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North Carolina Charitable Solicitation Registration Exemptions

Last Updated: February 2026

Charitable organizations that solicit contributions in North Carolina are generally required to obtain a charitable solicitation license from the North Carolina Secretary of State before engaging in fundraising activity.

North Carolina provides limited statutory exemptions from registration. However, exemption eligibility is narrower than many nonprofit leaders assume, and most organizations conducting public fundraising in the state must register.

This page explains who qualifies for exemption from North Carolina charitable solicitation registration and when registration is required.

For a national overview of charitable registration systems, see:
How Charitable Registration Works


When Registration Is Required in North Carolina

A charitable organization must obtain a license in North Carolina if it:

  • Solicits charitable contributions in North Carolina; or
  • Has contributions solicited on its behalf in North Carolina.

Registration generally must be completed prior to solicitation and must be renewed annually.

Out-of-state nonprofits are not exempt solely because they are incorporated elsewhere.

For broader context:
Nationwide Charitable Solicitation Registration Requirements


North Carolina Charitable Registration Exemptions

North Carolina provides categorical exemptions and a limited small-organization exemption.

Organizations claiming exemption may be required to file documentation or maintain evidence supporting their exempt status.


1. Small Organization Exemption ($25,000 Threshold)

An organization may qualify for exemption if:

  • It receives less than $25,000 in gross contributions during a fiscal year; and
  • It does not compensate any individual primarily to conduct solicitations.

Key considerations:

  • The $25,000 threshold applies to total contributions, not solely North Carolina-based donations.
  • If contributions exceed the threshold, registration becomes required.
  • Use of professional fundraisers generally eliminates eligibility for this exemption.

Because the revenue threshold is modest, many multi-state nonprofits exceed it quickly.

For planning context:
How Many States Must Nonprofits Register In?


2. Religious Organizations

Certain religious organizations are exempt from registration.

This generally includes churches and organizations operated primarily for religious purposes.

Separately incorporated affiliates should evaluate exemption eligibility independently.


3. Educational Institutions

Accredited educational institutions may qualify for exemption.

Affiliated foundations or supporting organizations may not automatically qualify and should independently review their registration obligations.


4. Governmental Entities

Federal, state, and local governmental entities are exempt from charitable registration requirements.


5. Political Organizations

Political candidates, political committees, and political parties required to file campaign finance disclosures are exempt.

This exemption does not extend to charitable advocacy organizations that are not formal political committees.


Online Fundraising and North Carolina

If your nonprofit:

  • Accepts online donations from North Carolina residents,
  • Conducts digital campaigns targeting North Carolina, or
  • Uses national donation platforms that generate North Carolina contributions,

registration is generally required unless a clear exemption applies.

Online fundraising frequently triggers multi-state obligations.

For digital compliance guidance:

Online Fundraising & Charleston Principles

Where Nonprofits Must Register Based on Online Fundraising


Renewal and Financial Reporting Considerations

Registered charities in North Carolina must renew annually and file required financial information.

Audit requirements apply based on revenue thresholds and are actively enforced.

Finance leaders should coordinate charitable registration compliance with Form 990 preparation and annual audit timelines.

For deadline tracking:
State Charitable Solicitation Registration Deadlines


What North Carolina Does Not Exempt

North Carolina does not provide:

  • A blanket exemption for all 501(c)(3) organizations
  • A broad exemption for organizations exceeding the $25,000 threshold
  • An exemption solely because the organization is headquartered outside North Carolina

Most organizations conducting sustained public fundraising in North Carolina must register.

For related risk considerations:
Charitable Solicitation Registration Mistakes That Put Nonprofits at Risk


Multi-State Planning Context

An organization exempt in North Carolina may still be required to register in neighboring states such as South Carolina, Virginia, Georgia, or Tennessee.

Conversely, organizations exempt elsewhere may exceed North Carolina’s threshold and trigger registration here.

For broader exemption strategy guidance:
Charitable Solicitation Registration Exemptions


If your organization is evaluating North Carolina exemption eligibility as part of a national fundraising strategy:

Schedule a Consultation