NGO Law

NGO Law Practical, specialist legal advice and support to the not-for-profit sector.

QUALITIES OF GREAT BOARD MEMBERS Building a great board is fundamental to getting governance working for an organisation...
19/01/2026

QUALITIES OF GREAT BOARD MEMBERS
Building a great board is fundamental to getting governance working for an organisation. Yet recruiting useful, committed board members is something that many organisations report struggling with. And which they often give up on, putting up with mediocre board performance and engagement, either because ‘better the devil you know’ or because the organisation is doing okay, raising funds, and (for the moment, anyhow) management perceives the board as superfluous to requirement!

However, the arrival of a crisis will prove the worth of a working-order board. If the board is disconnected, flabby or work-shy, the organisation will find it lacks the bed-rock required to weather the storm.

The lesson, of course, is not to wait for a drama before you realise how vital it is to have the right people bracing the organisation against shocks. Also, one of the main jobs of boards is to lift their eyes further than management has the time to do, and to plan for possible emergencies and hard times.

So, whatever the life stage of the organisation you serve, building a great board is important and deserves proper attention.

But who should you approach? What sort of people will be useful?

The first answer to this is, of course, people who are passionate about the work. Then I am asked- but don’t we need a lawyer, an accountant, other people with skills? It seems, however, that the most important factors are not the ‘hard’ skills brought to the boardroom table, but specific ‘qualities’ identified through an informal survey of over 200 executives conducted by Jocelyn Mangan of Illumyn Impact https://www.illumynimpact.org/ and reported on in full here: 10 must-have qualities every board member should cultivate https://www.illumynimpact.org/news/top10-9hl4y

Follow the link to read all about it, but they really resonate, and the headline (with my comments in brackets) is that you want people who:

• Ask thoughtful questions
• See around corners (the long view)
• Inspire bigger thinking
• Are connected to the work (told you so)
• Oversee without taking over (very important that roles are understood)
• Network and recruit for the organisation
• Spend time with the organisation (you can make this happen, allowing the board to encounter the work)
• Invest in the leadership
• Challenge thinking
• Think before they talk

According to Mangan the ‘so-called soft skills are what separate the great from the good’. She added that, when CEOs told her what they valued in particular board members, none said “Well, they really understand the audit process.”

THE GREY UN-LISTING  AND WHAT NEXT? South Africa was ‘grey-listed’ by the Financial Action Task Force February 2023. For...
24/11/2025

THE GREY UN-LISTING AND WHAT NEXT?
South Africa was ‘grey-listed’ by the Financial Action Task Force February 2023. For those who have not been following, the FATF assesses countries around the world to determine, according to their criteria, which countries are at risk of allowing money-laundering and terrorist financing to occur within their borders. Countries which are really terribly at risk are ‘black listed’ and there are only three (Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, Iran and Myanmar). Twenty countries are on the current grey list, which can be found here https://www.fatf-gafi.org/en/countries/black-and-grey-lists.html

The following from the FATF website report on South Africa at https://www.fatf-gafi.org/en/publications/High-risk-and-other-monitored-jurisdictions/increased-monitoring-october-2025.html

“The FATF welcomes South Africa’s significant progress in improving its AML/CFT regime. South Africa strengthened the effectiveness of its AML/CFT regime to meet the commitments in its action plan regarding the strategic deficiencies that the FATF identified in February 2023, by….:South Africa should continue to work with the FATF and ESAAMLG to sustain its improvements in its AML/CFT system."

For perspective from the non-profit perspective, see Feryal Domingo (long!) Acting Executive Director of Inyathelo’s views here https://www.inyathelo.org/mediacentre/newsandopinions/inyathelo-hails-south-africa%E2%80%99s-grey-list-removal,-paving-the-way-for-robust-npo-fundraising-and-global-re-engagement

“This is a victory for the thousands of NPOs whose work is vital to our democracy and social justice. The global community can now confidently re-engage with our non-profit sector, knowing that we have robust systems in place to promote transparency and accountability,” said Domingo.

We will not, of course, be able to rest on our laurels for long, as FATF assessments are ongoing, and SA is due to be reviewed again in April 2027, and we are expected to be able to report further progress at that time.

