TLDR
Nonprofits soliciting contributions in Nevada or holding Nevada charitable assets must file Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement with the Nevada Secretary of State. The current filing fee is no fee for the registration itself, and the renewal cycle runs before soliciting and annually upon renewal of corporate registration. Most rejections come from missing IRS Form 990 attachments, fee miscalculation, or filings submitted past the due date without an extension.
BLUF
Nonprofits soliciting contributions in Nevada or holding Nevada charitable assets must file Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement with the Nevada Secretary of State. The current filing fee is no fee for the registration itself, and the renewal cycle runs before soliciting and annually upon renewal of corporate registration. Most rejections come from missing IRS Form 990 attachments, fee miscalculation, or filings submitted past the due date without an extension.
TL;DR
- Who: any nonprofit soliciting contributions in Nevada or holding Nevada charitable assets.
- What: Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement, filed with the Nevada Secretary of State.
- When: before soliciting and annually upon renewal of corporate registration.
- Fee: no fee for the registration itself.
- Authority: Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 82A.
What Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement is
Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement is the filing the Nevada Secretary of State uses to oversee charitable activity in Nevada. The form registers a charitable organization to solicit contributions in Nevada. It exists under Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 82A. For most operating nonprofits, this is the recurring state-level filing that sits next to the federal IRS Form 990 in the annual compliance cycle.
Nevada combines charitable solicitation registration with the broader nonprofit corporate filing. Organizations renew both together each year.
Who must file
The registration obligation is broad. If your organization solicits contributions from Nevada residents, holds charitable assets in Nevada, or conducts charitable programs in the state, you almost certainly fall within scope. The trigger is solicitation activity, not physical presence. An organization headquartered in another state that runs a donation page reachable by Nevada residents has typically triggered registration.
Common categories that must file:
- 501(c)(3) public charities incorporated in Nevada
- Out-of-state charities that solicit Nevada donors by any channel (direct mail, phone, email, online, events)
- Organizations applying for grants from Nevada-based funders or government agencies
- Charitable trusts holding assets in Nevada
Common exemptions (verify each, since exemption is fact-specific):
- Religious organizations operating exclusively for religious purposes
- Accredited educational institutions soliciting from their own communities
- Hospitals and certain healthcare entities under defined statutory exemptions
- Small organizations under defined gross revenue thresholds
Even when an exemption applies, many states require an exemption claim to be filed. Confirm with the Nevada Secretary of State rather than assuming. For deeper sector context, see our nonprofit grant compliance guide and the Nevada nonprofit software overview.
Filing deadline and fee
The deadline is before soliciting and annually upon renewal of corporate registration. Missing the deadline triggers late fees and deficiency notices. Repeat lapses can result in administrative revocation of the right to solicit in Nevada, which has downstream effects on grant eligibility and donor confidence.
The current filing fee is no fee for the registration itself. Always check the agency’s current fee schedule before paying; fee tables change and out-of-date checks are a common rejection reason. Plan for ancillary costs: CPA review or audit fees if your gross revenue meets the financial-statement threshold, paid preparer fees if you outsource the filing, and late penalties if a previous year was missed.
Required attachments and documentation
The Nevada Secretary of State typically requires the following alongside Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement:
- A complete copy of the most recent IRS Form 990, 990-EZ, or 990-PF (organizations filing only the 990-N postcard generally still need to provide state-level financial detail)
- The IRS determination letter establishing tax-exempt status
- Articles of incorporation and any amendments
- Current bylaws
- A list of officers and directors with addresses and dates of appointment
- Audited or reviewed financial statements when gross revenue meets the Nevada threshold
- A list of states where the organization is registered, when applicable
Inconsistency between state and federal filings is a frequent deficiency trigger. Reconcile your figures before submitting. The GrantPipe compliance checklist lead magnet walks through the cross-checks that catch the most common errors.
How to file
The five-step sequence below covers the core mechanics. Each step maps to one of the structured filing steps in the frontmatter, so the content compiles into both narrative prose and HowTo schema.
1. Confirm registration trigger. Determine whether Nevada law requires your organization to register. Review Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 82A for the activities that trigger registration: direct mail, online giving forms accessible to Nevada residents, paid solicitors, grant solicitations, and asset holdings. If any apply, you must file.
2. Gather supporting documents. Pull the most recent IRS Form 990 (or 990-EZ/990-PF), IRS determination letter, articles of incorporation, bylaws, list of current officers and directors, and audited or reviewed financials if your gross revenue triggers the Nevada financial-statement requirement.
3. Complete the Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement. Complete every line. Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement registers a charitable organization to solicit contributions in Nevada. Use figures from your most recently filed Form 990 to keep state and federal data consistent. Inconsistencies between state and federal filings are a frequent deficiency notice trigger.
4. Calculate and submit the fee. The current filing fee is no fee for the registration itself. Verify the fee against the agency’s current schedule before submitting; fee schedules change. Pay through SilverFlume, the Nevada Secretary of State business portal or by check made payable to the entity specified on the current form instructions.
5. File and retain confirmation. Submit through SilverFlume, the Nevada Secretary of State business portal. Save the confirmation number, payment receipt, and a complete copy of the filed form with attachments. Store the package alongside your federal Form 990 in your compliance file.
For a full annual compliance calendar that pairs Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement with federal Form 990 and other state filings, see our grant compliance 101 walkthrough and the best grant management software comparison for the operational tooling that keeps these deadlines from slipping.
