Subordinate organizations

A subordinate organization is one that is under control of the central organization.

According to the United States IRS Publication 557 (Rev. Oct. 2010), Tax-Exempt Status for Your Organization this is the definition for a subordinate organization:

"A subordinate organization is a chapter, local, post or unit of a central organization. A central organization may be a subordinate itself, such as a state organization that has subordinate units and is itself affiliated with a national (central) organization."[1]

A subordinate organization may or may not be incorporated, but it must have an organizing document. A subordinate that is organized and operated in a foreign country may not be included in a Group Exemption Letter (GEL). A subordinate described in section 501(c)(3) may not be included in a group exemption letter if it is a private foundation described in section 509(c).

Advice

If an organization is a subordinate one controlled by a central organization (for example, a church, the Boy Scouts, or a fraternal organization), it is necessary to check with the central organization to ensure it has been issued a GEL that covers the organization. If it has, you do not have to file a separate application unless your organization no longer wants to be included in the group exemption letter.

If a group exemption letter does not cover your organization, ask your central organization about being included in the next annual group ruling update that it submits to the IRS.

References

  1. "Tax-Exempt Status for Your Organization" (pdf). Internal Revenue Service. October 2010. p. 7. Retrieved 6 January 2011.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, July 27, 2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.