Pennsylvania Nonprofit Compliance: Annual Reports, IRS Filings, and Charitable Registration

Jan 21, 2026Arnold L.

Pennsylvania Nonprofit Compliance: Annual Reports, IRS Filings, and Charitable Registration

Pennsylvania nonprofit compliance is not a single filing. It is a recurring system of state and federal obligations that helps a nonprofit stay in good standing, protect its tax-exempt status, and continue fundraising without interruption.

For organizations incorporated in Pennsylvania, foreign nonprofits registered to operate in the state, and charities that solicit donations from Pennsylvania residents, the compliance calendar usually includes an annual report, federal IRS filings, and charitable registration requirements. Depending on the organization’s activities, there may also be exemption filings, renewal deadlines, or local registration obligations.

This guide breaks down the major Pennsylvania nonprofit compliance requirements in plain language so your board, staff, or formation team can build a process that actually works.

What Pennsylvania nonprofit compliance covers

For most nonprofit organizations, compliance falls into four broad categories:

  • State corporate maintenance
  • Federal tax reporting
  • Charitable solicitation registration
  • Internal governance and recordkeeping

These requirements serve different purposes. The Pennsylvania Department of State wants current entity information. The IRS wants annual reporting on finances and activities. Charitable solicitation rules regulate fundraising. Internal governance rules help show that the nonprofit operates for public benefit rather than private gain.

A clean compliance process should connect all four.

1. Pennsylvania annual report for nonprofit corporations

Pennsylvania now requires most domestic and foreign filing associations to submit an annual report. That includes domestic nonprofit corporations and foreign nonprofit corporations.

Who must file

Beginning in 2025, Pennsylvania nonprofit corporations are generally within the annual report system. The Department of State’s reporting structure applies to both domestic and foreign corporations, including nonprofits.

If the entity has been dissolved or has otherwise ended its legal existence, it is not required to file.

When it is due

For corporations, including nonprofit corporations, the annual report filing window runs from January 1 through June 30 each year.

A first annual report is not due in the same calendar year the nonprofit is formed or registered. It is due in the following calendar year.

How much it costs

For nonprofit corporations, the Pennsylvania annual report fee is $0.

How it is filed

The annual report is filed online through the Pennsylvania filing portal. The state strongly encourages online filing because it populates the entity’s information from records already on file and reduces errors.

Why it matters

Missing the annual report deadline can create serious problems. Pennsylvania states that failure to file can lead to administrative dissolution, termination, cancellation, and loss of name protection.

For nonprofits that are already busy with fundraising, grants, board meetings, and program delivery, the annual report is easy to overlook. That makes it one of the most important recurring deadlines to track.

2. Federal IRS Form 990 filing

Every tax-exempt organization needs to keep up with federal information returns. For most nonprofits, that means filing some version of Form 990 each year.

Which 990 form applies

The IRS has several versions of the return:

  • Form 990-N for very small organizations
  • Form 990-EZ for smaller organizations that meet the filing criteria
  • Form 990 for larger organizations
  • Form 990-PF for private foundations

The correct form depends on the organization’s financial size and classification.

When Form 990 is due

The IRS generally requires Form 990 to be filed by the 15th day of the 5th month after the organization’s accounting period ends.

For a calendar-year nonprofit, that means the due date is typically May 15.

Electronic filing

The IRS requires electronic filing for 2025 Form 990 returns. Nonprofits should not assume paper filing is acceptable.

Why Form 990 matters

Form 990 is more than a tax return. It is a public-facing accountability document that shows how a nonprofit uses its money, who governs it, and whether it continues to operate in line with its exempt purpose.

The form is also one of the first documents donors, grantmakers, journalists, and regulators use when evaluating the organization.

Pending exemption status

Organizations that have applied for exemption but have not yet received IRS recognition may still need to file Form 990 and should follow the instructions for pending status.

That is one reason entity formation and tax setup should be coordinated early, not handled as an afterthought.

3. Pennsylvania charitable solicitation registration

If a nonprofit solicits charitable contributions from Pennsylvania residents, it usually must register with the Pennsylvania Department of State unless it is excluded or exempt.

Initial registration

The standard registration filing is generally made on Form BCO-10, Charitable Organization Registration Statement.

This filing is important for any nonprofit that asks for donations in Pennsylvania, whether the donations are solicited online, by mail, in person, or through other channels.

Renewal rules

For organizations that are not excluded or exempt, renewal dates are tied to the organization’s fiscal year end.

That makes charitable registration different from the Pennsylvania annual report, which follows a fixed calendar window for nonprofit corporations.

Exclusions and exemptions

Some organizations do not need full charitable registration, and some may qualify for a one-time exemption approval.

If an organization believes it qualifies for an exemption or exclusion, it may need to file Form BCO-9, Request for Approval of Exemption/Exclusion.

Local rules may still apply

State registration is not always the end of the story. Some Pennsylvania counties and municipalities may require additional registration before local fundraising begins, especially for in-person solicitation.

That is why organizations should not assume one filing satisfies every jurisdiction.

4. Pennsylvania charitable organization exemptions and exclusions

Not every charitable organization follows the same registration path.

