GivingArc Nonprofit accounting Service

How to Read Nonprofit Financial Statements: Complete Guide

How to read nonprofit financial statements guide 2026

Key Takeaways

  • Nonprofits produce four core financial statements: Statement of Financial Position (balance sheet), Statement of Activities (revenue and expense changes), Statement of Cash Flows, and Statement of Functional Expenses (program / management / fundraising breakdown).
  • Under current FASB standards (ASU 2016-14), net assets appear in two categories — “with donor restrictions” and “without donor restrictions” — replacing the older three-tier system.
  • Form 990 filers with gross receipts above $200,000 or assets above $500,000 must produce a Statement of Functional Expenses, which donors and watchdogs use to compare program efficiency.
  • Key board-level benchmarks: program expense ratio ≥75% of total expenses, 90–180 days of cash on hand, current ratio above 1.0, and annual surplus above 5%.
  • At minimum, full boards should review complete financial statements quarterly with finance-committee oversight monthly; year-end audited statements should be reviewed annually.

When a nonprofit board member receives a stack of financial statements during their monthly meeting, the documents can feel overwhelming. Yet understanding these statements isn’t just helpful—it’s essential for effective governance. According to the National Council of Nonprofits, organizations with financially literate boards are significantly more likely to maintain healthy reserves and achieve their mission-driven goals.

Whether you’re a new board member, donor, or nonprofit leader, knowing how to read nonprofit financial statements empowers you to make informed decisions about an organization’s financial health and sustainability. With over 23 years of collective nonprofit accounting experience, our team at GivingArc has seen firsthand how financial literacy transforms organizational decision-making through our nonprofit bookkeeping services.

Why Nonprofit Financial Statements Matter More Than Ever in 2026

The landscape for nonprofit accountability has intensified significantly. Donors increasingly demand transparency before making contributions, with the majority of major donors reviewing financial statements before giving, according to recent sector research. This scrutiny extends beyond individual donors to foundations, government agencies, and corporate partners who require detailed financial analysis as part of their due diligence process.

Why nonprofit financial statements matter for board governance

The IRS has strengthened its oversight of nonprofit organizations, implementing enhanced reporting requirements through Form 990 that demand greater detail about financial management and governance practices. State attorneys general have also expanded their monitoring of charitable organizations, with several states requiring additional financial disclosures beyond federal requirements.

For board members, understanding financial statements represents a core fiduciary responsibility. Directors who cannot interpret basic financial information may struggle to fulfill their duty of care, potentially exposing themselves and the organization to legal and financial risks. Grant-making organizations increasingly require board members to demonstrate financial competency as part of funding applications.

Organizations that maintain transparent, well-understood financial practices enjoy better access to funding opportunities, stronger donor relationships, and more effective strategic planning. If your nonprofit needs support maintaining accurate financial records that facilitate this transparency, our accounting services can help establish the foundation for clear financial communication.

The Four Core Nonprofit Financial Statements Explained

1

Statement of Financial Position

What We Own

Financial “photograph” — assets, liabilities, and net assets at a point in time.

2

Statement of Activities

How We Changed

“Movie” of financial action — revenue, expenses, changes in net assets over time.

3

Statement of Cash Flows

Where Cash Moved

Operating, investing, and financing activity — the reality check on liquidity.

4

Statement of Functional Expenses

Where Money Went

Program / management / fundraising breakdown — mission vs. overhead.

Every nonprofit organization produces four primary financial statements, each serving a distinct purpose in telling the organization’s financial story. Understanding how these statements interconnect provides a complete picture of organizational health and performance.

Statement of Financial Position (Nonprofit Balance Sheet)

The statement of financial position provides a snapshot of the organization’s financial condition at a specific point in time. Think of it as a financial photograph—here’s what we own, here’s what we owe, and here’s what’s left over. This statement follows the fundamental accounting equation: Assets = Liabilities + Net Assets.

Assets include everything the organization owns: cash, investments, accounts receivable, inventory, equipment, and buildings. These appear in order of liquidity, with cash and cash equivalents at the top, followed by short-term investments and accounts receivable.

Liabilities represent what the organization owes: accounts payable, accrued expenses, debt obligations, and deferred revenue. Current liabilities (due within one year) appear before long-term obligations.

Net assets, the nonprofit equivalent of equity, show the organization’s accumulated financial position. Under current FASB standards, net assets appear in two categories: with donor restrictions and without donor restrictions. This classification replaced the previous temporarily and permanently restricted terminology to provide clearer information about spending limitations. For detailed guidance on preparing this statement, see our guide on nonprofit statement of financial position.

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Statement of Activities (Income Statement)

The statement of activities shows how the organization’s net assets changed during a specific period. If the balance sheet is a photograph, this is the movie—showing financial action over time.

Revenue appears in several categories: contributions, grants, program service revenue, investment income, and other sources. Each revenue type may have restrictions. For example, a grant might specify funds for a particular program, while general donations might support any organizational need.

