Nonprofit Conflict of Interest Policy: Meaning, Requirements, and How to Write One
Nov 15, 2025Arnold L.
Nonprofit Conflict of Interest Policy: Meaning, Requirements, and How to Write One
A conflict of interest policy is one of the most important governance documents a nonprofit can adopt. It helps directors, officers, key employees, and committee members identify situations where personal interests could influence organizational decisions. Just as important, it gives the board a clear process for disclosure, review, and resolution when a conflict arises.
For nonprofits, the goal is not to eliminate every possible conflict. That is rarely realistic. The goal is to recognize conflicts early, handle them transparently, and protect the organization’s mission, reputation, and tax-exempt status.
What a Conflict of Interest Policy Does
A conflict of interest policy sets rules for identifying and managing situations in which a person with decision-making authority could personally benefit from a nonprofit transaction or arrangement.
These situations may involve:
- Contracting with a board member’s business
- Hiring a family member of a director or officer
- Approving compensation for a leader with a financial stake in the outcome
- Selecting vendors owned by someone with influence over the nonprofit
- Making decisions that benefit a related organization or personal investment
A well-written policy does not assume bad intent. Instead, it creates a reliable framework for disclosure and review so the organization can make decisions in the nonprofit’s best interest.
Why Nonprofits Need This Policy
Nonprofits depend on public trust. Donors, members, grantmakers, regulators, and the community expect leaders to act with loyalty and integrity. Even the appearance of self-dealing can damage confidence in the organization.
A conflict of interest policy helps a nonprofit:
- Preserve board independence and accountability
- Reduce the risk of improper influence in decisions
- Support compliance with IRS governance expectations
- Document that conflicts are reviewed consistently
- Protect the organization from reputational harm
For tax-exempt organizations, especially charities, the policy is also part of sound governance. It supports the board’s duty of care and duty of loyalty by requiring decision-makers to put the organization first.
Who Should Be Covered
The policy should clearly identify who must disclose conflicts and follow the procedure. In most nonprofits, coverage includes:
- Directors
- Officers
- Key employees
- Committee members with board-delegated powers
- Sometimes founders, advisors, or volunteers with financial authority
The broader the decision-making authority, the stronger the case for inclusion. If someone can influence hiring, contracting, grants, investments, or compensation decisions, that person should usually be covered by the policy.
What Counts as a Conflict of Interest
A conflict exists when a person’s personal, financial, family, or organizational interest could interfere with the nonprofit’s best interest.
Common examples include:
- Receiving compensation from a vendor the nonprofit is considering
- Having a spouse, child, parent, or sibling employed by the nonprofit
- Owning stock in a business that is negotiating with the nonprofit
- Serving on the board of another organization that stands to benefit from a decision
- Using insider information for personal gain
A policy should also address potential conflicts, not just actual conflicts. If a reasonable person could question whether a decision-maker is impartial, the issue should be disclosed and reviewed.
Essential Parts of a Strong Policy
A useful conflict of interest policy should be practical, clear, and easy to follow. It usually includes the following elements.
1. Purpose Statement
The policy should explain that its purpose is to protect the nonprofit’s interests when a transaction or arrangement may benefit the private interests of a director, officer, key employee, or related party.
2. Definitions
Key terms should be defined so everyone understands what must be disclosed. This may include:
- Interested person
- Family member
- Financial interest
- Material interest
- Related party
- Transaction or arrangement
Clear definitions reduce confusion and make the policy easier to enforce.
3. Duty to Disclose
Covered individuals should be required to disclose any actual or potential conflict as soon as it becomes known. The policy should require disclosure before the organization acts on the matter.
4. Review Procedure
The policy should explain who reviews the conflict and how the review works. A common approach is for the interested person to leave the room while the board or a designated committee discusses the matter.
The review should consider:
- Whether a real conflict exists
- Whether the proposed action is fair and reasonable
- Whether alternatives are available
- Whether the nonprofit can document a better basis for the decision
5. Voting Restrictions
The interested person should usually not vote on the matter. In some cases, they should also not participate in discussion after disclosure, depending on the severity of the conflict and the organization’s bylaws or state law.