Of grave concern to civil society is how the non-profit sector across the world has been scapegoated for apparently harboring risks of money laundering and terrorist financing. You may recall how, in 2022, we narrowly escaped the tentacles of the proposed mandatory registration of all non-profits through submissions made, see the background here https://ngolawsa.co.za/last-quarter-2022-ngolaw-in-brief/

The FATF ratings and requirements have in many countries been abused by politicians to control and silence civil society. Compulsory registration and reporting requirements in many jurisdictions are being used to effectively ban human rights work which may be counter to government policies, or critical of government.

The response from civil society has been to galvanise and organise and FATF has taken notice and modified its approach, acknowledging that “the misapplication of the FATF Standards can lead to unintended consequences such as the illegitimate targeting and suppression of legitimate non-profit organisations”. https://www.fatf-gafi.org/en/topics/non-profit-organisations.html?utm_source=chatgpt.com

Members of the NPO Working Group have been actively involved in this work with FATF, and this is an extract from a submission on the National Corruption Risk & Prevention Framework drafted by our own Ann Bown:

“In line with the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) Recommendations 12 and 22, and the Financial Intelligence Centre (FIC) PEP Guidance Note 3A (para 25/26), we recommend that the NCRMPF acknowledge NPOs as a moderate-risk sector. Not as a source of corruption, but as an essential partner in mitigating risks through improved governance, transparency, and accountability”.

NPO ONLINE APPLICATIONS AND REPORTS: LACK OF PROGRESS REPORTAs mentioned in our previous Brief, DSD (Department of Socia...
24/11/2025

NPO ONLINE APPLICATIONS AND REPORTS: LACK OF PROGRESS REPORT
As mentioned in our previous Brief, DSD (Department of Social Development) has been upgrading its NPO registration and reporting system and going entirely online, with:

o New applications to be made only online from 1 September 2025; and
o NPO online reporting effective from 1 October 2025.

Sadly, although the online reporting was only set to be launched on 1 October, DSD had, from 1 September, disabled the ability to receive attachments not only for the email address for new applications (which makes sense) but also for the email addresses used for NPO updates and reports.

As at 4 November, the NPO application system is partly working, but we have not yet been able to file a single online report (and we try every day). And those email address receipt facilities are still disabled, so there is no back up plan available.

For organisations with financial year ends of end February, their reports are due on 30 November, and for 31 March year ends, these should be lodged by the end of December (or before we all go on leave).

We are in very regular communication with the NPO Directorate on this.

New NPO applications which are made for voluntary associations are more likely to be successful, as there is less integration required with other government databases.

For NPCs, the links to the CIPC database are misbehaving, currently recording multiples of some directors, then nothing of the rest.

We have no data on Trust applications, since we no longer set up new trusts (for reasons that anyone who operates under a trust will be familiar with.

For NPO reporting, many of our trials so far have been thwarted by this message in the image below.

This is apparently because the data from the old system needs to be ‘migrated’ into the new system, before reports can be filed. Sometimes, just to keep us on our toes, we get a different error- an organisation that we didn’t ask about displayed, and then we get stuck at that point and there is no way to correct it.

As at 4 November, we have not yet managed to lodge a single report on the new system.

We have been assured by the NPO Directorate officials that there is no need to panic, they are working on the systems and no organisation will be deregistered or marked as non-compliant for an inability to lodge reports at this time.

THE 18A RECEIPTS AND THIRD PARTY RETURNS: NEW INFORMATION REQUIREDIt seems like just the other day, but it was back in 2...
18/11/2025

THE 18A RECEIPTS AND THIRD PARTY RETURNS: NEW INFORMATION REQUIRED
It seems like just the other day, but it was back in 2023 when SARS started preparing the ground to introduce a requirement for organisations to report to SARS on all of the 18A receipts issued to donors, through what are called ‘third party’ returns. For the full explanation of that, see our 2023 Brief https://ngolawsa.co.za/second-quarter-2023-ngolaw-in-brief/

31 May 2024 was the start of compulsory filing of these returns, and you can read more about that in https://ngolawsa.co.za/welcome-to-the-first-ngolaw-brief-of-2024/.

