
Managing a Church’s Liquidity and Financial Position
CPA Mike Batts weighs-in on how to protect and deepen your church’s financial liquidity.
CPA Mike Batts weighs-in on how to protect and deepen your church’s financial liquidity.
Discover effective church budgeting strategies to support your mission, prioritize goals, and maintain financial health.
Last Reviewed: January 27, 2025
The word “budget” can strike fear in the heart of nearly any staff member. The preparation of the budget is often either a long, arduous process or done with little thought and therefore ineffective. Either way, it is a task that leaders should carefully guide for their churches.
No organization has an infinite supply of resources. At home, a budget is necessary to make sure you have money when various expenses come up. If you don’t personally plan for your car repairs or vacation, you may be surprised or disappointed in the future. Budgeting is even more important in a church, because so many people are involved in the process. If everyone spends money without guidelines, it won’t go well!
The following considerations will help you prepare to budget, resulting in a more successful process and an effective budget that supports your church’s goals.
It is vital for your budget to be tied to the mission of your church. What are you trying to accomplish as a church? Make sure you understand this before you start because it should serve as the filter through which all budgeting decisions are made.
Your church may have a broad vision of reaching your community with the gospel. Now it needs goals that will actually help accomplish that.
For example, you may want to have an active youth group with a 30 percent increase in attendance. Your church may also determine it should have a food pantry reaching out to low-income individuals in your area. Supporting missions also may be a critical goal, with the hope of increasing the number of short-term trips the church offers or the percentage of expenses used in support of local or global efforts.
You won’t know whether you’ve met your goals unless you specifically know what they are. In addition, the budget can’t really be a useful tool unless you are specific about how it is created and monitored.
Let’s say your church chooses to serve meals to the elderly, and at the end of the year you are under budget by $2,000. Was the program successful? You might think so, but if you’d spent the full amount budgeted, you could have possibly shared the love of Christ through a meal with 100 more people.
Everyone on staff should have an idea of the church’s goals for the year ahead. This helps everyone understand how to prioritize spending in their respective areas of responsibility. There are a lot of good things we can do but we need to pick the best things. Strong leadership will be required to work through those opportunities and determine which ones to pursue first.
I strongly suggest you create the primary budget and then two contingency budgets. One would be used if contributions are lower than expected, and the other in case of a surplus. This will allow you to use the prioritization of possible ministries to its fullest, and enable you to automatically know which things to cut or add back. It eliminates much of the emotion that can be tied to the discussion of finances.
I often say that people have their hands out when there is more money than expected, but those hands quickly become fists when people think their program might get cut. If everyone is aware upfront of the funding order for your programs and understands that decisions will be made based on fulfilling the mission, then the spirit of cooperation will be more evident.
Decisions that are short-sighted can have a very detrimental effect on the long-term health of the church. Be sure to consider whether the current budget should include items to help facilitate growth or ministry in the future (beyond just the coming year). Also, before you make a significant cut, consider whether it is something that will cost you more in the long run to correct or re-implement.
Once you consider the budget as vital to fulfilling your overall mission, you can begin the process of actually creating the working document. Will you choose a more top-down approach, or bottom-up?
Having your church leadership—either a few key leaders or the finance committee—make the budget decisions simplifies the process significantly. However, there is seldom good buy-in from an approach like this. Staff members involved in the ministry’s day-to-day work have a much better idea of where costs can be cut and where costs are vital.
Should you choose to use a bottom-up approach, though, you will need to make sure there are guidelines in place to keep the process moving along. It’s also important for those involved to understand that not all ideas will be implemented. There are constraints they may be unaware of outside their particular realms.
The budget process is a year-round matter. The first six months of the year should be spent monitoring the budget and the second six months spent planning and approving the new budget. You also should be sure that people are held accountable for the budgets they are responsible for. If there are no consequences, there likely will be no compliance.
A simple approach of “let’s add 5 percent to last year’s line items and approve the budget” is not the most effective budgeting method. Consider what needs to be accomplished and what finances that will take. With careful planning and buy-in from leaders, the budget can be used as a tool, not a weapon, and help accomplish the vision that has been set for your church.
The FLSA provides a straightforward answer.
Q: We have a non-exempt employee who frequently works 50 or more hours per week. She is adamant that she only wants to be paid for 40 hours of work, and is waiving any right to overtime pay. Is this legal?
The overtime requirement may not be waived by agreement between an employer and employee.
An agreement that only 8 hours a day or only 40 hours a week will be counted as working time also fails the test of FLSA compliance.
An announcement by the employer that no overtime work will be permitted, or that overtime work will not be paid for unless authorized in advance, also will not impair the employee’s right to compensation for compensable overtime hours that are worked.
A church employee cannot be both ministerial and nonministerial for tax purposes—here’s how to determine the correct classification.
Last Reviewed: January 30, 2025
Q: Our church is licensing our youth director as a youth pastor, which will change his status to ministerial for self-employment tax purposes. But he also does the mowing for the church, which is a nonministerial position. Do we pay him separately for the two functions, withholding and matching FICA for the mowing but not for the ministerial work?
For tax purposes, an employee can either be a minister or not; an employee cannot be both.
The way to tell if an employee should be classified as a minister for tax purposes is if he or she performs ministerial duties at least 51 percent of the time.
If the majority of his or her duties are ministerial, then you must classify the employee as a minister for tax purposes. If the majority of your youth pastor’s work is indeed ministerial, then the payment for mowing the lawn, for tax purposes, should be regarded the same as payment for his ministerial work.
Reduce the risk of fraud by creating a team that incorporates solid internal control.
Last Reviewed: May 17, 2025
As financial secretary at Corn Mennonite Brethren Church in Corn, Oklahoma, Ginnie Warkentin understands how critical teamwork is in managing church finances.
