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Nonprofit Law

Non-Profit & 501(c)(3) Formation Attorney in Tampa

Starting a Florida nonprofit involves more than filing paperwork. From state incorporation through IRS tax-exempt status, we guide your organization through every step - so your legal foundation is built to last.

$35
FL Nonprofit Filing Fee
$275
IRS 1023-EZ Fee
3 Directors
FL Board Minimum
501(c)(3)
Tax-Exempt Status

Forming a nonprofit in Florida is a two-part process. The first part is state incorporation - filing Articles of Incorporation with the Florida Division of Corporations to create a nonprofit corporation under Florida law. The second part is federal recognition - applying to the IRS for 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status, which is what allows your organization to accept tax-deductible donations, qualify for grants, and operate free from federal and state income tax.

These two steps are related but distinct. Incorporating with the state does not automatically make your organization tax-exempt. And the IRS will scrutinize your articles before approving your application. If your Articles of Incorporation are missing required language - a proper purpose clause, a private inurement prohibition, or the dissolution clause directing assets to another 501(c)(3) - the IRS will deny your application. This is one of the most common and most costly mistakes in nonprofit formation. Fixing it requires amending the articles, restating them, and re-submitting to the IRS.

Beyond state incorporation and IRS approval, Florida nonprofits have additional compliance obligations - including fundraising registration with the Florida Department of Agriculture before soliciting a single donation, sales tax exemption applications, and ongoing annual reporting. Setting these up correctly from the start is far less expensive than correcting them later.

FL Patel Law guides Florida nonprofits through the entire formation process - from name selection and articles drafting through IRS application and post-formation compliance setup. Whether you are starting a charitable foundation, a community organization, a religious institution, or an educational entity, we handle the legal work so you can focus on the mission. Our nonprofit formation practice connects directly to our business formation and corporate law services for ongoing governance support after formation.

Call (727) 279-5037 or schedule a consultation to discuss forming your Florida nonprofit with an experienced attorney.

Process Overview

Nonprofit Formation at a Glance

Choose Name
File FL Articles
Draft Bylaws & Organize
IRS Application
Tax-Exempt Status
Choose Name
File FL Articles
Draft Bylaws & Organize
IRS Application
Tax-Exempt Status

Each stage involves multiple legal steps. The full process from name selection through IRS determination typically takes 2-6 months depending on which IRS form you file.

Step by Step

The Nonprofit Formation Process

From state incorporation through federal tax-exempt status and post-formation compliance - every step required to properly establish a Florida nonprofit.

1

Name and Purpose

State

Choose a name and confirm availability through Sunbiz.org. Define your exempt purpose - the IRS requires nonprofits to operate exclusively for charitable, educational, religious, scientific, or literary purposes. The purpose statement in your articles must align precisely with IRS requirements.

2

Articles of Incorporation

State

Draft and file Articles of Incorporation for a nonprofit corporation with the Florida Division of Corporations. The articles must include IRS-required language: organized exclusively for exempt purposes, no private inurement clause, and a dissolution clause directing remaining assets to another 501(c)(3) upon dissolution. Filing fee: $35.00.

3

Registered Agent

State

Designate a Florida registered agent with a physical street address in Florida. The registered agent receives legal notices and official correspondence on behalf of the organization. This is a legal requirement for all Florida nonprofit corporations.

4

Bylaws and Organization

Governance

Draft bylaws governing board structure, officer roles, meeting procedures, voting requirements, and conflict of interest policy. Hold the organizational meeting: elect the initial board of directors (minimum 3 required in Florida), adopt the bylaws, appoint officers, and document everything with formal meeting minutes.

5

Obtain EIN

Federal

Apply to the IRS for an Employer Identification Number (EIN) - the federal tax ID for your organization. You need the EIN before opening a bank account, hiring employees, or filing the IRS tax-exempt application. Application is free and can be obtained online from the IRS.

