North Dakota Code § 50-22-04

Information required to be filed annually
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
1. Every charitable organization that is required to file or that files a registration statement 
pursuant to section 50 -22-02 shall file an annual report . The annual report must be 
delivered to the secretary of state, along with a ten dollar fee , on or before September 
first of each year.
The secretary of state may extend the filing date for the annual report of any 
charitable organization, if a written application for extension is received before the 
filing deadline an extension may be granted for a single year, or permanently at the 
request of the charitable organization . A charitable organization with a fiscal year 
ending within three months prior to the filing deadline may make a written request for 
an extension to apply to reports for subsequent years until the fiscal year is changed. A 
filing date may not be extended under this subsection beyond December first of any 
given year an annual report is due.
Information submitted must be given as of the close of the business on the 
thirty-first day of December next preceding the date herein provided for the filing of the 
report, or, in the alternative, the date of the end of the fiscal year next preceding this 
report may be used.
2. The annual report must be filed on forms prescribed by the secretary of state and must 
include a financial statement covering the immediately preceding twelve -month period 
of operation. An officer of the charitable organization shall execute the financial 
statement which must include a balance sheet, statement of income and expense, and 
statement of functional expenses. The financial statement must be filed on or attached 
to forms furnished by the secretary of state and must be prepared in accordance with 
generally accepted accounting principles so as to make a full disclosure of the 
following, including necessary allocations between each item and the basis of the 
allocations:
a. Total receipts and total income from all sources;
b. Cost of management and general;

c. Program services;
d. Cost of fundraising;
e. Cost of public education;
f. Funds or properties transferred out of state with explanation as to recipient and 
purpose, unless the information is not reasonably available, in which case the 
charitable organization may, with the approval of the secretary of state, provide a 
reasonable estimate of the amounts transferred;
g. Total net amount disbursed or dedicated within this state, broken down into total 
amounts disbursed or dedicated for each major purpose, charitable or otherwise, 
unless the information is not reasonably available, in which case the charitable 
organization, with the approval of the secretary of state, may provide a 
reasonable estimate of the required information;
h. Names of professional fundraisers used during the accounting year and the 
financial compensation and profit resulting to each professional fundraiser; and
i. Total compensation, including salaries, fees, bonuses, fringe benefits, severance 
payments, and deferred compensation, paid to employees by the charitable 
organization and all its affiliated organizations.
3. Unless otherwise required by this section, the financial statement need not be certified.
4. Upon request of the secretary of state or attorney general, the charitable organization 
must promptly provide a copy of all tax or information returns, including all schedules 
and amendments, submitted by the charitable organization to the internal revenue 
service for the period covered by the annual report, except any schedules of 
contributors to the organization.
5. The secretary of state or attorney general may make a detailed examination of the 
accounts of any charitable organization conducting a solicitation for funds within this 
state. Every charitable organization subject to this chapter shall keep a full and true 
record in the form that will enable the charitable organization to accurately provide the 
information required by this chapter. The registration of a charitable organization is 
ineffective immediately upon its failure to file an annual report, including the payment 
of all required fees. Any such organization, if in default under this chapter, may not file 
a new registration statement until it files the required annual report with the secretary 
of state.
Failure to file the annual report and fee as required will mean the organization may not solicit in 
this state.

‹ Prev All North Dakota sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.