TYSONS OFFICE
Protect Your Tax-Exempt License: Learn the Rules of the IRS Road
A trillion-dollar infrastructure bill may improve our nation’s highways, but saving lives is not as easily bought. Safety mostly depends on all drivers knowing and obeying the rules. Our nation’s well-developed tax-exempt infrastructure is similar. It greatly facilitates the charitable movement of goods and services but is equally dependent on all users knowing and following the IRS rules of the road.
Take one section of the charitable highway – activity in the public square of laws and legislators. It has two distinct lanes with very different rules. According to the IRS road map “Political activities and legislative activities (commonly referred to as lobbying) are two different things and are subject to two different sets of rules and have different consequences of exceeding the limitations.” Violating the rules prohibiting politicking are like a DUI where a single offense can result in lock-up and loss of license. Lobbying on the other hand is like a school zone: slow down, drive carefully and you can get through safely.
What practices trigger the prohibition on political activity for tax-exempt organizations?
- All section 501(c)(3) organizations are absolutely prohibited from directly or indirectly participating in, or intervening in, any political campaign on behalf of (or in opposition to) any candidate for elective public office.
- This absolute prohibition includes any contribution to political campaign funds.
- It also prohibits any public statement of position (verbal or written) made on behalf of the organization in favor of or in opposition to any candidate for public office.
What’s the penalty for engaging in any such prohibited politicking?
What exactly are the key elements of such prohibited politicking?
Are there any permissible political activities?
Are there different rules on political activity for churches and religious groups?
Do the IRS no-politicking rules apply only to the organization, or also to its leaders?
What is the penalty for violating the prohibition?
What is the penalty for violating the prohibition?
What is nonprofit lobbying?
Is lobbying prohibited for 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organizations?
What exceeds the speed limit of “substantial” lobbying?
- The definition of “substantial” lobbying is not as clear as a speed limit sign. The IRS offers two methods to determine if lobbying is less than substantial.
- The substantial part test has many unclear precedents in case law, but generally a 5% limitation is an accepted rule of thumb. That is, organizations are safe if their lobbying activities do not exceed 5% of their total activities.
- The §501(h) expenditure test permits expenditures for lobbying activities up to certain ceiling amounts. The tax code specifies these guardrail amounts:
- 20% of the first $500,000 of the organization’s exempt purpose expenditures in any given year, plus …
- 15% of the second $500,000, plus
- 10% of the third $500,000, plus
- 5% of any additional exempt purpose expenditures, with an annual cap of $1,000,000 of lobbying expenditures.
Do organizations have to report their lobbying activities to the IRS?
Nonprofit, Exempt Organizations & NGOs
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