6

IRS Tax-Exempt Application

Federal

Prepare and file Form 1023 (full application, $600 fee) or Form 1023-EZ (streamlined form, $275 fee) with the IRS. The full Form 1023 requires detailed narratives on programs, governance, compensation, and financials. The 1023-EZ is shorter but has a higher denial rate on audit. We advise on the right form for your organization.

7

IRS Determination

Federal

The IRS reviews your application and issues a determination letter recognizing your organization as tax-exempt under Section 501(c)(3). This letter is the official documentation of your tax-exempt status - required by donors, grantmakers, and government agencies. Keep it permanently.

8

Fundraising Registration

State

If your nonprofit solicits donations from the public, you must register with the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services before soliciting. This is a legal requirement under Florida law. Registration fees range from $10 to $400 depending on contributions received. Annual renewal is required.

9

Sales Tax Exemption

State

Apply for a Florida sales tax exemption using Form DR-5 with the Florida Department of Revenue. Once approved, your nonprofit is exempt from paying Florida sales tax on most purchases used in furtherance of your exempt purpose. Application is free. A separate property tax exemption may also be available for owned real property.

10

Governance Policies

Compliance

Adopt the governance policies the IRS asks about in Form 1023: a written conflict of interest policy, document retention and destruction policy, and whistleblower policy. These policies demonstrate to the IRS and donors that your organization operates with proper oversight and accountability.

IRS Application

Form 1023 vs Form 1023-EZ

Recommended for Most

Form 1023

  • Comprehensive 30+ page application
  • Required if over $50,000 gross receipts or over $250,000 assets
  • IRS fee: $600
  • Processing: 3-6 months
  • Stronger determination, lower audit risk
  • Detailed narrative builds stronger case

Form 1023-EZ

  • Streamlined 3-page online form
  • Available if under $50,000 gross receipts AND under $250,000 assets
  • IRS fee: $275
  • Processing: 2-4 weeks
  • Higher denial rate on subsequent audit
  • Less documentation means more risk later

Even when your nonprofit qualifies for Form 1023-EZ, the full Form 1023 provides a stronger foundation. We advise on which form is right for your organization based on your mission, funding plans, and long-term goals.

Tax-Exempt Categories

Types of Tax-Exempt Organizations

The IRS recognizes multiple categories of tax-exempt organizations under Section 501(c). FL Patel Law primarily handles 501(c)(3) formations - the most common type and the only category where donor contributions are tax-deductible. Here is an overview of the four most common categories.

The most common and most well-known category of tax-exempt organization. 501(c)(3) covers charitable, religious, educational, scientific, literary, and similar organizations. Contributions to 501(c)(3) organizations are tax-deductible for donors on their federal returns - a critical advantage for fundraising. This is the primary focus of our nonprofit formation practice.

  • Charitable, religious, educational, scientific, and literary organizations
  • Donations are tax-deductible for donors on federal returns
  • Exempt from federal and Florida corporate income tax
  • Eligible for government and foundation grants
  • Must apply via IRS Form 1023 or 1023-EZ for recognition
  • Governed by Florida Statutes Ch. 617 (Florida Not For Profit Corporation Act)

Legal Requirements

501(c)(3) Requirements

To qualify for and maintain 501(c)(3) status, your organization must meet the following requirements. Violating any of these can result in IRS denial or revocation of tax-exempt status.

Organized exclusively for exempt purposes

No private inurement (profits stay in the organization)

Dissolution clause directing assets to another 501(c)(3)

Minimum 3 board directors (Florida requirement)

No substantial lobbying activity

No political campaign activity

Conflict of interest policy adopted

Annual Form 990 filing (or lose status after 3 years)

Distributing profits to founders or insiders

Articles missing required IRS language

Operating for private benefit rather than public purpose

Engaging in political campaign activity

Don't Lose Your Tax-Exempt Status

The IRS automatically revokes 501(c)(3) status if your organization fails to file Form 990 (or 990-EZ or 990-N) for three consecutive years. This revocation is automatic, with no prior warning or opportunity to cure. Once revoked, you must re-apply from scratch - including paying the IRS filing fee again and waiting through the full review period. Calendar your filing deadline and never miss it.