Her conviction comes from experience—and a cautionary tale.
“I personally know of a church where one person took care of the offerings, wrote and signed the checks, and ended up embezzling a substantial amount of money,” Warkentin said.
“To reduce the chance of wrongdoing on the part of any one person, it’s important for any church to have several people handle the offerings.”
Sadly, her story is not unique. A quick search of “church embezzling” yields nearly 5,000 results. A nationwide survey of churches by Church Law & Tax revealed at least 31 percent experienced fraud of some kind over the courses of their histories.
“And those are only the cases that are leaked or made public by the media,” says CPA Vonna Laue.
Laue, a senior editorial advisor for Church Law & Tax, stresses the risk of consolidating financial duties with one individual.
“When you have so many duties consolidated with one person, there is always the risk of fraud,” she explained.
She cited scripture as a helpful guide:
“In the multitude of counselors there is safety. When you have a team that you can rely on, it takes the responsibility and divides it up to the point that the pressure isn’t all on one person.”
A team-based approach—combined with internal control—promotes better decisions and ensures financial reporting is accurate.
Teamwork alone isn’t enough. Strong internal control systems are essential, says CPA Mike Batts, managing partner at Batts Morrison Wales & Lee and a senior editorial advisor for Church Law & Tax.
Batts outlines three core principles of internal control:
Separate those who handle money from those who manage accounting and reporting.
“Handling money includes processing live incoming currency and checks and having signatory authority over bank and investment accounts,” Batts said.
Never allow one person to handle funds alone.
“Live funds must be processed by at least two unrelated people working together,” Batts said.
“If funds are stored in a safe or vault, it must be done in a way that doesn’t permit one person solo access.”
A group separate from the accounting team should regularly review financial reports and flag anything unusual.
“They should compare balances in financial reports with independent documentation—like bank and investment statements,” Batts explained.
For further details, Batts explores these concepts in his book, Church Finance, Second Edition.
Churches vary in structure, but generally:
The number of people needed depends on the size of the church and how duties are split.
Finding trustworthy volunteers is essential. Look for individuals with:
“First and foremost, they should fully support and endorse the vision of the church,” Batts said.
“You are entrusted with the finances of God’s ministry,” Laue said.
“You need to take that seriously. People are getting tax deductions, so donations must be handled properly.”
“Confidentiality is so important,” said Dan Busby, former president and chief executive officer of the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability. “If people show evidence of wanting to tell everybody everything they see, they’re not the kind of people you want handling financial information.”
“Someone facing bankruptcy is not a good person to have handling the offering,” Busby said.
He recommends background checks—just as churches screen childcare workers. These checks can uncover financial red flags. If your church performs financial background checks, especially for paid employees, make certain it complies with the Federal Credit Reporting Act (FCRA)—learn more about the act in this article about employee handbooks by attorney and CPA Frank Sommerville.
People don’t need to be CPAs, but they should be comfortable with the responsibilities.
“They need to be gifted in the faithful administration of God’s resources,” Busby said.
That sentiment resonated with Warkentin from Corn Mennonite Brethren Church.
“I really love bookkeeping, so I found my niche here,” she added.
Laue shared a scenario many treasurers face:
“Someone’s donation check bounces—it’s awkward. You need people who can handle that with grace.”
Punctuality is a must.
“It isn’t unusual to see churches behind in reconciling accounts,” Busby noted. “That’s an open door for fraud.”
A well-functioning financial team does more than protect funds—it protects your church’s reputation.
“This is important work,” Busby said. “This work is for people who are passionate about protecting the reputation of Jesus Christ.”
We’ve used a combination of AI and human review to make this content easier to read and understand.
From anti-scald devices and changing tables to overall cleanliness, this list of helpful hints will keep your baby’s safe and happy.
Last Reviewed: February 14, 2025
Keep your nursery safe for children by following these suggestions:
Discover how lapsed credentials impact a clergy housing allowance and steps to navigate eligibility.
Last Reviewed: January 18, 2025
Q: Our minister’s ordained status lapsed for a few months this year due to his failure to timely renew his credentials with our denomination. How does this affect his housing allowance for the year?
Technically, a housing allowance is only available to an “ordained, commissioned, or licensed minister.” Therefore, a housing allowance is not available while a minister’s credentials are lapsed.
If and when the minister’s credentials are reinstated, the reinstatement might “relate back” to the beginning of the year. While this is a plausible argument, it has not been definitively addressed by any court.
Even during a lapse, it could be argued that the minister retains the ability to:
However, the validity of this position is subject to interpretation. It should therefore be discussed with a qualified tax professional or legal advisor.
Because no court has directly ruled on this issue, no definitive answer is possible. Ministers and church leaders should consult with a qualified tax professional to navigate this complex situation and ensure compliance with IRS guidelines.
A clergy housing allowance is a portion of a minister’s compensation designated for housing expenses, which can be excluded from taxable income.
No, during the period when a minister’s credentials have lapsed, they technically do not qualify for a housing allowance.
It could be argued that reinstating credentials corrects the lapse retroactively, but no definitive court ruling exists on this matter.
Churches should work with a tax professional to evaluate the situation and ensure compliance with applicable tax laws and IRS regulations.
Lapsed credentials can impact a minister’s housing allowance eligibility, though reinstatement might provide an argument for retroactive correction. Because this issue has not been addressed by courts, seeking guidance from a tax professional or legal advisor is highly recommended. For more information, consult resources like the Church & Clergy Tax Guide.
Learn the legal risks for churches that divert donor-designated funds and how to handle these situations responsibly.
Last Reviewed: January 24, 2025
It is common for church members to make “designated” or restricted charitable contributions to their church, specifying that their contributions be used for a particular purpose. But what happens if a church board applies such contributions to another purpose? Are there legal consequences for the church or its leadership?