These ‘third party’ returns are an important mechanism to allow SARS to establish whether donors who are claiming a tax deduction for making a donation to a non-profit have actually made the donation, and how much they have really donated. Without these linking of systems at SARS, fraudulent claims of donations made would only be caught if the taxpayer was audited.

Although the requirement to file these returns places an extra administrative burden on non-profits, it is necessary to stem fraud and (hopefully) encourage actual donations being made to get the tax benefit.

Because there is certain information which needs to be reported to SARS, the 18A receipts which are issued need to contain all of these fields, so that the information is captured and can be reported on.

And SARS has just issued a notice in the Government Gazette Legal Counsel – Secondary Legislation – Income Tax Notices 2025 | South African Revenue Service adding the following compulsory fields:
1. The income tax number of the donor;
2. In the case of a donation of a thing instead of money an ‘adequate and accurate description’ of what has been donated; and
3. If a thing has been donated, the value of the thing, according to the SARS rules, which are set out in section 18A(3) and 18A(3A) of the Act.
We find that people can tend to be secretive about their income tax numbers. We are not sure why, as SARS is exceptionally good at privacy, it is fundamental to how they work. Also, I cannot think what the risk would be- that someone to pays my tax for me? Whatever the reason, if I donor wants their tax deduction to be granted by SARS, you have to report their income tax number, and so you have to collect it from them.

In the case of donations of property/things, 18A receipts can be issued and tax deductions claimed, but there are some limits:
o They cannot be ‘intangible’ (not physical) unless they are shares in a listed company OR a ‘financial instrument’ which is share-like in having an ascertainable value (bonds, money market securities, derivative instruments etc) listed in the definition of ‘financial instrument’ in the Financial Sector Regulation Act, 2017;
o They certainly cannot be time or services donated, these are not on the list; and
o The values are determined under the strict provisions of sections 18A(3) and 18A(3A)

The following is our brief summary of these rules:

COMING VERY SOON: SARS ONLINE APPLICATIONS AND UPLOADSThe newly launched SARS Online Query System allows taxpayers to lo...
06/10/2025

COMING VERY SOON: SARS ONLINE APPLICATIONS AND UPLOADS
The newly launched SARS Online Query System allows taxpayers to lodge various queries online (instead of going into branches) and Tax Exemption Unit at SARS is already using and testing the system with plans to roll it out to allow the uploading of documents in connection with exemption applications and a exemption updates. We will be early adopters, and are communicating our initial feedback to the TEU. Watch this space for more details as it comes into use

CIPC UPDATE AND ISSUES The new Companies Act is a power for good in the new legal structure options, flexibility and rep...
06/10/2025

CIPC UPDATE AND ISSUES
The new Companies Act is a power for good in the new legal structure options, flexibility and reporting and transparency measures it has introduced. And the CIPC has online systems which are clear, navigable (mostly), reliable, efficient and which have created speedy, accessible and secure mechanisms for business and nonprofit entities to be registered and updated.

• A new (standard form) NPC can be registered online in a matter of hours;
• Director changes are processed within 24 hours;
• Director and other changes have incorporated security protocols such as OTPs being sent to all affected by changes;
• Amended founding documents are registered within 4-6 days;
• Name reservations take less than 24 hours;
• The system requires all director details to be updated, building better public credibility and transparency;
• Online search facilities make the registered details of companies and their directors immediately accessible;
• ‘Back office’ links to Home Affairs systems allow for verification and pre-population of forms (though dependency on these systems routinely causes delays for CIPC processes);
• Those who serve as directors of companies are required to take responsibility for their own CIPC profiles, building engagement with and understanding of the systems;
• The annual reporting requirement provides deadlines and impetus for companies to keep proper records, adhere to reporting standards and stay current with administrative and governance matters;
• These same annual reporting requirements allow CIPC to clear from its system the ‘debris’ of failed or discarded companies, as deregistration follows non-compliance;
• The CIPC annual compliance checklist filing requirement (if understood and engaged with by the board itself) keeps matters of adherence to the law ‘on the radar’ and current.

