Alabama Nonprofit Compliance Guide: IRS Filings, Charitable Registration, and Renewal Deadlines

Nov 03, 2025Arnold L.

Alabama Nonprofit Compliance Guide: IRS Filings, Charitable Registration, and Renewal Deadlines

Running a nonprofit in Alabama means staying on top of federal tax filings, state charitable solicitation rules, organizational records, and renewal deadlines. The compliance burden is manageable, but only if your board creates a clear calendar and treats filings as routine governance work rather than last-minute paperwork.

For most charities, the most important question is not whether the organization is exempt from income tax. It is whether the organization is meeting every filing obligation that keeps its exemption, fundraising rights, and good standing intact. In Alabama, that usually means two systems working together:

  1. The IRS rules that govern tax-exempt status.
  2. The Alabama Attorney General rules that govern charitable solicitation registration and renewal.

If your nonprofit is newly formed, expanding into Alabama, or asking donors in the state for support, both layers matter.

What Alabama Nonprofits Must Keep Up With

A charitable organization in Alabama typically needs to watch for four categories of compliance:

  • Federal tax filings with the IRS
  • Alabama charitable registration and annual renewal
  • Updates to organizational information when leadership or filing details change
  • Internal governance records that prove the organization is properly run

Some obligations apply to nearly every nonprofit. Others depend on your size, your fundraising model, and whether you solicit donations directly or through third parties.

Federal IRS Filings

Every tax-exempt organization should begin with the federal filing rules because they set the baseline for ongoing compliance.

Form 990 series returns

Most nonprofits must file some version of the IRS Form 990 series each year. The correct form depends on the organization’s size and structure:

  • Form 990-N for many small organizations
  • Form 990-EZ for mid-sized organizations that qualify
  • Form 990 for larger organizations
  • Form 990-PF for private foundations

The general federal due date is the 15th day of the 5th month after the organization’s accounting period ends. For a calendar-year organization, that usually means May 15.

This deadline matters even when the organization has little or no activity. If a filing is required, it needs to be submitted on time. Repeated failures to file can lead to automatic revocation of tax-exempt status.

Form 990-N for small organizations

Smaller organizations that meet the IRS threshold may be eligible to file the electronic e-Postcard, Form 990-N. Even though it is a short filing, it is still an annual filing requirement. The IRS uses it to confirm that the organization is still operating and remains eligible for exemption.

Form 990-T for unrelated business income

Tax-exempt status does not always eliminate every tax filing. If a nonprofit has unrelated business income, it may need to file Form 990-T. This is especially important for organizations that operate revenue-generating activities that are not substantially related to their exempt purpose.

That issue is easy to overlook, which is why annual review of revenue sources should be part of board oversight.

Alabama Charitable Solicitation Registration

If a nonprofit solicits contributions in or from Alabama, the organization generally must register with the Alabama Attorney General’s Office. Alabama’s charitable solicitation rules are designed to regulate fundraising activity and protect donors.

Initial registration

The state requires a $25 registration fee for initial charitable organization registration. Alabama also requires supporting documents and organizational information when the registration is first filed.

In practical terms, the organization should be ready to provide documents such as:

  • Articles of incorporation or organization
  • Bylaws or governing instrument
  • IRS determination letter
  • Officer and director information
  • State registration history, if applicable
  • Information about professional fundraisers or commercial co-venturers, if used

One authorized officer signs the filing. Alabama does not require a specific officer title for the signature.

Annual renewal

Alabama charitable organizations must file annually within 90 days after the close of the organization’s fiscal year. The state also charges a $25 annual fee.

The annual filing is not just a fee payment. The organization must submit the required annual financial report or a copy of its IRS Form 990, depending on the filing requirements that apply.

If your fiscal year ends on December 31, the annual Alabama renewal is generally due by March 31.

Extension option

Alabama allows a filing extension of up to 180 days. If a nonprofit needs extra time to finish its annual report or gather the required attachments, it should request the extension through the state’s registration system rather than ignoring the deadline.

Updates within 10 days

The organization must notify the Attorney General within 10 days of changes in information required for registration. That can include changes in contact details, leadership, or other registration data.

This is one of the easiest compliance steps to miss because organizations often assume annual filings are enough. They are not. The state expects prompt notice when key information changes.

Reinstatement after a lapse

If a registration lapses, the organization should not assume the situation will resolve itself automatically. Renewals for missed years may need to be filed together with the required fees and documents. If more than one year is overdue, the organization may need separate forms for each missed year.

