IRS Form 990: What Every Board Member Must Know
Form 990 is public, detailed, and scrutinized by donors and grant-makers. Learn what to look for before you sign off.
Key Takeaways
- โForm 990 is a public document โ donors, journalists, and grant-makers can and do read it.
- โBoard members should review the 990 carefully before it is filed, not just sign it.
- โSchedule L discloses transactions with board members โ even legitimate ones.
- โA program expense ratio below 65% typically triggers scrutiny from watchdog groups.
Form 990 is a public document
Think of the 990 as your organization's public report card. Anything that looks unusual will be noticed by donors, journalists, or grant-makers โ and there is no way to unpublish it once filed.
Key 990 sections every board member should review
Form 990 โ key sections at a glance
How to Review the Form 990 Before Signing
Schedule L: the conflict-of-interest disclosure
Schedule L must disclose loans to or from board members, grants to related parties, and business transactions where a board member or their family has a financial interest. Even legitimate transactions must be disclosed. If something is on Schedule L, the board should be able to explain it clearly โ because donors and grant-makers will see it.
Common 990 errors that attract scrutiny
Watch for: inconsistencies between the 990 and audited financial statements, compensation figures that seem unusually high or low, a program ratio below 65%, undisclosed related-party transactions, and changes in accounting methods without explanation. A board member who spots a discrepancy should raise it before the 990 is filed โ not after.