Expenses appear by functional classification: program services, management and general, and fundraising. Program services represent direct mission delivery costs, while support services include infrastructure costs. The relationship between these categories reveals organizational efficiency and mission focus.

The bottom line shows the change in net assets—whether the organization’s financial position improved or declined. This change appears separately for assets with and without donor restrictions, providing transparency about how different funding types affected financial position.

Statement of Cash Flows

Cash flow statements reveal how cash moved during the reporting period, categorized by operating, investing, and financing activities. As we often remind our clients, you can’t pay bills with net assets—you need actual cash.

Operating activities include cash flows from primary activities: collecting donations, paying staff, purchasing supplies, and delivering programs. Positive operating cash flow indicates core activities generate sufficient cash to sustain operations.

Investing activities encompass buying or selling investments, purchasing or disposing of property and equipment, and making or collecting loans. These typically involve larger, less frequent transactions affecting long-term financial capacity.

Financing activities include borrowing money, repaying debt, and receiving or repaying restricted funds that must be returned if unused. These cash flows affect capital structure and debt obligations.

Statement of Functional Expenses

Organizations filing Form 990 (those with gross receipts normally exceeding $200,000 or assets exceeding $500,000) must provide a statement of functional expenses. This detailed breakdown shows spending by expense type within each functional category.

The statement reveals spending ratios, with most stakeholders expecting at least 75% of expenses to support program activities. However, these ratios must be interpreted contextually. For instance, a startup nonprofit might appropriately invest more in infrastructure during early years to build capacity for future impact.

Key Financial Ratios Every Nonprofit Leader Should Track

Healthy Range

1.5–3.0

ratio value

Current Ratio

Current Assets ÷ Current Liabilities

Target Reserve

90–180

days of cash

Days Cash on Hand

Unrestricted Cash ÷ Daily Expenses

Benchmark Minimum

≥75%

of total expenses

Program Expense Ratio

Program Expenses ÷ Total Expenses

Healthy Surplus

>5%

annual margin

Operating Margin

Surplus ÷ Unrestricted Revenue

Financial ratios transform raw numbers into meaningful insights about performance, efficiency, and sustainability. Understanding these enables benchmarking against industry standards and identifying concerning trends.

Liquidity Ratios

The current ratio (current assets ÷ current liabilities) measures ability to meet short-term obligations. A ratio above 1.0 indicates sufficient assets to cover immediate debts. Most experts recommend maintaining ratios between 1.5 and 3.0. A ratio of 2.0 means $2 in current assets for every $1 owed near-term.

Days cash on hand (unrestricted cash ÷ average daily expenses) reveals operational runway using only existing reserves. Organizations should typically maintain 90-180 days of expenses in accessible funds, though this varies by funding stability.

Efficiency Ratios

Nonprofit efficiency ratios infographic showing program, management, and fundraising expense breakdown

The program expense ratio (program expenses ÷ total expenses) shows the percentage directly supporting mission. While 75% is a common benchmark, context matters. Consider a scenario where a growing nonprofit invests in technology infrastructure—its program ratio might temporarily dip to 65%, but this investment could multiply future impact.

Administrative expense ratios above 25% often raise questions, though shouldn’t be applied mechanically. Strategic investments in systems, training, or capacity building may temporarily increase overhead while improving long-term effectiveness.

Financial Sustainability Ratios

Revenue concentration analysis examines dependence on single funding sources. Organizations receiving over 50% of revenue from one source face higher risk if that funding disappears. Diversification strategies might include expanding individual giving programs, pursuing grants from multiple foundations, or developing earned revenue streams.

The operating margin (change in unrestricted net assets ÷ total unrestricted revenue) indicates whether core operations generate surpluses or deficits. Consistently negative margins signal unsustainable operations requiring immediate attention.

Red Flags That Demand Immediate Attention

Critical

Act Immediately

  • Less than 30 days cash on hand
  • Declining cash + rising liabilities
  • Restricted fund deficits
  • Current ratio below 1.0
High Risk

Watch Closely

  • Persistent operating deficits
  • Negative operating margins
  • Single revenue source > 50%
  • Budget variance over 10%
Moderate

Monitor Trends

  • Program ratio below 60%
  • Rising admin expense ratio
  • Slowing receivables collection
  • Declining donor retention

Certain financial indicators signal serious problems requiring swift action. Recognizing these warning signs enables proactive intervention before crises develop.

Declining cash reserves accompanied by increasing liabilities creates a dangerous squeeze. When days cash on hand drops below 30 while payables grow, the organization faces imminent liquidity crisis. This combination often results from delayed grant payments, unexpected expenses, or revenue shortfalls.

Persistent operating deficits, especially in unrestricted funds, indicate fundamental sustainability issues. While occasional deficits during expansion or economic downturns are manageable, chronic shortfalls erode organizational capacity and threaten long-term viability.