Required Before Fundraising in Florida

If your nonprofit solicits donations from the public, you must register with the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services BEFORE you begin soliciting. This is a legal requirement under Florida law - not optional. Annual renewal is required. Failure to register can result in fines and enforcement action by the state. Sending a single fundraising email without this registration is a violation.

Government Fees

Florida Nonprofit Filing Fees

These are the government filing fees charged by the state and federal agencies. Attorney fees for drafting articles, bylaws, and the IRS application are separate.

FL Articles of Incorporation (nonprofit)$35.00
IRS Form 1023 (full application)$600.00
IRS Form 1023-EZ (streamlined)$275.00
FL Solicitation of Contributions Registration$10 - $400
FL Sales Tax Exemption Application (DR-5)Free
EIN Application (IRS)Free
FL Annual Report$61.25

FL Solicitation of Contributions Registration fee is based on gross contributions received in the prior year. New organizations registering for the first time pay the minimum $10 fee.

Ready to Start Your Florida Nonprofit?

Call (727) 279-5037 or schedule a consultation with an experienced Florida nonprofit attorney. We handle state incorporation, IRS 501(c)(3) applications, bylaws, fundraising registration, and post-formation compliance setup.

FAQ

Florida Nonprofit Formation: Frequently Asked Questions

State filing fees are $35.00 for the Articles of Incorporation. IRS filing fees are $275 for Form 1023-EZ or $600 for the full Form 1023. In addition, most nonprofits need to register with the Florida Department of Agriculture before soliciting donations ($10-$400 depending on contributions received) and apply for a Florida sales tax exemption (free). Attorney fees cover drafting the articles, bylaws, and preparing the IRS application - the most critical parts of the process where errors lead to denial.

The IRS Form 1023-EZ typically processes in 2-4 weeks after submission. The full Form 1023 takes 3-6 months. From the start of state incorporation through IRS approval, the complete process typically takes 2-6 months. State incorporation in Florida is usually completed within 3-5 business days. The largest variable is the IRS review period, which depends on which form you file and the current IRS processing backlog.

Form 1023 is the full 30+ page IRS application required for organizations expecting more than $50,000 in annual gross receipts or more than $250,000 in total assets. IRS fee: $600. Processing: 3-6 months. Form 1023-EZ is a streamlined 3-page online form available for smaller organizations below both thresholds. IRS fee: $275. Processing: 2-4 weeks. While 1023-EZ is faster and cheaper, it has a higher denial rate on subsequent IRS audit because it requires far less documentation. Even when your organization qualifies for the EZ form, the full Form 1023 often provides a stronger legal foundation. We advise on the right choice based on your mission and funding plans.

You are not legally required to hire an attorney. However, the Articles of Incorporation must contain specific IRS-required language - including a purpose clause, a private inurement prohibition, and a dissolution clause directing assets to another 501(c)(3). Missing any of these results in IRS denial. The full Form 1023 also requires detailed narratives about your programs, governance structure, compensation practices, and financial projections. A well-prepared application moves faster and avoids the back-and-forth that delays approval. Most nonprofit founders find that the cost of legal assistance is far lower than the cost of a rejected application and the time to re-file.

Yes. Nonprofits can and should generate revenue and operating surplus. The term "nonprofit" does not mean the organization cannot earn more than it spends - it means that profits cannot be distributed to founders, directors, officers, or other insiders. Any surplus must be reinvested in the organization's exempt mission. Nonprofits regularly earn revenue through program fees, grants, fundraising events, and investments. The IRS restriction is on private inurement - distributing net earnings to insiders - not on generating revenue or operating efficiently.

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NONPROFIT LAW

Ready to Start Your Nonprofit?

From state incorporation through IRS 501(c)(3) approval and Florida compliance setup - we guide your organization through every step. Schedule a consultation with a Tampa nonprofit formation attorney.

(727) 279-5037 · contact@flpatellaw.com