A recent decision by the Mississippi Supreme Court offers critical insights into this issue. The ruling not only discusses the consequences of using donor-restricted funds for other purposes but also highlights the potential for donors to reclaim their contributions under certain conditions.
In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, St. Paul Catholic Church raised funds specifically for rebuilding its church. However, the funds were later diverted when the church decided to merge with another parish and abandon rebuilding plans.
Donors filed lawsuits alleging misrepresentation and improper fund use. The Mississippi Supreme Court ruled:
Over the past 150 years, several court cases have addressed the misuse of donor-designated funds:
Churches face serious risks if they fail to honor donor restrictions:
To avoid potential issues, churches should:
Using donor-restricted funds for purposes other than the donor’s specified intention without their consent.
In most cases, no. Churches must use these funds as specified or seek donor consent for redirection.
If a donor cannot be identified, the church may need to seek court approval to redirect the funds under specific guidelines like the Uniform Prudent Management of Institutional Funds Act (UPMIFA).
Yes, donors may reclaim their contributions if the church fails to use the funds for the designated purpose or abandons the project entirely.
Churches have a legal and ethical responsibility to honor donor-designated funds. Mismanagement can lead to legal disputes, loss of trust, and financial challenges. By following best practices and consulting with legal experts, churches can ensure compliance and maintain donor confidence.
Learn effective church missions fundraising strategies to inspire generosity and connect your congregation with impactful global projects.
Last Reviewed: January 25, 2025
1. Let your congregation see where their money is going. “People love to give to something they can see,” says Dan Crane, missions pastor at First Evangelical Free Church in Fullerton, California. Crane finds that supporting projects like wells, orphanages, and other tangible programs, and telling donors exactly which projects are supported, encourages continued giving.
2. Tailor missions investment to projects your community is passionate about. If no one in your church is interested in supporting a missions organization, consider something more development- and humanitarian-focused. “I try to find out what God wants our church to do, because there are so many needs,” said Crane. “I spend a lot of time in prayer, thinking and talking and pondering.”
3. Invest in relationships. “Key factors in giving are the role model of the senior pastor and a church’s relational connection with teams around the world,” says Tim Crouch, vice president of international ministries for the Christian & Missionary Alliance. Congregations who know the people their money supports, either from vision trips or visits from missionaries, are more likely to keep giving.
4. Diversify your investment. Some people might want to buy goats for a community in Rwanda; others might want to run to raise money for water. “We try to support a wide swath and a lot of different places,” says Mark Wilson, senior pastor of Hayward Wesleyan Church in Hayward, Wisconsin. “We’re hoping there will be something to connect with everybody in our faith promises.”
For further insights into funding and administering your church’s missions budget, see these articles:
Protect your church’s financial integrity with practical strategies for governance, financial controls, risk management, and transparent decision-making.
Last Reviewed: January 25, 2025
Amidst the daily duties and demands church leaders encounter, it is not easy to maintain perspective on factors that can protect or diminish integrity. But consider the immeasurable benefit of maintaining integrity—and the cost of compromising it.
To help protect and maintain the financial integrity of your church and leadership, this checklist contains five key areas of considerations built on a framework of:
The following checklist does not cover all areas but is meant to help focus your thinking about financial integrity. Keep in mind that accountability is paramount at all levels, and even one oversight can result in a significant failure.
___ Have a high regard for legal parameters, tax forms, and status (charter, corporation, registrations, etc.) in order to support the church’s operations and vision through appropriate structure, legal position, and tax compliance.
___ Understand fiduciary responsibilities (duties of loyalty, care, and obedience).
___ Define the roles and responsibilities of the board and its members. This starts with a governance framework that is defined and set forth in board policies. The most effective boards know their role and execute their position.
___ Know exempt organization responsibilities so you can identify potentially problematic areas that can negatively reflect on character and competence.
___ Maintain active board oversight and monitoring of financial policies, operations, and controls, including ongoing risk assessments.
It is often said that tone at the top is everything and permeates an organization. There is ample evidence that this is true, and responsibility starts with leaders, especially those on an organization’s board.
As with our Christian witness, actions speak louder than words. A governing board leaves the door open to failure when it does not empower accountability by rigorously fulfilling its fiduciary duties and exercising effective oversight and monitoring. It’s also imperative for boards to define appropriate conduct and misconduct.
To be effective, boards must ensure accountability by understanding the cost/benefit of controls and what can go wrong without them.
___ Establish written policies and procedures that include a clear delineation of the roles, functions, and duties of all people, positions, and groups, and then monitor those to ensure they are working.
___ Maintain segregation of duties, with multiple people involved to prevent and detect problems and monitor the effects of change on people, processes, and systems. These basic controls (checks and balances) should be an ongoing priority.
___ Monitor internal and external fraud risk and know how to respond to suspected fraud.
___ Consider internal audit procedures, which can be performed in any size church, as well as independent financial audits and legal evaluations, which can be right-sized for your church.
Financial integrity is dependent on financial control that prevents and detects problems. Control goes beyond exercising care with financial assets to stewarding and protecting people as well.
___ Ensure that you receive timely, accurate, and reliable financial reporting, including key financial indicators, trends, and ratios. Your board and management need this information to make effective decisions and to anticipate and avoid problems.
___ Monitor church-specific, local, regional, and national giving trends, such as annual giving and budget survey findings. Understand the factors behind these trends.
___ Establish and maintain dynamic budgetary controls that are responsive to changing circumstances.
___ Maintain adequate financial reserves to weather unforeseen circumstances.
___ Adhere to strict guidelines for the acceptance and appropriate use of offerings and restricted contributions that avoid conduit of funds (funds that are received but then passed on to other individuals or organizations) and other concerns (including tax areas such as benevolence and scholarships).