6. Documentation Requirements
Minutes should reflect the disclosure, the board’s discussion, the decision, and any recusal. Good documentation is one of the best ways to demonstrate good governance.
7. Annual Disclosure Statement
Most nonprofits ask directors, officers, and key personnel to sign a disclosure statement annually. This keeps the process current and gives the board a regular opportunity to identify new conflicts.
8. Consequences for Violations
The policy should state what happens if someone fails to disclose a conflict or disregards the procedure. Consequences may include removal from discussion, discipline, or other corrective action.
Annual Disclosure Process
Annual disclosure is not a formality. It is one of the most effective ways to keep the policy active and useful.
A typical annual process includes:
- Sending a disclosure form to all covered individuals
- Asking each person to list outside business interests, family relationships, and affiliations
- Reviewing forms for possible conflicts
- Updating the board records
- Reconfirming the policy at board meetings if needed
If the nonprofit changes leadership, expands programs, or enters new contracts, additional disclosures may be necessary during the year.
How the Board Should Handle a Conflict
When a conflict is disclosed, the board should follow a consistent process.
Step 1: Disclose the Interest
The interested person should describe the relationship, financial stake, or other issue that creates the potential conflict.
Step 2: Determine Whether a Conflict Exists
The board or committee should decide whether the relationship creates an actual or potential conflict under the policy.
Step 3: Leave the Room if Appropriate
The interested person should recuse themselves from discussion and voting unless the governing documents or applicable law clearly permit limited participation.
Step 4: Compare Alternatives
The board should consider whether comparable options are available and whether the nonprofit can obtain better value, independence, or expertise elsewhere.
Step 5: Approve Only If It Is in the Nonprofit’s Best Interest
The decision should be based on the merits of the transaction, not the preferences of the conflicted person.
Step 6: Record the Decision
Minutes should note the nature of the conflict, the review process, the vote, and any recusal.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Many nonprofits adopt a policy but fail to use it correctly. The most common mistakes are:
- Treating the policy as a one-time document instead of a living governance process
- Failing to collect annual disclosure statements
- Letting conflicted individuals participate in the final vote
- Not documenting how the board reviewed the matter
- Using vague definitions that leave room for interpretation
- Ignoring family and related-party relationships
- Failing to train new board members on disclosure expectations
A policy only works when it is understood and consistently applied.
IRS and Compliance Considerations
The IRS expects nonprofit leaders to manage conflicts carefully. For certain tax-exempt filings and governance reviews, organizations may be asked whether they have adopted a conflict of interest policy.
That makes the policy more than a best-practice document. It is part of the governance record that shows the nonprofit takes oversight seriously.
If the organization is applying for exemption or maintaining tax-exempt status, the board should make sure the policy is current, adopted formally, and reflected in the minutes.
Sample Policy Language to Include
Every organization should tailor its policy to its structure and state law, but a strong policy often says something like the following in substance:
- Covered individuals must disclose any actual or potential conflict
- The board will review the conflict before approving the transaction
- The interested person will not vote on the matter
- The organization will document the disclosure and decision in the minutes
- Violations may result in corrective action
The exact wording should fit the nonprofit’s bylaws, size, and decision-making process.
When to Review or Update the Policy
A nonprofit should review its conflict of interest policy regularly, especially when:
- Board composition changes
- The organization starts new programs or contracts
- State law changes
- The IRS updates governance expectations
- The board identifies repeated disclosure issues
Annual review is a practical standard for most organizations.
How Zenind Can Help New Nonprofits
New nonprofits often focus on formation documents and tax filings, then postpone governance policies until later. That creates avoidable risk.
A conflict of interest policy should be part of the organization’s early compliance checklist, along with bylaws, board resolutions, and annual recordkeeping procedures. Zenind helps founders and nonprofit leaders build a strong compliance foundation so the organization can operate with clarity from the start.
Final Takeaway
A nonprofit conflict of interest policy protects the organization from hidden self-interest, inconsistent decision-making, and reputational damage. It also supports transparency, board accountability, and IRS compliance.
The strongest policies are not overly complicated. They clearly define conflicts, require prompt disclosure, set a fair review process, and keep a written record of decisions. With the right policy in place, a nonprofit can make better decisions and preserve the trust that makes its mission possible.
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