Common mistakes
After reviewing the published deficiency reasons across state charity bureaus, the same handful of errors come up year after year:
- Missing Form 990 attachment. The state expects the complete federal return, not a summary. Partial uploads are rejected.
- Inconsistent revenue figures between state and federal filings. Use the same fiscal-year data in both places. If the federal return is amended, amend the state filing too.
- Wrong fee. Fee tables change. Verify the current schedule on the Nevada Secretary of State website before submitting payment.
- Missing signatures. Most state forms require two officer signatures, often the chief executive and the chief financial officer. One signature is a common reject.
- Late filing without an extension. A federal Form 990 extension does not always extend the Nevada filing automatically. Confirm before relying on it.
- No audit when one is required. State audit thresholds are independent of the federal $750,000 single audit threshold under 2 CFR 200.501. An organization can need a state audit but no federal one, or vice versa.
- Stale officer and director information. Directors who rolled off the board still appearing on the filing is a frequent point of state follow-up.
What happens if you miss the Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement deadline
The first consequence is mechanical: the Nevada Secretary of State issues a deficiency notice and assesses late fees. The second consequence is operational: until the registration is current, the organization is not legally permitted to solicit contributions in Nevada. That status flows through to grant eligibility (state and many private funders verify charitable registration before disbursing), donor receipts (deduction language tied to Nevada-registered status becomes problematic), and online giving platforms (some platforms verify registration before processing).
The third consequence is reputational. Lapses appear in public registries. Donors who research the organization on the Nevada Secretary of State website see the lapse. Board members who run their own organizations notice. For an organization that depends on institutional grants, a lapse can disqualify a proposal in the eligibility-screening stage before the substance ever gets reviewed. The math on prevention is simple: the cost of a calendar reminder and a monitored deadline is far less than the cost of a missed grant cycle.
How GrantPipe helps
GrantPipe tracks state filing deadlines alongside federal Form 990 due dates and grant compliance milestones in a single dashboard. For finance and operations staff at a Nevada nonprofit, that means Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement appears in the same view as federal returns, audit engagement dates, and grantor reporting deadlines, with reminders built in. You can pair this with the Nevada nonprofit software overview to see how the rest of the platform fits a Nevada operation.
FAQ
Who must file the Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement in Nevada? Any organization soliciting charitable contributions from Nevada residents, holding charitable assets in Nevada, or otherwise meeting the registration trigger under Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 82A must file. Religious organizations, accredited educational institutions, and certain small organizations may qualify for an exemption, but exemption is not automatic; confirm status with the Nevada Secretary of State before skipping the filing.
When is the Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement due? The Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement is due before soliciting and annually upon renewal of corporate registration. Missing the deadline typically triggers late fees, deficiency notices, and (in repeat cases) administrative dissolution or revocation of the right to solicit in Nevada.
What does it cost to file the Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement? The current filing cost is no fee for the registration itself. Additional costs can include CPA fees for required reviews or audits, registered agent fees, and late penalties if the organization missed a prior renewal.
Can I file the Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement online? Yes. Nevada Secretary of State accepts filings through SilverFlume, the Nevada Secretary of State business portal. Online filing reduces the most common rejection reasons (missing signatures, math errors on fee tables, attachments not received) and produces a date-stamped confirmation.
What happens if my Nevada registration lapses? A lapsed registration means the organization is not legally permitted to solicit contributions in Nevada until the registration is reinstated. The state may impose late fees, require back filings for missed years, and pursue civil penalties under Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 82A. Donors who give during a lapse may not be able to claim deductions tied to the Nevada-registered status.
Free resource
Get the Nonprofit Grant Compliance Checklist
A practical checklist for post-award grant compliance: restricted funds, reporting cadence, audit prep, and common failure points. Delivered by email.
- Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement
- The Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement is the filing required by Nevada Secretary of State for charitable organizations operating in Nevada. Registers a charitable organization to solicit contributions in nevada.
DEFINITION
- Charitable solicitation
- Any request for a contribution made on behalf of a charitable organization. The definition usually covers direct mail, telephone, online, in-person, and grant solicitations directed at residents of the state.
DEFINITION
- Audited financial statements
- Financial statements prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles and examined by an independent CPA following generally accepted auditing standards (GAAS).
DEFINITION
- Deficiency notice
- A notice from the state agency indicating that a filing is incomplete or inaccurate. The notice typically gives the organization a short cure window before the filing is rejected.
DEFINITION
Q&A
What is Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement?
Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement is the filing the Nevada Secretary of State uses to keep current registration information for charitable organizations operating in Nevada. It exists under Nevada Revised Statutes Chapter 82A and is the principal mechanism the state uses to oversee charitable solicitation.
Q&A
Does Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement replace IRS Form 990?
No. Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement sits on top of federal filings. The IRS Form 990 establishes federal tax-exempt status and reports financial activity. Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement is a Nevada-specific filing and almost always requires the most recent Form 990 as an attachment.
Q&A
Can an out-of-state nonprofit be required to file Charitable Solicitation Registration Statement?
Yes. Nevada law generally extends registration obligations to any organization soliciting contributions from Nevada residents, regardless of where the organization is incorporated. Online giving pages reachable by Nevada residents typically count as solicitation.
Frequently asked