The decisions your church makes and the way it conducts operations merit careful consideration. This requires good organization, clear core values, having the right people in the right positions, effective systems and processes, strong controls, and an uncompromising commitment to accountability.
___ Increase human resource awareness and skills of all staff by providing guidelines and training in areas such as hiring, supervision, and compensation and benefits. Maintain personnel files with required tax and legal information, including periodic evaluations. This is an area of significant risk for churches, and mistakes can lead to litigation and can affect a church’s reputation.
___ Manage intellectual property ownership through clear guidelines and consistent practices, including a general church policy of ownership absent specific identification and agreement. This should provide a clear understanding for all individuals, whether personnel, leaders, or board members.
___ Perform careful retirement planning. Options and resources are limited, so time is critical. This is particularly an area of concern for start-up and nondenominational churches.
___ Document the reasonableness of compensation and the ministry’s compliance with excess benefit rules.
This is an area that can stretch the bounds of trust and transparency. There is an inherent conflict of interest that cuts to the core of integrity and values. What constitutes appropriate compensation and benefits to one person can be different in the eyes of another. The key is to understand the perspective of stakeholders and to base decisions on compensation studies that identify comparability with other churches.
___ Maintain an intentional and formal risk assessment process that is monitored by the board.
___ Monitor legal and regulatory developments, such as in religious hiring, ministerial status, and tax law.
___ Watch the horizon to be aware of developments that can affect your church. This includes fraud and financial failures, economic changes, giving trends, technology security, and many more.
Beyond reliance on God and a commitment to core values, avoiding problems is difficult without continually identifying risks and evaluating the potential effects of taking appropriate action.
Although there is a lot to monitor, it’s vital to be aware of, and respond to, these crucial areas in order to maintain financial integrity and protect the reputation and standing of your church leadership.
Gregg Capin is a partner at CapinCrouse and has over 30 years of experience managing audit and advisory services for a wide range of not-for-profit organizations both nationally and internationally. He has participated in national organizations involved in not-for-profit initiatives such as AICPA, ECFA, FASB and others. CapinCrouse offers a tool, The Church Financial Health Index™, to help with not-for-profit financial management and is available at CapinCrouse.com .
Learn 7 critical guidelines to ensure compliant and effective church missions funding, from tax rules to donor contributions.
Last Reviewed: January 27, 2025
Missions is an essential component of any church budget. But the ins-and-outs of supporting missions and missionaries are fraught with potential tax and legal issues. By following these seven guidelines, you can avoid many financial headaches and more easily navigate the often tricky area of missions funding.
Zach wants to give to his niece’s summer missions trip, so he writes a check in her name and drops it in the offering plate. But Zach might be jeopardizing his chances of receiving a deduction.
Why? Donations must be given to a specified fund and not to an individual.
CPA Elaine Sommerville explains: “The church can allow the donors to indicate the particular participant they wish to support. However, a church must convey to the donor that it may use the donation for other participants, other missions trip expenses, or even future missions trips in the event the selected participant receives excess designated funds or the indicated participant does not go on the trip. This message should be contained in any fundraising material.”
See “Designated Contributions” in Church Finance (pages 72-76). For specific insights on fundraising, see “Rule 3—individual quid pro quo cash contributions of $75 or less” and “Rule 4—individual quid pro quo contributions of more than $75” (pages 81-83).
While on a business trip, Lindsey, one of your elders, visits a small, struggling church in a developing country. She is impressed by the pastor’s efforts to reach out to his impoverished community. When she returns home, Lindsey talks to her pastor and fellow elders about providing funds to help this pastor and his church.
While Lindsey’s heart is in the right place, Frank Sommerville, an attorney and CPA, says such funding ventures are extremely risky.
“The IRS rules require that you maintain something called ‘expenditure responsibility’ over the funds that you send outside of the United States,” says Sommerville. “What that means is your church is responsible for how those funds are spent. So when you’re sending funds overseas you need to make sure the lumber that you paid for actually goes into building the church and not building the house for someone who’s over there.”
Then there’s the problem of funds inadvertently falling into the wrong hands.
“If any of those funds end up in a terrorist state, or in a terrorist organization, or supporting a terrorist or even a suspected terrorist,” says Sommerville, “that’s a criminal offense and the church treasurer and the missions committee that approved the transfer [of funds] could be looking at prison time.”
Sommerville strongly advises churches to work through their denominational missions agency or a well-established nondenominational missions organization.
See “Contributions made to or for the use of a qualified organization” in Church Finance (pages 70-71).
Tyler has attended your church from infancy and is now graduating from college with a degree in missions studies. Within the next 18 months, he hopes to head out to a foreign missions field. Your church is excited to support him and makes plans to do so. But how much support should he receive?
Frank Sommerville says that funds given must further the “exempt purpose” of your missionary endeavors and they must also add up to a “reasonable amount” of compensation.
“The church has a responsibility for determining what a reasonable amount of compensation would be,” says Sommerville. “The church also needs to determine whether or not other churches are involved in supporting this missionary. If you had 20 churches sending $1,000 a month, that’s $20,000 in income. In most places in the world, taking even $10,000 a month is going to be considered excessive. So you have to be aware of all of the funds coming from U.S. churches and how those funds are spent.”
Sommerville says that careful records must be kept of all expenditures, and he suggests that the missionary keep a daily activity log to help justify his or her compensation.
See “Missionaries” in the annual Church & Clergy Tax Guide (Chapter 8).
A group of adults from your church is heading off to Ecuador for a three-week missions trip this summer. At the end of the volunteer ministry work, the group plans to spend a couple of days seeing the local sites. Before the group leaves, this question comes up: “Will all our travel expenses be deductible?”
The answer: Only those days spent in actual ministry are deductible.
“A ministry day is where you are ministering for the benefit of others,” says Frank Sommerville. “A personal day is a vacation day. And the expenses related to a personal day are not tax-deductible.”
