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What Is Grant Reporting? A Plain-Language Guide for Nonprofits

Last updated: March 21, 2026

TLDR

Grant reporting is the process of documenting how a nonprofit used grant funds and what it accomplished during the grant period. Most grants require both financial reports (how the money was spent) and narrative reports (what programs you ran and what changed as a result).

Every grant comes with a reporting obligation. Understanding that obligation before you start spending is the basic requirement of responsible grant management.

Grant reporting is not a bureaucratic afterthought. Funders use reports to verify that their investment produced the intended results and that restricted funds were spent as agreed. Missing a report, filing an incomplete one, or filing one that cannot be reconciled to your financial records creates compliance problems that range from awkward to severe.

The Two Types of Grant Reports

Most grants require two types of reports submitted in parallel:

Financial reports show how grant funds were spent. The standard format is a budget-vs-actual table: approved budget by line item on one side, actual expenditures on the other. Financial reports go to the funder’s financial management contact — often a different person than the program officer.

Narrative reports (also called programmatic or progress reports) describe what the organization did with the money: activities implemented, people served, outcomes achieved, and challenges encountered. These go to the program officer.

Some funders consolidate both into a single submission. Others require them separately, sometimes on different schedules. The grant agreement specifies which format applies.

Interim vs. Final Reports

Most multi-year grants require interim reports during the grant period, followed by a final report at close.

Interim reports are typically due quarterly or semi-annually. They document progress to date: spending pace, outputs produced, any changes to program implementation. Funders use interim reports to flag organizations that are significantly behind on spending or outcomes before the grant period ends.

Final reports close the grant. They document total expenditures, final outcomes against the targets committed to in the application, any unspent funds, and the organization’s assessment of what worked and what did not. Federal grant closeout processes include additional requirements: final financial reports to the Payment Management System, equipment disposition, and record retention notices.

Who Reviews Grant Reports

For federal grants, two different reviewers typically see your reports. A grants management officer or financial analyst reviews financial reports for compliance with federal cost principles. A program officer reviews narrative reports for programmatic performance. They communicate with each other — a program that is on track programmatically but has unexplained financial variances will get questions from both.

For foundation grants, the program officer usually reviews both. Community foundations often have smaller staffs and closer relationships with grantees; reporting is more conversational. National foundations (Annie E. Casey, Ford Foundation, Robert Wood Johnson) have formal reporting processes with specific templates and evaluation criteria.

Building a Reporting Calendar

A reporting calendar is the most useful compliance tool most nonprofits do not maintain. It maps every reporting deadline for every active grant, 12 months out, with the responsible staff member assigned to each.

Building one takes less than an hour. Maintaining it requires updating it when new grants are awarded. What it prevents: deadline misses caused by staff turnover, leave, or competing workload at reporting time.

For each active grant, your calendar should include:

  • The report type (interim/final, financial/narrative)
  • The due date
  • The submission method (portal, email, PDF)
  • The funder contact for each report type
  • Data collection deadlines (2-3 weeks before submission)
  • Internal review deadline (1 week before submission)

Organizations that maintain a reporting calendar rarely miss deadlines. Organizations that track deadlines in individual staff members’ calendars miss them when those staff members are unavailable.

Grant Reporting and Compliance

Grant reporting is not separate from grant compliance — it is the visible evidence of compliance. A report that shows budget-vs-actual in balance, outcomes meeting targets, and restricted funds spent on approved activities is the compliance documentation funders and auditors rely on.

For federal grants, reporting data flows directly into federal audit systems. Inconsistencies between what you report to the program officer and what the financial reports show are audit flags.

The connection is direct: organizations with clean reporting histories pass audits more easily. The audit is largely a verification that your reports were accurate.

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DEFINITION

Grant reporting
The process of submitting required financial and programmatic documentation to a funder demonstrating how grant funds were spent and what program outcomes were achieved during a specified reporting period. Required by virtually all grant agreements as a condition of receiving and retaining grant funding.

DEFINITION

Interim report
A grant report submitted during the grant period, before the grant closes. Interim reports may be quarterly, semi-annual, or at other intervals defined by the funder. They document progress to date and flag any issues with spending pace or program implementation.

DEFINITION

Final report
The last report submitted at the close of a grant period. Final reports document total expenditures, final outcomes against committed targets, and any unspent funds to be returned. Federal grants also require a grant closeout process, including a final financial report to the payment management system.

What is grant reporting?

Grant reporting is the process of documenting to a funder how grant funds were used and what the funded programs accomplished. It includes financial reports (budget vs. actual) and narrative reports (activities, participants, outcomes). Both types are required by most grant agreements on a schedule that varies by funder.

Why is grant reporting important?

Grant reporting is a contractual obligation and a compliance requirement. It also drives funder relationships: organizations with a track record of clear, on-time reporting are more likely to receive renewals and larger awards. Poor reporting creates doubt about organizational capacity regardless of how well the program actually ran.

What happens if a nonprofit misses a grant report deadline?

For federal grants, missing a deadline can pause drawdown of grant payments, trigger a compliance finding, and affect eligibility for future federal awards. For foundation grants, it damages the relationship with the program officer. The standard approach: if you will miss a deadline, contact the program officer in advance, not after.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is grant reporting?
Grant reporting is the process of submitting required documentation to a funder showing how grant funds were used and what program outcomes were achieved. It typically includes a financial component (budget vs. actual expenditures) and a narrative component (program activities, participants served, and outcomes). Reports are submitted on a schedule defined in the grant agreement.
Why is grant reporting important?
Grant reporting is a legal and contractual obligation. By accepting a grant, a nonprofit agrees to use the funds as specified and to document that use. Late or incomplete reporting can result in compliance findings, withheld payments, or loss of future funding. It also builds or damages the relationship with the funder, which affects renewal and future grant prospects.
What happens if a nonprofit misses a grant report deadline?
Consequences vary by funder. For federal grants, missing a reporting deadline can trigger a compliance finding, pause drawdown of future grant payments, and affect eligibility for new federal awards. For foundation grants, it typically damages the relationship with the program officer. At minimum, missing a deadline requires an explanation and an agreed new due date.

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