Restricted fund deficits represent serious compliance failures. Using restricted funds for unauthorized purposes violates donor trust and potentially breaches legal obligations. These deficits require immediate correction and may necessitate repayment from unrestricted sources. Our guide on restricted vs unrestricted funds provides detailed compliance guidance.

Best Practices for Financial Statement Review

Before the Meeting

Receive statements 5+ days in advance
Compare current vs. prior period
Compare actual vs. budget
Calculate 4 key ratios
Flag variances exceeding 10%

During & After

Ask probing questions on variances
Benchmark against peer organizations
Document findings in meeting minutes
Assign and track follow-up actions
Finance committee reviews monthly

Effective financial oversight requires systematic review processes. Board members should receive statements at least five days before meetings, allowing adequate preparation time. Finance committees benefit from meeting monthly to review detailed reports before presenting summaries to full boards.

Comparative analysis enhances understanding. Always review current results against prior periods, budgets, and peer organizations. Variances exceeding 10% warrant investigation and explanation. We’ve observed that organizations implementing regular variance analysis catch problems months earlier than those reviewing statements in isolation.

Ask probing questions during reviews. Why did this revenue source decline? What drove the expense increase? How will cash flow constraints affect programs? Effective governance requires moving beyond passive receipt of reports to active engagement with financial data.

Document review findings and follow-up actions. Meeting minutes should capture key discussions, concerns raised, and decisions made. This documentation protects directors legally while ensuring accountability for addressing identified issues.

Take Control of Your Financial Narrative

Understanding nonprofit financial statements transforms overwhelming documents into powerful management tools. Regular review using the framework outlined here enables early problem detection, informed decision-making, and confident communication with stakeholders.

Start by scheduling dedicated time to review your organization’s most recent statements. Calculate the key ratios discussed and compare them to sector benchmarks. Identify one area needing improvement and develop an action plan. Financial literacy grows through practice—each review builds competence and confidence.

Remember that behind every number lies a story about your mission impact. Strong financial management isn’t about accumulating wealth but stewarding resources effectively to maximize community benefit. When board members, staff, and supporters understand the financial narrative, organizations thrive.

If your nonprofit struggles with financial statement preparation or wants to improve reporting quality, contact GivingArc today. Our experienced team can establish systems that produce clear, accurate statements while training your team to interpret and use financial data effectively. Don’t let financial complexity limit your mission impact—partner with professionals who understand nonprofit accounting’s unique requirements.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about nonprofit financial statements answered by GivingArc CPAs.

What are the four nonprofit financial statements?
Nonprofits produce four core financial statements: the Statement of Financial Position (balance sheet snapshot of assets, liabilities, and net assets), the Statement of Activities (revenue and expenses over a period), the Statement of Cash Flows (how cash moved through operating, investing, and financing activities), and the Statement of Functional Expenses (expenses broken down by program, management, and fundraising). Together, these four statements tell the complete financial story of an organization.
What is a good program expense ratio for a nonprofit?
Most watchdog organizations and funders expect nonprofits to spend at least 75% of total expenses on program activities. However, this benchmark should be applied in context. A startup nonprofit investing in infrastructure may temporarily run a 65% program ratio while building capacity. Administrative ratios above 25% often raise questions but aren’t automatically problematic if tied to strategic investments in technology, training, or systems that improve long-term impact.
What does “net assets” mean on a nonprofit balance sheet?
Net assets are the nonprofit equivalent of equity — the difference between total assets and total liabilities. Under current FASB standards, net assets appear in two categories: net assets with donor restrictions (funds restricted to specific purposes or time periods by donors) and net assets without donor restrictions (funds the board can use freely). A healthy nonprofit maintains positive net assets in both categories, with sufficient unrestricted reserves to cover 90–180 days of operating expenses.
How often should nonprofit boards review financial statements?
Best practice is for the finance committee to review detailed statements monthly and present summaries to the full board at every board meeting. Board members should receive financial statements at least five days before meetings to allow adequate review time. At minimum, full boards should review complete financial statements quarterly, with year-end audited statements reviewed annually. Organizations receiving federal grants or managing restricted funds benefit from more frequent review to ensure compliance.
What financial red flags should nonprofit board members watch for?
The most critical warning signs include: less than 30 days cash on hand, a current ratio below 1.0, persistent operating deficits in unrestricted funds, and restricted fund deficits (which indicate potential legal violations). High-risk indicators include a single revenue source exceeding 50% of total revenue, negative operating margins for two or more consecutive periods, and budget variances exceeding 10% without explanation. Any of these patterns warrants immediate discussion with financial leadership.
How is a nonprofit’s Statement of Activities different from a for-profit income statement?
The key differences are classification and purpose. A nonprofit’s Statement of Activities shows changes in net assets (not profit), separated by donor restriction status — with restrictions and without restrictions. Revenue includes contributions, grants, and program service fees rather than sales. Expenses are reported by functional classification (programs, management, fundraising) rather than by department. The “bottom line” shows change in net assets rather than net income, reflecting the nonprofit’s stewardship mission rather than profit generation.