To validate actual ministry days, Sommerville encourages the missions team to keep a daily log of missions-related activities.
See “Principle 3: no significant element of personal pleasure” in the Church & Clergy Tax Guide (Chapter 8).
Tim, your church’s youth pastor, wants to take his wife and young children on a summer missions trip. Although he’s pretty sure funds raised for his family’s travel are tax-deductible, he admits that his wife will be busy taking care of the kids and that she’ll have little involvement with “doing ministry.” Is Tim’s assumption correct?
“No,” says Richard Hammar. “Contributions given toward the travel expenses of the youth pastor’s wife and children would not be tax-deductible, because their travel is not primarily for ministry purposes.”
See “Principle 3: no significant element of personal pleasure” in the Church & Clergy Tax Guide (Chapter 8).
Your missions team has enlisted three carpenters for a summer trip to India. During early planning meetings, one of the carpenters asks: “Will we be able to deduct the time we spend using our skills?”
Church Finance says, “No deduction is allowed for contribution of services. Church members who donate labor to their church may not deduct the value of their labor.”
See “Donated services” in Church Finance (page 66).
During prep meetings for an upcoming missions trip, the missions pastor assures participants that all “reasonable travel expenses” will be deductible.
The missions pastor is most likely correct. The Church & Clergy Tax Guide says, “Travel expenses incurred during a short-term missions trip which may qualify as a charitable contribution include air, rail, and bus transportation; out-of-pocket car expenses; taxi fares or other costs of transportation between the airport or station and your hotel; lodging costs; and the cost of meals.”
But remember: The travel must be for ministry and not for fun. And for expenses exceeding $250, the participant must keep a record of travel expenses, such as a copy of the plane ticket, and have written documentation from the church. This documentation should detail the services provided by the participant and should state that the participant received no goods or services in return for his or her volunteer work.
For a list of four specifics that should be in the church’s document, see “Unreimbursed expenses” in the Church & Clergy Tax Guide.
Simplify church financial reporting with an effective dashboard. Use visuals and key metrics to guide better discussions and decisions
Last Reviewed: January 25, 2025
Have you ever been driving and run out of gas? If so, it’s unlikely that you have done it more than a few times. It usually only takes one or two instances of the inconvenience, concern, and sometimes even embarrassment to help people remember to keep a closer eye on the fuel gauge.
The dashboard of your vehicle provides vital information. In addition to monitoring how much gas you have, the dashboard helps you ensure that you’re not speeding and that all of your car’s major systems are working properly.
A dashboard report serves the same purpose for a church. It takes pages of reports and summarizes the key data into one page of information, mostly in the form of graphs and charts. This report helps you keep an eye on essential information and alerts you when things begin to deviate from the norm. When prepared properly, it can also engage board members who may have been disinterested in operational or “business” matters.
While there are software programs available to facilitate the creation of dashboard reports, Excel is all you need to get started. The simple graphing feature in Excel will allow you to create graphs or charts of various data and select the size and location you desire on a page.
Start by identifying the information you want to include. Keep in mind that this will change over time, so it doesn’t need to be perfect at the beginning. Consider the types of key financial and nonfinancial data your board and leadership ask for or monitor, as well as the information you believe they should focus on.
Here are some pieces of financial and nonfinancial information you may choose to include:
Here are a few key points to remember in implementing or maintaining a dashboard report:
I encourage you to give this reporting method a try. As with anything new, it will take time to get the report exactly the way you want it and to train the readers. The end result, however, is likely to be better discussion, with more focus on the key areas of church management and less on inconsequential items. You’ll also save a lot of time and effort previously spent on printing and preparing lengthy board packets!
Guidelines for when safety and prudence trump the church’s schedule.
Last Reviewed: February 10, 2025
I live one hour north of New York City, an area where our church and the local population endure hurricanes, blizzards, ice storms, and a wide variety of other dangerous weather conditions. Our area is also affected by power outages that can go on for days, sometimes more than a week. Sometimes we cancel gatherings and sometimes we just press on. But how do you know which to do?
Do you cancel that board meeting? The Sunday service? That special program you’ve been planning for months?
I have a few rules that I have developed over the years which have thus far served me well as a rubric for cancelling or postponing church events.
There are obviously exceptions—Hurricane Irene hit us on Sunday morning and we cancelled Sunday services that day—but there are many times when a predicted blizzard never materializes or it arrives with a whimper. Don’t cancel or postpone an event if your only worry is the chance of bad weather.
If the local officials have declared a state of emergency and told people to stay home, then you should cancel, too.
As I noted above, we have frequent power outages in the Northeast. At our Christmas Pageant this year, the power went out. For us, that meant no lighting, no heating, and no running water (we have a well). We were about to sit down to a post-pageant potluck, when suddenly the lights went out. Within two minutes of the power going out, several children were crying and the older kids were running around like it was Halloween.
After checking with the power company and being informed it would take hours to restore power, I sent everyone home. I know some people weren’t happy, but if you keep the event going and someone gets hurt, you risk serious liability. Even though in this case, the power came back on 30 minutes later, it was still the right thing to do given our inability to predict when it might be safe again.
My church can temporarily supply running water to the church via a backup generator at the rectory. That allows us to finish a daytime, warm weather event that is still in progress because we can just go outside or see by the daylight and we can still use the bathrooms with the running generator. That said, if it is dark and cold, we shut down immediately.
Each time we have an extended power outage, a committee leader or the head of the boy scouts or the AA liaison insists that “we can bring in candles and lanterns.” But that is asking for a fire hazard and even liability. No dice—safety first!
Some events can theoretically be postponed, like a Christmas pageant or a bake sale. Admittedly, we don’t do it enough, but I think a prudent way of scheduling any event includes having a predetermined rain or snow date. You can avoid a lot of handwringing if you have a rain or snow date.
