990-PF and
also to apply for an additional (not automatic) 3-month extension if
needed.
Do not apply for both the automatic 3-month extension
and the additional 3-month extension at the same time. Also, do
not use Form 2758, Application for Extension of Time
to File Certain Excise, Income, Information, and Other Returns,
to get an extension once Form 8868 becomes available. For more
information, see Form 8868 and its instructions.
Application for exemption pending.
An organization that claims to be exempt under section 501(a) of
the Code but has not established its exempt status by the due date for
filing an information return should complete and file Form 990 or
990-EZ (or Form 990-PF if it considers itself a private
foundation). If the organization's application is pending with the
IRS, it must so indicate on Form 990, 990-EZ, or 990-PF
(whichever applies) by checking the application pending
block at the top of page 1 of the return.
For more information on the filing requirements, see the
instructions for Forms 990, 990-EZ, and 990-PF.
State reporting requirements.
Copies of Form 990, 990-EZ, or 990-PF may be used to
satisfy state reporting requirements. See the instructions for those
forms.
Form 8870.
Organizations that filed a Form 990, 990-EZ, or 990-PF,
and paid premiums or received transfers on certain life insurance,
annuity, and endowment contracts (personal benefit contracts), must
file Form 8870. For more information, see Form 8870 and its
instructions.
Penalties for failure to file.
An exempt organization that fails to file a required return must
pay a penalty of $20 a day for each day the failure continues. The
same penalty will apply if the organization does not give all the
information required on the return or does not give the correct
information.
Maximum penalty.
The maximum penalty for any one return is the smaller of $10,000 or
5% of the organization's gross receipts for the year.
Organization with gross receipts over $1 million.
For an organization that has gross receipts of over $1 million for
the year, the penalty is $100 a day up to a maximum of $50,000.
Managers.
If the organization is subject to this penalty, the IRS may specify
a date by which the return or correct information must be supplied by
the organization. Failure to comply with this demand will result in a
penalty imposed upon the manager of the organization, or upon any
other person responsible for filing a correct return. The penalty is
$10 a day for each day that a return is not filed after the period
given for filing. The maximum penalty imposed on all persons with
respect to any one return is $5,000.
Exception for reasonable cause.
No penalty will be imposed if reasonable cause for failure to file
timely can be shown.
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