The building, rolling out and integration of systems has not been without issues, but, even with these, the CIPC system we have today is a giant leap forward and, on the whole, effective, useful and user-friendly. (And, with each advance, it leaves the dusty and disorganised Master’s office further behind, clinging doggedly to outdated protocols and searching endlessly for lost files).

Like most systems, the CIPC systems have been built primarily to service business and its needs. And this is to be expected, as business is the main CIPC client and having an efficient and supported economy would be one of the main aims of the Department of Trade and Industry under which CIPC falls.

However, the non-profit sector also plays a major role in the functioning of our society and our economy, and needs to be properly served by the CIPC. Some current difficulties which are being experienced by NPCs include:

1. A lack of understanding of the largely voluntary and independent nature of NPC boards. (CIPC is, at the moment, insisting that at least one director is recorded as ‘executive’ even if there are no executive directors on the board and the MOI or organisation culture prohibit or discourage executives from serving on the board);
2. For ‘beneficial ownership’ filing, the CIPC fields require that each ‘beneficial owner’ is allocated a percentage of the ‘voting rights’ as though they were all shareholders. If it is a no-members NPC with five directors, then it is easy enough to allocate each director 20%. But in a with-members NPC, we report on the board and the members. The directors exercise oversight of ongoing management. The members appoint the directors. Each group has their own sphere of power and responsibility. And if there are five directors and 15 members, it makes no sense to ‘give’ each of them 5%, as the directors have more power on an ongoing basis, but the members greater ultimate power. The system should either remove the percentage requirement for NPCs or allow the percentage of each group to be separately added.

A NOTE ON NPC AFS AND ANNUAL RETURNS TO CIPC
Each year, all registered companies, including NPCs, must file their ‘annual return’ which includes an annual fee based upon ‘turnover’. Now, ‘turnover’ is routinely interpreted to mean ‘total sales’ so, for most NPCs, this number is low and the fee to be paid should be a minimal R100 a year (R150 if you file late) or, if the turnover is between R1 000 000 and R10 000 000, R450 a year (R600 if you pay late.)

Regulation 164(4) to the Companies Act defines ‘turnover’ as follows:

4) At any particular time, the annual turnover of
(a) a company …. is the gross revenue of that company from income in, into or from the Republic, arising from the following transactions or events, as recorded on the company’s most recent annual financial statements:
(i) the sale of goods;
(ii) the rendering of services; or
(iii) the use by other persons of the company’s assets yielding interest, royalties or dividends ….

Regulation 164(5) specifically excludes from ‘turnover’, VAT or gains from ‘foreign currency transactions’, as well as any amounts excluded from ‘gross revenue’ in terms of the accounting standards applicable to the company.

Based on these Regulations (and the IFRS for SMEs accounting standard, which most NPCs use), it is clear that most non-profits will pay the minimum annual return fee, as their ‘turnover’ will be limited to any income from sales of goods or services, interest earned on money in the bank, or interest and dividends earned on other investments.

To allow proper calculation of the annual return (and, indeed, of tax which might be due) it is important that the financial systems and records of the company distinguish between different types of funds received, and that these are accurately identified in the Annual Financial Statement of the company:

o Donations, grants bequests and other amounts which are ‘fund raised” should be grouped together;
o Sales income (from goods or services) should be on a separate line; and
o Interest and dividends should be clustered together.

We often find that there is no such distinction made in the Annual Financial Statements of our clients, or that the categories of funds received are incorrectly labelled. Quite often donations are just called ‘Sales’. Which they are not. Though compilers of Annual Financial Statements and those who review or audit them should be aware of the importance of these classifications and ask questions to check they are correct, it is usually the actual financial records and the ‘codes’ assigned when the systems are set up, that are to blame for the misidentification of funds. Those who compile, review or audit do so based on the records and materials provided to them, so these need to be set up correctly.