Pennsylvania recognizes certain categories of organizations that may be exempt or excluded from the full charitable solicitation registration requirement.

Examples can include:

  • Educational institutions and related foundations or support groups
  • Hospitals and related hospital foundations
  • Certain veterans’ organizations and service foundations
  • Volunteer fire, ambulance, and rescue organizations
  • Bona fide auxiliaries or affiliates of those organizations, when the statutory conditions are met

Even when an exemption seems likely, the organization should verify the exact category and filing requirement before assuming it is off the hook.

An exemption from charitable registration does not automatically mean the organization has no other compliance obligation.

5. Institutions of Purely Public Charity Statement

Some organizations based in Pennsylvania may still need to file an Institutions of Purely Public Charity Statement.

This can matter even when the entity is clearly charitable under federal tax law. Pennsylvania’s charitable treatment has its own standards, and state-level status should be reviewed independently.

The underlying idea is straightforward: a public charity should operate for public benefit, not private profit.

Practically speaking, that means the organization should be able to show things like:

  • Its governing documents prohibit private inurement
  • Revenue is used for charitable purposes
  • Compensation is not based primarily on financial performance
  • The organization provides real community benefit

A board that understands these rules is better positioned to document mission alignment and avoid disputes later.

6. A practical Pennsylvania nonprofit compliance calendar

A simple compliance calendar can prevent missed deadlines and last-minute scrambles.

January through March

  • Review the prior year’s revenue, expenses, and fundraising activity
  • Confirm whether the organization must file Form 990 or Form 990-N
  • Check whether charitable solicitation registration renewal is approaching based on fiscal year end
  • Update board and officer records

April and May

  • Prepare and file the IRS return if the organization is on a calendar year
  • Gather financial statements, board approvals, and supporting schedules
  • Confirm the Pennsylvania annual report filing window is on track

By June 30

  • File the Pennsylvania annual report for nonprofit corporations if required
  • Verify that registered office and contact information are current

Throughout the year

  • Track donations and solicitation activity in Pennsylvania
  • Monitor whether new states or jurisdictions require registration
  • Keep board minutes, financial records, and policy updates organized
  • Review whether the organization’s activities still match its exempt purpose

7. Records every nonprofit should keep

Strong compliance depends on strong recordkeeping.

At a minimum, a Pennsylvania nonprofit should keep:

  • Articles of incorporation and amendments
  • Bylaws and board resolutions
  • IRS determination letter and exemption applications
  • Annual Form 990 filings and related schedules
  • Pennsylvania annual report confirmations
  • Charitable registration filings and renewal records
  • Conflict of interest policy
  • Board and committee minutes
  • Financial statements and audit reports, if applicable
  • Donation records and fundraising reports

If a filing question arises later, these records are often what prove the nonprofit did things correctly.

8. Common compliance mistakes

The most common nonprofit compliance problems are usually not complex legal disputes. They are missed administrative steps.

Watch for these mistakes:

  • Filing the federal return but forgetting the state annual report
  • Assuming a federal 501(c)(3) letter automatically covers Pennsylvania fundraising rules
  • Missing charitable registration renewals because the deadline depends on fiscal year end
  • Failing to update the state with a new registered office or mailing address
  • Waiting until the last week before a filing deadline to gather board approvals and financial data
  • Treating exemption status as permanent without checking whether the organization still qualifies

These problems are avoidable with a simple compliance checklist and calendar.

9. How Zenind fits into the process

For founders and nonprofit leaders building an organization in Pennsylvania, the hardest part is often not understanding the rules. It is keeping the rules organized.

Zenind helps new and growing organizations manage formation and recurring filing obligations with a structured, business-friendly workflow. That matters because compliance is easier when filings, deadlines, and entity information are tracked in one place.

If your nonprofit is being formed now, the best time to build the compliance system is before fundraising starts and before the first annual deadline arrives.

10. Final compliance checklist

Before year-end or before a new fundraising campaign, confirm the following:

  • The nonprofit’s entity records are current with Pennsylvania
  • The annual report filing requirement is on the calendar
  • The correct IRS Form 990 version is identified
  • Charitable solicitation registration has been completed or renewed when required
  • Exemption or exclusion status has been verified
  • Board and financial records are complete and accessible
  • Registered office and contact details are up to date

A Pennsylvania nonprofit that keeps this checklist under control is far less likely to run into surprises.

Helpful official resources

  • Pennsylvania Department of State annual reports
  • Pennsylvania Department of State charitable organizations page
  • IRS Form 990 instructions
  • Pennsylvania Institutions of Purely Public Charity Act

Pennsylvania nonprofit compliance is manageable when it is treated as an ongoing process instead of a once-a-year emergency. With the right calendar, the right records, and a disciplined filing routine, a nonprofit can stay focused on its mission while keeping its obligations under control.

Disclaimer: The content presented in this article is for informational purposes only and is not intended as legal, tax, or professional advice. While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy and completeness of the information provided, Zenind and its authors accept no responsibility or liability for any errors or omissions. Readers should consult with appropriate legal or professional advisors before making any decisions or taking any actions based on the information contained in this article. Any reliance on the information provided herein is at the reader's own risk.

This article is available in English (United States) .

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