Form 1023 is a United StatesIRS tax form, also known as the Application for Recognition of Exemption Under 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. It is filed by nonprofits to get exemption status. On January 31, 2020, the IRS abandoned the paper format of the form 1023. Those who used the paper version were given 90 days grace period and that ended on April 30, 2020. Going forward, every application has to be filed online through Pay.gov portal.[1]
Eligibility
The IRS specifies certain types of organizations that are exempt from federal income tax. The most common types are charitable, religious and educational organizations, civic associations, labor organizations, business leagues, social clubs, fraternal organizations, and veterans’ organizations.[2]
Scientific organizations and organizations that test for public safety
Literary or educational organizations
National or international amateur sports competitors
Organizations created to prevent cruelty to children or animals
However, the IRS allows certain groups to be automatically exempt from filing Form 1023, yet still eligible to be classified as a 501(c)(3) organization:
Churches, their integrated auxiliaries, and conventions or associations of churches[3]
Organizations that are not private foundations and that have gross receipts that normally are not more than $5,000[4]
Furthermore, to qualify for tax-exempt status, the organization must be:
Organized as a corporation, LLC,[a] trust, or unincorporated association with organization documents limiting the organization's reach permanently to the purpose it's filing the form for.
Operated to further the purposes laid out in its organization documents, and:
Refrain from participating in political campaigns or promoting legislative activity
Ensure that its assets and earnings don't unjustly benefit board members, officers, or other key members of the organization
Refrain from promoting private or non-tax-exempt purposes more than insubstantially
Not engage in illegal activities or violate fundamental public policy
Tax-exempt organizations may file Form 5768 to influence legislative activity.
Filing requirements
Form 1023 requires the following information about an applying charity:
Date of organization's creation and what country it was created under
Organizational structure
Organizing documents (e.g. articles of incorporation, trust agreement, articles of association)
Description of organization's past, present, and future activities
Compensation of the organization's officers, directors, trustees, employees, and independent contractors
Other members and individuals receiving benefits
Organization's history, including whether the organization is the successor of another
Specific activities as outlined in the form, including any fundraisers
Financial data for the past four years
Form 1023 Application user fee for the long form is $600, and the Form 1023-EZ is $275 respectively.[8]
Form 1023-EZ
Form 1023-EZ is a streamlined version of Form 1023; it was introduced in 2014[9][10] because the original Form 1023 can take over nine hours to complete, and many organizations were waiting over a year for review. About 52% of all organizations filed Form 1023-EZ, with an average turnaround time of 9 days. Of the organizations submitted, 95% of them were approved for charity status.[11]
Requirements
Organizations applying for tax-exempt status through Form 1023-EZ can apply online at Pay.gov if they meet the following requirements:
Gross receipts in each of the past three years and projected next three years are below $50,000
Total assets are less than $250,000
The organization was created under United States law and its mailing address is within the United States
The organization is not a successor to, or controlled by, an entity suspended as a terrorist organization as defined by section 501(p)
Are organized as a corporation, unincorporated association, or trust
Not a successor of a for-profit entity
Not a revoked or previously revoked organization
Not a church (or other place of worship), church association, school, college, university, hospital, medical research organization, HMO, ACO or organization participating in ACO activities, organized and operated exclusively for public safety testing,
Are not applying for an exemption as a cooperative hospital service organization, cooperative service organization of operating educational organizations or qualified charitable risk pool
Are not requesting application as a supporting organization or private operating foundation
Do not offer credit counseling as the main service, invest more than 5% of assets in non-public trading, or offer carbon credits or carbon offsets
Organizations that do not fall under these requirements may still file the original Form 1023.[12]
History
Form 1023-EZ was created when the National Taxpayer Advocate suggested simplifying the form in 2011, and the IRS eventually followed that advice in 2013. The form was finally introduced in July 2014.[9][10] While the majority of charities will file through Form 1023-EZ, the move to simplify it wasn't without its criticisms. As Form 1023-EZ doesn't require a list of charity activities or supporting documentation, those activities will go unknown to the IRS, and there is no protection against uncharitable organizations filing the form for tax exemption status.[13] In the 2015 Annual Report, the IRS reported an audit on Form 1023-EZ revealing that 2 in 5 charities that filed Form 1023-EZ would not qualify for charity status if they had gone through the full Form 1023.[14] Furthermore, in 2016, the application fee for Form 1023-EZ had been reduced from $400 to $275.[15]
^An LLC will not qualify for tax-exempt status if it has either private shareholders or individuals who are members.[5] An LLC with only tax-exempt members might qualify for tax-exempt status.[5][6][7]
^ abNevius, Alistair M. (March 1, 2016). "Form 1023-EZ: First-year results are in". Journal of Accountancy. Retrieved January 21, 2017. In 2014, the IRS introduced a streamlined process to allow small organizations to more easily apply for tax-exempt status.