Nonprofit in Georgia

Georgia Nonprofit Intel

Thursday, July 9, 2026
2 min read
4 stories

Welcome to your daily briefing on nonprofit developments in Georgia. Today we're covering 4 key stories including updates on georgia nonprofit headlines, background & context. Let's dive in.

1

Georgia Nonprofit Headlines

1 story

1.1

GCN's Monthly Funding Roundup: Support Opportunities for GA Nonprofits.

Georgia Center for Nonprofits maintains a curated, monthly-updated collection of funding and resource opportunities for nonprofit organizations.

Why It Matters

Georgia nonprofit professionals can use this centralized hub to discover timely grant and support opportunities without spending hours searching across multiple platforms.

Sources:Source
Sponsored

Advertise Here

Reach professionals in this market

Learn More
2

Background & Context

3 stories

2.1

Private inurement and private benefit are different problems.

Private inurement is benefit flowing to insiders (officers, directors, key employees); it is an absolute prohibition. Private benefit is benefit to outsiders that is more than incidental to the exempt purpose; it is a question of degree. Both can revoke exemption, but the legal analysis differs.

Why It Matters

Insider transactions trigger automatic intermediate sanctions even when the exemption survives. Outsider benefit triggers a facts-and-circumstances analysis. Distinguishing them shapes the defense.

2.2

When fundraising activities cross into UBIT.

Unrelated business income tax applies when an activity is regularly carried on, is a trade or business, and is not substantially related to the exempt purpose. Common surprises: corporate-sponsored events with naming rights that look like advertising, affinity credit-card royalties that include co-marketing services, and gift-shop sales of items unrelated to the mission.

Why It Matters

UBIT exposure can cost both tax and exempt status if the unrelated business becomes substantial. The line between sponsorship (excluded) and advertising (included) is narrow and case-specific.

2.3

Why every Form 990 line is public — and what most boards forget.

Form 990 is required to be made public by the filing organization on request and is indexed by ProPublica and others within weeks of filing. Sections most boards underestimate: Schedule J (top-staff compensation), Schedule L (transactions with interested persons), and Schedule O (narrative explanations that "soften" other answers). Donors and reporters read these.

Why It Matters

Items that read fine in management's narrative often read very differently in print. Pre-filing review by a non-finance board member catches optics issues that a CFO will not.

Never Miss an Update

Get Georgia nonprofit intelligence delivered to your inbox every morning.

Subscribe Free

Subscribe Free

Get Georgia nonprofit intelligence delivered daily.

Subscribe Now

Issue Summary

DateJul 9, 2026
Stories4
Sections2
Read Time2 min
Sponsored

Advertise Here

Reach professionals in this market

Learn More

Browse Archive

View all past issues

National Partner

Reach Professionals Nationwide

Feature your brand across the U.S., Canada, and select international markets and 10 industry verticals.

Become a National Partner