Other events cannot be postponed – like a Christmas Eve midnight service. Thankfully, the church has seasons, so if Christmas Eve service is wiped out due to a snow storm, then the odds are good that the Sunday after Christmas will be packed.
If you are affected by weather related postponements and cancellations, then it is important to have updated and accessible communication methods. We use a user opt-in/opt-out email list. Essentially, it is a blog and anyone can sign up for it. Once you are signed up, you receive every post. I can send out a newsfeed blast to everyone from my office computer, my home computer, my smartphone, tablet, or any device that is connected to the Internet. Because it is a blog format, the posts are public, and that means you need to refrain from sending out personal information to everyone (you shouldn’t do that anyway!).
If you have good communication with the congregation, you can cancel one service and add an alternate one. When Hurricane Irene hit, we offered a Saturday afternoon Eucharist and cancelled our Sunday services. I sent out an email to the congregation on Saturday morning noting what we were doing. We had a 17-minute service including the Eucharist, singing three a capella hymns, and a homily. We had more than 50 people present and they all appreciated the fact that they were able to come together for prayer and worship despite the irregular circumstances.
Matthew Hoxsie Mead is an Episcopal priest and Rector of the Church of the Good Shepherd in the Episcopal Diocese of New York. This post first appeared on FatherMatt.com and is adapted with permission.
Tips for effectively communicating financial information to church leaders and boards.
Last Reviewed: January 26, 2025
Communicating financial information to governing boards and finance or audit committees is an important task for management—but it’s also not an easy one. There are several factors that can complicate the process, and those factors lie both with those who receive the information and those who provide it.
It’s important to remember that the responsibilities and expectations for church boards are greater now than ever. Staff must provide accurate and timely information to help boards make informed decisions.
Many board members are willing but untrained. Consider implementing a robust orientation process to help new members understand:
Additionally, financial leaders should review financial statements with new members and conduct annual retreats or evaluations to identify training opportunities.
When communicating financial information, ensure the focus remains on key data. Consider these three principles:
Your credibility is crucial. Repeated errors can erode trust. Make accuracy a priority as the information will guide strategic decisions.
Delays in providing information can be as harmful as inaccuracies. Aim to close financial statements within two weeks of month-end and address delays promptly.
Understand what your audience values most and tailor reports to their needs. Avoid overwhelming them with unnecessary details.
Dashboard reports are effective tools for summarizing key data. These one-page reports often include:
Dashboards engage all board members, even those without financial expertise, and help focus discussions on strategic issues.
Providing accurate, timely, and relevant information ensures sound financial decisions. Regularly refine your process by:
Start with key metrics, adjust over time, and remember that less is often more when it comes to understanding and relevance.
Take this key step before publicly sharing the needs of your congregation.
Q: Some churches post “prayer lists” on their website that describe the prayer needs of identified members. These needs may include medical diagnoses, relational problems, or financial needs. Does the posting of this information on a church website constitute an invasion of privacy?
Possibly. A church can reduce if not eliminate this risk by obtaining consent from people before putting their names on the list. This can be done either by contacting persons directly and obtaining their written consent to having their name (and need) posted on the website prayer list or by instructing members to include this written consent at the time of prayer request submission if they desire for it to be shared publically online.
Some churches seek to avoid the inconvenience of obtaining the consent of every person on a prayer list by creating a “no prayer list” and notifying the congregation periodically (i.e., in church bulletins or newsletters) that persons who do not want the congregation to pray for them should contact the church office and have their names placed on the “no prayer list.” This “implied” consent is not as effective as the express consent obtained by contacting each person directly, and it is far from clear whether it would be deemed effective by a court.
It’s possible that many have a similar question about emailing prayer lists. While that might not be as problematic as posting prayers online, I still think it would be wise to obtain consent before including someone on such a list.
Explore whether clergy can reverse their Social Security opt-out decision and the rules that govern this process.
Last Reviewed: January 2, 2025
When I was hired as a new pastor last year, I decided to opt out of Social Security. Now that I’ve learned more about the pros and cons of my decision, can I change it?
A minister’s earnings from performing ministerial duties are considered “net earnings from self-employment” under IRC Section 1402(a)(8). Due to this legal definition, ministers are treated as self-employed for Social Security and Medicare purposes—even if they are classified as common law employees for other employment tax purposes.
While a minister’s earnings are defined as self-employment income, ministers have the option to opt out of the system by filing Form 4361.
Once Form 4361 is approved, the decision to opt out of Social Security is irrevocable under current laws. A minister cannot change their mind unless Congress passes legislation allowing it.
It’s important to note that any Social Security contributions from non-ministerial employment can still qualify for future benefits, provided the minister meets the eligibility requirements for being fully insured.
What is the deadline for filing Form 4361? The form must be filed by the tax return due date (including extensions) for the second year in which a minister earns $400 or more from ministerial services. Can a minister opt back into Social Security? No, unless Congress provides an opportunity to do so. Such opportunities are rare. What happens to Social Security contributions from non-ministerial work? Earnings from other employment can be used to qualify for Social Security benefits if the minister is fully insured. Why is Form 4361 approval permanent? The approval signifies a minister’s religious or conscientious objection to public insurance, making it a lifelong decision unless the form was incorrectly filed or Congress intervenes.
Opting out of Social Security is a significant decision for clergy, one that cannot be reversed under current regulations. Ministers considering this option should weigh the long-term implications carefully and consult a tax professional or legal advisor for guidance. If you’re unsure about your eligibility or the consequences of opting out, seek expert advice to make an informed decision.
Discover tips for church contingency budgeting, from addressing giving shortfalls to reducing expenses and planning for unexpected financial challenges.
Last Reviewed: January 27, 2025
Have you ever created a budget that was perfectly on target? Did you end a year and realize revenues and expenses were exactly what you expected?