The misidentification of income sources has consequences for the annual return classification but also, importantly, for calculation of tax. For instance:

• For a non-profit which does not (or not yet) have tax exempt status, it is important to correctly identify donations and grants received as these fall outside of ‘gross income’ as defined in the Income Tax Act, and so are not taxable;
• For an organisation which has PBO or one of the other ‘partial’ exempt statuses, one must distinguish ‘Sales’ income (which may be taxable trading income) from donations, interest and other non-taxable funds;
• The obligation to register as a VAT vendor (and charge VAT to any customers) arises when you make ‘supplies’ of over R1 000 000 in a year. If donations are incorrectly classified as ‘Sales’, then it could seem that you need to register as a VAT vendor, when you do not.

As ever, proper planning and preparation and attention to these (yes, boring for most of us) details are really important.

NLC APPLICATIONSThe new and vigorous entry into the race is the National Lotteries Commission (NLC) which is making a co...
30/09/2025

NLC APPLICATIONS
The new and vigorous entry into the race is the National Lotteries Commission (NLC) which is making a concerted and rapid effort to shake off its terrible reputation and build ramparts against further pillaging of its coffers, by building an online system which creates an online profile for each organisation, requires extensive details and cross-checks and verifies details with other government systems in the background (Home Affairs, UPC, Central Supplier Database, and DSD).

It is this last aspect that was creating immense difficulties for organisations applying for funding (and there are suddenly many more of them than before, with USAID and PEPFAR funding swept out from under us (through the illegal, unconstitutional and contract-breaching actions of Trump) and EU funding on the decline as public spending re-aligns in that region.)

The NLC also governs applications to register for and run Society Lotteries, and we can report from ngoLAW that a recent application which we have dealt with for a client was handled swiftly, and with clear and helpful assistance at every step of the process.

NPO ONLINE APPLICATIONS LAUNCHEDDSD (Department of Social Development) has also been upgrading its NPO registration and ...
30/09/2025

NPO ONLINE APPLICATIONS LAUNCHED

DSD (Department of Social Development) has also been upgrading its NPO registration and reporting system and going entirely online, with the initial promised launch date of the end of March 2025 and then actual launch date on pushed out to 1 September 2025.

This is an extract from the DSD mailer:

“…The new system will be introduced in three (3) phases, the first phase will take effect from 1 September 2025 for the application of new NPO registrations only, whilst the second phase will be introduced on 1 October 2025, and the third phase will be introduced on 19 October 2025.
… Phase two will be implemented on October 1, 2025. This phase will allow the submission of annual reports, changes to the constitution, updates to organizational details, printing compliance letters, and accessing the education and awareness library.
Finally, phase three will be introduced on October 19, 2025. This phase will include the launch of a mobile App that enables NPOs to access registration and compliance services from the comfort of their homes, eliminating transportation costs to visit departmental offices. NPOs will receive guidance on how to access and use the App.

So, far, as always with these systems, there have been some technical teething problems. There are also some fundamental design errors including:

• A drop-down box to choose from a (limited list) of objects; and
• A statement that the system ‘automatically generates a constitution’

These issues indicate a lack of understanding by the designers of the system of:

• The importance of an authentic and accurate statement of objects. The ‘main object’ of an organisation is its statement of its unique and individual approach to its chosen field of work and it sets the boundaries within which that organisation will work;
• The fact that only voluntary associations have constitutions; and
• The right of freedom of association, which allows those who found non-profits to choose the appropriate legal entity for the founding cohort, and then draft a founding and governing document which is useful, accurate, clear and unique to that organisation.

At the time of sending out this brief, there was also a practical issue with DSD disabling the ability to receive attachments not only for the email address for new applications (which makes sense) but also for the email addresses used for NPO updates and reports. We have sent up a flare on it, and I am sure DSD will have received complaints from many others, too.

When it comes to the launching of the online reporting, we anticipate issues with historical gaps in their records, primarily of email addresses of all of the board members of the organisation. These may have been captured at registration but:

• the NPO reporting regime, in which changes in board members must be recorded, has not required that email addresses for new board members be captured; and
• there are community-based organisations whose board members do not have email addresses.

We are also concerned about whether the new reporting system will contain the historical record of past NPO reports lodged and acknowledged. It would be wonderful to be pleasantly surprised on this!

