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Read MoreOne area of The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) that is flying under the radar is how the bill will impact tax-exempt organizations and their donors. While the bill covers a wide range of tax policy, this post will focus on the provisions most relevant to the nonprofit sector.
The OBBBA introduces new rules for charitable deductions for both individual and corporate donors, with a mix of potential benefits and drawbacks for nonprofits. These changes provide reasons for both optimism and concern for nonprofits, as they determine whether the bill is beautiful, ugly, or kind of pretty when it takes its glasses off.
Here are the details:
The OBBBA also introduces new or expanded taxes that could increase the financial and administrative burdens on certain tax-exempt organizations.
– 1.4% for endowments between $500,000 and $750,000 per student.
– 4% for endowments between $750,000 and $2,000,000 per student.
– 8% for endowments above.
– $2,000,000 per student. This change is intended to curb endowment growth at the wealthiest institutions and may pressure them to adjust their investment strategies or increase spending on mission-related programs.
– The bill also introduces new reporting requirements for IRS Form 990 related to this excise tax, such as number of tuition-paying students.
It is also important to note what was not in the final version of the bill. Earlier drafts included provisions that would have:
• Reinstated the “parking tax,” which treated the cost of providing employee parking as unrelated business taxable income (UBTI).
• Taxed royalties from the licensing of a nonprofit’s name or logo as UBTI.
• Provided the Treasury with broad authority to revoke the tax-exempt status of organizations deemed to support terrorism.
The exclusion of these measures will be a relief to many in the nonprofit community.
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