That means it is smart to create contingency budgets that define what will happen if various changes in funding occur during the year at your church. From a primary budget, build one that is a certain percentage lower and build another that is a certain percentage higher. Doing this can minimize controversy later. If you find yourself above or below budget, you’re already ready to act with cuts or additions based on the overall vision of the church—not on the basis of who asks or complains the loudest.
A budget is a tool but it doesn’t guarantee results. The following four scenarios are the most common for churches to face during the course of a year:
Giving below budget, spending above budget. This is obviously the most difficult scenario. Hopefully, your church built up necessary reserves to carry it through times such as this. Every decision must be weighed carefully. Use caution to avoid short-sighted decisions. Instead, consider the unintended consequences of each cost-saving decision you make.
Giving at budget, spending above budget. Donations are in line with projections. That’s encouraging. But spending is more than budgeted. That’s tough from a cash-flow standpoint. This situation can easily arise when there is growth in attendance. It often takes newcomers about 18 months to begin financially supporting a ministry, but expenses related to serving them are immediate.
Giving below budget, spending below budget. This scenario may not be ideal, but it isn’t threatening to a church. If both giving and spending are below plan, it is typically because intentional cutbacks have been made to align spending with giving. That is prudent. But exercise caution with the cutbacks as well as any unintended consequences from those cutbacks.
Giving above budget, spending below budget. What an envious scenario, right? But it can present its own challenges. What do you do with the excess? Will donors see it as a positive reflection of financial management? Or will they think their money isn’t needed? Make sure you know what you will do with extra revenue; perhaps it’s the establishment of needed reserve funds or the replacement of outdated equipment. Whatever the plan, make sure you communicate what your church plans to do and why continued faithful giving is so important.
There is no magic budget tip, and you’ve probably considered and implemented many options. Let the following tips offer you and your leadership team helpful reminders or newfound inspiration as you consider how to build contingency budgets or respond when an unexpected situation arises.
Offer more giving options. Encourage other forms of giving. One is gifts of appreciated securities or property, which are attractive to donors now while the market is strong and they can minimize capital gains taxes. What about online or automated clearing house (ACH) giving? Many churches continue to see significant increases with digital giving and it may be time to promote (or explore, depending on your situation) such options again. For instance, my daughters’ school recently changed to an online payment format, which has shortened the cash collection time from 10 days to 5 minutes. Also, don’t forget to investigate a mobile app. It may appeal to certain givers and make it faster and easier for people to give.
Make donors aware. Do the congregation and other supporters know that giving is down? They may increase their involvement if they are made aware through a thoughtful approach.
Consider restricted giving. Many donors, especially young people, will support a specific cause or project faster than they will support the general operations of the church. Explain the cause and the need, then celebrate when it is accomplished. One church I know published photos of parking lot potholes in the bulletin along with information about a campaign, then celebrated with photos of the completed project made possible by funds raised beyond the general budget.
Create a stewardship series. When did your pastor last preach a stewardship series? Take a holistic approach beyond money, too, by including stewardship of time and talents. Churches often avoid certain “uncomfortable” topics, but these are no less true or needed. Some churches trace a direct correlation between teaching on stewardship and increases in giving.
Understand your demographics. Do you have a young, growing demographic, or is the average donor 60 or older? Monitoring these trends helps predict where the church is headed and gives you more options and more time to implement change.
Conduct an expense reduction review. Has an outsider looked at your expenses? Sometimes an objective set of eyes can identify cuts. Possible areas of savings someone else might uncover include an energy audit, research into technology and communications expenses (and lower-cost alternatives and plans), and a review of benefit plan costs.
Ask the staff. Church staff, especially frontline employees, often know where to save money in the ministry.
Compare your ministry to others. Comparing budgets and other financial arrangements with other churches may identify areas where you are spending too much. Personnel costs and loan interest rates are two areas churches often find run higher than their peers.
Find synergy among departments. Is there ministry overlap? Places where one program can meet the needs or goals of multiple departments? One example: Pair the missions director and youth pastor to plan a short-term missions trip that meets the goals of both ministries.
Consider activities and their results, not just costs. Focusing on costs tends to perpetuate spending that has occurred in the past. Instead, evaluate various types of activities and their results. That helps prioritize what is spent compared to the results—and overall value—the activity brings. It also may reveal excessive costs that may be addressed through alternatives, whether it’s outsourcing a particular function or partnering with another group or church.
Change is difficult, and so it’s vitally important for your church to communicate any contingency plans ahead of time.
A strong understanding of the financial strength or weakness of your church is valuable before you conduct a budgeting process. Consider financial indicators, such as previous financial performance, the amount of cash reserves, liquidity ratios, and not only how much cash the ministry has but how much cash should be set aside for restricted purposes. Being aware of these measures, as well as how they have changed over the past few years, will better prepare you to plan for the future and minimize the size of any later contingency plan you have to implement.
Hard work at the beginning can make the budget process work more smoothly through its adoption—especially if an unforeseen scenario with giving or expenses unfolds. Remember the words of Jesus in Luke 14 when he emphasizes the value of sitting down first and computing the cost before building a tower. The right planning creates the right foundation, and it helps make certain nothing crumbles when surprises arise.
These calculations offer key clues about the health of the church’s finances.
Why is it important for churches to monitor debt ratios and measurements?
First of all, your lender will monitor them even if you aren’t. Keep in mind that many loan covenants are based on the results of key debt ratios. If you violate one, there may be penalties and, in extreme circumstances, the lender may even call your loan—requiring you to refinance or pay off the remaining balance. Most importantly, you will strain the relationship with your lender.