The practical takeaway is simple: keep the renewal cycle current and avoid building a backlog.

Exemptions From Alabama Registration

Not every organization that raises money in Alabama must file the full charitable registration. Alabama law recognizes several exemptions.

Common examples include:

  • Religious organizations
  • Educational institutions and their related foundations
  • Political organizations
  • Civic leagues and membership-based civic organizations
  • Certain fraternal, patriotic, benevolent, and related organizations
  • Certain low-revenue charities that do not expect to receive more than $25,000 in contributions during the fiscal year and do not use paid fundraisers
  • Specific appeals for named individuals, if the solicitation stays within the state’s limits

Exemption analysis matters because it affects whether the organization files a full registration, an exemption application, or nothing at all. A nonprofit should not rely on guesswork here. The fundraising model, the organization’s purpose, and the amount of money raised can all change the outcome.

Alabama Annual Reports and Corporate Maintenance

According to the Alabama Attorney General’s guidance, a domestic or foreign Alabama nonprofit corporation with a 501(c) exemption does not file a separate annual report in the way many for-profit entities do. For many charities, the recurring state compliance item is the charitable registration renewal rather than a standard corporate annual report.

That does not mean the organization can ignore corporate housekeeping.

A well-run nonprofit should still maintain:

  • Current articles and bylaws
  • Board and officer records
  • Meeting minutes and resolutions
  • Financial statements and tax records
  • A clean record of state filings and renewal dates

If your nonprofit is formed in Alabama but operates in additional states, you may also need foreign qualification and additional charitable solicitation registrations outside Alabama.

Registered Agent Requirements

Nonprofit corporations should maintain a registered agent with a street address in Alabama. The registered agent receives legal notices and service of process, so this role should never be left to chance.

Many organizations prefer a professional registered agent service rather than naming a volunteer officer or director. That reduces the risk of missed notices when leadership changes or someone moves.

For a growing nonprofit, registered agent continuity is not a clerical detail. It is a risk-control measure.

Professional Fundraisers and Third-Party Solicitation

If your nonprofit uses a professional fundraiser, solicitor, or commercial co-venturer, those relationships can trigger additional obligations.

That means the board should confirm:

  • Who is actually soliciting donations
  • Whether the fundraiser is properly registered
  • What the contract says about compliance responsibilities
  • How donor funds and campaign records will be tracked

Third-party fundraising can expand reach, but it also expands compliance exposure. A nonprofit should vet these arrangements before launch, not after a problem appears.

A Simple Alabama Compliance Calendar

A practical compliance calendar should include at least these recurring items:

  • IRS annual return due date
  • Alabama charitable renewal due date
  • Extension deadlines, if needed
  • Deadline to report changes in registration information
  • Board review of fundraising contracts and solicitation activity
  • Registered agent review

For many organizations, the easiest way to avoid missed deadlines is to assign each filing to a specific person and set reminders 60, 30, and 10 days before the due date.

Common Compliance Mistakes

Most nonprofit compliance problems are not complicated. They usually come from missed process steps.

Common mistakes include:

  • Assuming federal tax exemption automatically satisfies Alabama filing requirements
  • Missing the 90-day Alabama renewal deadline
  • Forgetting to update the Attorney General after leadership changes
  • Failing to keep a current registered agent
  • Ignoring unrelated business income filings
  • Overlooking professional fundraiser registration duties
  • Letting documents and board records get scattered across email threads and personal devices

The right answer is usually better process, not more scrambling.

How Zenind Can Help

Zenind supports nonprofit formation and ongoing compliance by helping organizations stay organized from day one. For Alabama nonprofits, that can mean:

  • Forming the entity correctly
  • Maintaining a reliable registered agent relationship
  • Tracking recurring filing deadlines
  • Keeping formation and compliance documents organized
  • Reducing the chance that a routine deadline turns into a status problem

That kind of support matters because nonprofit compliance is cumulative. One missed filing may not look serious in isolation, but repeated gaps can create major problems for fundraising, governance, and tax status.

Final Takeaway

Alabama nonprofit compliance is built on a few recurring habits: file the IRS return on time, register properly with the Alabama Attorney General if you solicit donations, update the state when information changes, and keep strong internal records.

If your organization builds those obligations into its operating calendar, compliance becomes manageable. If it leaves them to memory, mistakes become predictable.

For newly formed nonprofits and growing charities alike, the safest approach is to treat compliance as a board-level responsibility and to use a system that keeps deadlines, filings, and documents 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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