The Nonprofit Law Primer.
Practical resources on the rules nonprofits operate under. Governance and fiduciary duties. Tax-exempt status and public-support tests. Lobbying and advocacy rules. Employment and volunteer compliance. Fiscal sponsorship. Written for executive directors, board members, and senior leadership who want to understand the frameworks shaping their work.
The Other Lobbying Rules: State Registration and Reporting Requirements for Nonprofits
Federal 501(h) election covers your IRS exposure, but every state has its own lobbying registration regime, and once your advocacy crosses the state-defined threshold, missing the registration is a strict-liability problem that can shut a campaign down.
Nonprofit Board Fiduciary Duties: A legal guide for directors in MA, NY, CT & DC
Board members owe three legal duties (care, loyalty, and obedience), and while the federal framework is consistent, NY, DC, MA, and CT each define and enforce them differently, with state-specific case law that can leave a director personally exposed.
Charitable Solicitation and Registration, Part II: Online and Multi-State Fundraising — Navigating a Borderless Compliance Landscape
The moment your donate-now button is reachable from anywhere with internet, you're potentially soliciting in 40+ states; the unified registration system was supposed to fix that but doesn't, leaving online nonprofits with a borderless fundraising landscape and bordered compliance obligations.
State Charitable Solicitation and Registration, Part I: A Core (and Often Missed) Nonprofit Compliance Area
Before your nonprofit asks anyone for a donation, most states require you to register, and the penalty for skipping that step ranges from a fine to a public listing of unregistered solicitors that funders quietly use to disqualify grant applicants.
What Effective Nonprofit Conflict of Interest Policies Look Like, and How to Enforce Them
Most nonprofit COI policies are drafted to satisfy the IRS Form 990 question and then ignored, which is exactly when they fail, because the moment a real conflict surfaces is the moment everyone realizes the policy doesn't say who has to recuse.
Nonprofit Startup Checklist
Launching a nonprofit takes more than a mission statement: between state incorporation, EIN, bank account, 501(c)(3) application, and charitable solicitation registration, here's the sequencing that gets you operating without backtracking.
From State to IRS: How Nonprofits Move from Incorporation to Tax-Exempt Status
Filing articles of incorporation creates a nonprofit corporation under state law, but it doesn't make you tax-exempt; that requires a separate federal application most founders don't realize is decoupled from the state filing.
The Two Layers of Nonprofit Law: What Founders Should Know About Federal vs. State Oversight
Tax-exempt status is only half the picture: federal IRS rules and state nonprofit laws create distinct compliance regimes that sometimes conflict, and the cost of treating them as one stack falls hardest on the founders who didn't realize they had to file twice.
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