There are six debt ratios and measurements you can use to monitor your church’s dependence on debt levels and identify any needed adjustments. These represent important indicators every church should understand and monitor.
total debt
____________________________
unrestricted contributions
This ratio measures how many times your debt is greater than annual unrestricted gifts. Lenders expect debt to be funded through unrestricted contributions. They determine what debt load a church will be able to handle on top of other required expenditures (salaries, benefits, facility expenses, mission expenses, and so on).
The lower the ratio, the less the debt will strain the church’s budget. A ratio that is too high indicates your church’s debt levels are placing an excessive burden on the budget. It also indicates your debt may be at a level that lenders consider too great for your church to support.
current assets
____________________________
current liabilities
This ratio helps determine how easily the church can meet its current obligations through current assets or resources. A low ratio (less than 1.0) indicates the church does not have enough in current resources to meet its upcoming short-term obligations. Shortfalls in current assets might force the church to borrow from restricted funds or obtain a temporary line of credit to cover short-term obligations. A ratio this low also warrants a careful review of cash flow and reserve levels.
total liabilities
____________________________
unrestricted net assets
This ratio measures the church’s ability to handle further debt (also known as its debt capacity). A low result suggests the church has capacity to take on additional debt. A higher result may indicate the church is stressed or unable to take on any further debt.
required annual principal and interest
(including capitalized interest)
____________________________
unrestricted contributions
This ratio is more commonly known as your church’s debt payment requirements. It looks at the percentage of unrestricted contributions that will be used to make these annual required debt payments.
Although your church may have many revenue sources, lenders typically only consider unrestricted contributions when determining how much debt a church can manage. Lenders also take into consideration other required expenditures your church has (salaries, benefits, facility expenses, mission expenses, and so on) before setting this level.
With the low variable interest rates presently available, a ratio kept below the covenant level allows for room in the budget in case the church’s interest rate increases.
total debt
____________________________
average adult attendees and giving units
This measure introduces the concept of a giving unit. This is a group of family members who contribute jointly to the church. A giving unit is also defined as any recurring supporter of the ministry. This excludes an individual that may make a smaller one-time gift supporting a specific event, such as a short-term mission trip. To identify only the regular recurring giving units, you must set a minimum dollar threshold; for instance a giving unit might be one that contributes more than $250 annually to the church.
This measure shows how much of the church’s debt each attendee or giving unit is carrying. We know the church’s debt is not a specific obligation to the attendees or giving units of that church, however it’s helpful to see these levels and whether they place an excessive burden on your congregation.
This measure will vary significantly based on the philosophy, denomination, location, age, size, and demographics of your church. Ultimately, your church must choose the level of debt it is comfortable servicing. When this level is compared to similar congregations, it can help you determine if your debt is too high or at an acceptable level. Trend comparisons over several years within your own church can also help.
change in unrestricted net assets – interest
expense and depreciation expense
____________________________
mandatory debt service payments (principal + interest)
This ratio is used to determine how many times a church would be able to cover its current annual debt obligations from current operations. This may factor into the amount of reserves the church leadership deems necessary.
This ratio can fluctuate significantly between years since it includes the fiscal year’s change in unrestricted net assets. Debt covenants typically have a required score of 1.1–1.2. Ministry choices may drive the decision to spend unrestricted net assets and result in lower positive or negative change in unrestricted net assets. It is important to keep your lender informed of these decisions before negatively affecting this ratio.
Measuring and monitoring debt and other key financial data will help your leadership team assess your church’s financial health, identify areas for improvement, and be good stewards of your resources.
Understand the risks of early Social Security benefits and explore your options for withdrawal or suspension.
Last Reviewed: January 17, 2025
Q: I started receiving Social Security retirement benefits at age 62, even though I had not retired. As a result, my benefits have been significantly reduced. Is there any way to change my mind and stop receiving benefits?
Taking Social Security retirement benefits before reaching full retirement age can result in a significant reduction in benefits. For individuals who begin receiving benefits before their full retirement age, Social Security reduces benefits by $1 for every $2 of earned income exceeding a set threshold. For example, in 2023, this annual earnings limit is $21,240.
Full retirement age varies depending on your birth year. For those born between 1943 and 1954, it is 66 years. Choosing to receive benefits at age 62 often leads to regret due to the financial impact. Fortunately, there are options for individuals who want to adjust their decision.
If you change your mind within 12 months of starting Social Security retirement benefits, you may withdraw your application and reapply later. However, you can only withdraw your application once in your lifetime.
The Social Security Administration will calculate the total repayment amount and notify you. You have 60 days to cancel an approved withdrawal request, after which your decision becomes final.
If you cannot withdraw your application and you have reached full retirement age (but are not yet 70), you can request to suspend your Social Security benefits. This suspension allows your benefits to grow until you restart them, potentially providing a larger monthly payment in the future.
If you are not yet enrolled in Medicare, be sure to apply three months before turning 65 to avoid penalties. If you withdraw Social Security benefits, Medicare enrollment is not automatic and must be addressed separately.
If you receive veterans’ benefits, consult the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) to understand how withdrawing Social Security benefits may affect those benefits.
What happens if I exceed the annual earnings limit while receiving benefits early? Your Social Security benefits will be reduced by $1 for every $2 of earnings above the annual limit. Can I reapply for Social Security benefits after withdrawing? Yes, but you must repay all benefits received and can only withdraw your application once in your lifetime. What is the benefit of suspending Social Security payments? Suspending benefits after full retirement age allows them to grow by up to 8% per year until you restart payments or reach age 70. How do I withdraw my Social Security application? Complete and submit Form SSA-521 to the Social Security Administration, including a reason for your withdrawal and any Medicare instructions.
Choosing to take Social Security benefits early comes with significant financial considerations. If you regret your decision, options like withdrawing your application or suspending benefits may provide relief. Always consult with a financial advisor or the Social Security Administration to make informed decisions based on your unique circumstances.