
There’s a quiet awkwardness around nonprofits and money. Somewhere along the way, “nonprofit” got heard as “no money,” and now board members hesitate to talk about revenue, new founders worry they’re not allowed to earn a living, and everyone tiptoes around the word profit. If you’ve ever felt unsure whether your organization is even allowed to bring in money, you’re in good company — it’s one of the most common questions we hear.
So how do nonprofits make money, and is a nonprofit even allowed to? Here’s the clear version: nonprofits not only can make money, they have to. The difference from a business isn’t whether you bring in more than you spend — it’s where that money goes. A business can send profit to its owners; a nonprofit reinvests every dollar back into its mission. Same engine, different destination. Let’s walk through exactly how the money comes in — and the part most guides skip: what each kind of income does to your books and your tax-exempt status.
Key Takeaways
Nonprofits make money through three broad channels: contributed income (donations and grants), earned income (selling goods or services related to the mission), and investment income. Most healthy organizations blend several of these rather than leaning on a single source. What sets nonprofit revenue apart isn’t the sources themselves — plenty of businesses use the same ones — but how each is recorded and what it means for your tax-exempt status.
| Revenue source | What it is | What it means for your books |
|---|---|---|
| Individual donations | One-time and recurring gifts from people who believe in your work. | Usually unrestricted; recorded as contributions. Retention matters more than acquisition. |
| Grants | Funding from government, foundations, or community funders, usually for a specific purpose. | Typically restricted; tracked by grant and released as you spend. |
| Earned income | Program fees, ticket sales, memberships, services, merchandise. | Recorded as program/earned revenue; can trigger UBIT if unrelated to your mission. |
| In-kind donations | Donated goods, services, or space instead of cash. | Recorded at fair value, with documentation. |
| Investment income | Interest, dividends, and returns on reserves or an endowment. | Recorded as investment revenue; tied to your reserve policy. |
Yes — though in the nonprofit world it’s called a surplus, not a profit. A nonprofit can and should end some years with more money than it spent; that surplus is what funds reserves, growth, and the lean years that eventually come. The myth that nonprofits must spend every dollar and end at zero is not just wrong — it’s financially dangerous.
Business profit
Money left over after expenses that can be distributed to owners or shareholders.
Nonprofit surplus
Money left over after expenses that must be reinvested in the mission — there are no owners to pay. Same math, different destination.
So when someone asks whether a nonprofit can “make money,” the honest answer is: it must, and a surplus is a sign of health, not a problem. What you can’t do is hand that surplus to founders or board members as profit. Where it goes instead — reserves, programs, capacity — is a decision your reserve policy and budget should guide.
Most of it isn’t, but some can be. Income tied to your mission — donations, grants, and program fees related to your exempt purpose — is generally free of federal income tax. Income from a regular trade or business that isn’t substantially related to your mission can be taxable under unrelated business income tax (UBIT), even though the rest of your money isn’t.
The practical rule: when your gross unrelated business income reaches $1,000 or more in a year, you file Form 990-T and may owe tax. A museum cafe open to the public or advertising sold in your newsletter are classic examples. Plenty of activities have exceptions, which is why earned income is worth a quick check rather than a guess — the IRS lays out the basics on its Unrelated Business Income Tax page.
Not sure how to record — or tax — a new revenue stream?
We help nonprofits track every kind of income correctly and stay tax-exempt while they grow.
Request a quote →Each revenue type lands in a different place in your books: restricted grants must be tracked and released grant by grant, unrestricted donations can go wherever the need is greatest, and earned income needs watching for UBIT. That’s more than most people expect — and it’s where nonprofits quietly get into trouble, because getting the distinction wrong is the difference between books a funder trusts and books that raise questions.
A restricted grant can only be spent on what the funder specified, so it has to be tracked separately and released as you actually spend it — the heart of nonprofit fund accounting. Unrestricted donations are yours to deploy where the need is greatest. Earned income has to be watched for UBIT. Each of these wants its own home in your chart of accounts, and your financial statements should show them clearly. If you’re not sure who should be setting this up, our guide to the bookkeeper, accountant, and CPA roles is a good starting point.
Yes, nonprofits pay their people, and founders can draw a salary. Compensation is a normal, expected cost of running an organization — staff salaries and reasonable founder pay come out of revenue just like any other operating expense. The common belief that working at a nonprofit means working for free, or that a founder can’t earn a living, simply isn’t true.
The IRS rule isn’t that pay must be low — it’s that it must be reasonable: comparable to what similar organizations pay for similar work, and approved through a documented process rather than set by the person being paid. Excessive or self-dealing compensation is what the rules against private inurement exist to prevent. Paid staff also mean payroll taxes, which every nonprofit with employees handles like any other employer.
A healthy nonprofit usually doesn’t depend on a single source of money. The most common financial risk we see isn’t too little revenue — it’s too much of it riding on one grant or one major donor that could disappear next year. Spreading income across donations, grants, and earned revenue makes an organization far more resilient.
There’s no single “correct” mix — the right balance depends on your model and stage. What matters is knowing your concentration risk and building a cushion against it, which is where operating reserves and steady cash flow management come in. Diversification isn’t about chasing every dollar; it’s about not letting one source hold your mission hostage.
Pull your most recent financial statement and label your income by where it came from: donations, grants, earned income, investments. Two questions tell you a lot — what share comes from your single largest source, and is each type recorded in the right place? The first reveals your risk; the second reveals whether your books are telling the truth.
Bringing in money is the easy part — recording it right is where it counts.
We provide nonprofit bookkeeping & accounting and Form 990 & tax support so every revenue stream stays clean and compliant.
GivingArc provides bookkeeping, Form 990 preparation, and nonprofit-specialized accounting for small and mid-size 501(c)(3) organizations across the US. This article is general information, not tax or legal advice for your specific situation. Reviewed by Min Kim, CPA.
Common questions about how nonprofits earn and handle money.
Nonprofits make money through contributed income (donations and grants), earned income (selling goods or services related to their mission), and investment income. Most healthy organizations blend several sources rather than relying on one, which makes them more financially stable.
Yes, but it’s called a surplus rather than a profit. A nonprofit can end the year with more money than it spent, and that surplus is healthy. The difference from a business is that the surplus must be reinvested in the mission, not distributed to owners or shareholders.
Usually not on mission-related income like donations, grants, and related program fees. But income from a business activity unrelated to the mission can be taxable under unrelated business income tax (UBIT). If gross unrelated income is $1,000 or more in a year, the organization files Form 990-T and may owe tax.
Yes. Founders and staff can earn salaries, which are a normal cost of running the organization. The IRS requires that compensation be reasonable — comparable to similar roles at similar organizations and set through a documented process — rather than excessive or self-dealing.
Unrestricted revenue can be used wherever the need is greatest. Restricted revenue — most often grants — can only be spent on what the funder specified, so it must be tracked separately and released as it’s spent. Recording the two correctly is the core of nonprofit fund accounting.
Yes. Charging fees for programs or services is a common and legitimate source of earned income. As long as the activity is related to your mission, the revenue is generally tax-free; if it’s an unrelated business, it may be subject to UBIT.