ALL SYSTEMS GO (OR NOT) : In the ongoing process to escape grey-listing of South Africa by the Financial Action Task For...
30/09/2025

ALL SYSTEMS GO (OR NOT) :
In the ongoing process to escape grey-listing of South Africa by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), government departments are generally upgrading, modernising and automating their systems, going electronic and online.

CIPC and SARS are ahead of the pack - Ongoing updates to their (already in working order) systems continue apace, with constant adjustments required by those who use them.

Trailing in the rear (or at the very back of the peloton) is the Master of the High Court, which has an online system for reporting beneficial ownership (but only, so far, available for trusts registered after 2016 and some in 2015). The uploading and systematising in their corner (already under-resourced and thinly staffed) is not expected to be finished any time soon.

The good news is that co-operation between all of these departments is at an unprecedented level (driven by the ill-wind of FATF) and there is work going on to close the gaps and synchronise systems.

Register now for the webinar titled “Immigration and Visa 101 for NGOs: Mistakes, Myths & Must-Knows,” co-hosted by Xpat...
09/06/2025

Register now for the webinar titled “Immigration and Visa 101 for NGOs: Mistakes, Myths & Must-Knows,” co-hosted by Xpatweb and ngoLAW, and taking place on 26 June 2025 at 10:00 AM (SA Time). https://bit.ly/43Pi99C

This is your opportunity to access NGO-specific immigration guidance from two of South Africa’s foremost experts in the field.

Marisa Jacobs (Managing Director at Xpatweb; NEDLAC Business Representative & IAB Board Representative for Organised Business) and Nicole Copley (Founder of ngoLAW and Master Tax Practitioner) will tackle common immigration myths, review regulatory updates, and respond to real questions submitted by NGOs currently managing immigration hurdles.

Do not miss out on this session: Immigration and Visa 101 for NGOs: Mistakes, Myths & Must-Knows1 | Xpatweb



Happening Now:
The webinar “Immigration and Visa 101 for NGOs: Mistakes, Myths & Must-Knows,” co-hosted by Xpatweb and ngoLAW, is currently underway.

Presented by Marisa Jacobs (Managing Director at Xpatweb; NEDLAC Business Representative & IAB Board Representative for Organised Business) and Nicole Copley (Founder of ngoLAW; Master Tax Practitioner), this session addresses urgent immigration developments impacting NGOs, including the new Remote Work Visa and strategic workforce planning.

For more information on upcoming sessions: Upcoming Events | Xpatweb

Register now for “Immigration and Visa 101 for NGOs: Mistakes, Myths & Must-Knows,” co-hosted by Xpatweb and ngoLAW, and...
09/06/2025

Register now for “Immigration and Visa 101 for NGOs: Mistakes, Myths & Must-Knows,” co-hosted by Xpatweb and ngoLAW, and taking place on 26 June 2025 at 10:00 AM (SA Time). https://bit.ly/43Pi99C

Marisa Jacobs (Managing Director at Xpatweb; NEDLAC Business Representative & IAB Board Representative for Organised Business) brings frontline insights from her work with national advisory bodies to help NGOs navigate immigration compliance.

Nicole Copley Founder of ngoLAW and Tax Practitioner) offers over three decades of legal and tax expertise in the non-profit sector, with deep knowledge of governance, reform, and NGO-specific compliance.

Together, they present a focused session designed to help NGOs address immigration and workforce challenges with confidence.

Reserve your seat: Immigration and Visa 101 for NGOs: Mistakes, Myths & Must-Knows1 | Xpatweb

Hiring foreign nationals without a compliant immigration strategy could expose your NGO to legal and reputational risk.I...
09/06/2025

Hiring foreign nationals without a compliant immigration strategy could expose your NGO to legal and reputational risk.

In the upcoming webinar “Immigration and Visa 101 for NGOs: Mistakes, Myths & Must-Knows,” co-hosted by Xpatweb and ngoLAW, sector-specific experts will highlight how immigration regulations directly impact NGO operations.

Marisa Jacobs (Managing Director at Xpatweb; NEDLAC Business Representative & IAB Board Representative for Organised Business) and Nicole Copley (Founder of ngoLAW and Tax Practitioner) will focus on Remote Work Visas, regulatory updates, and how these changes affect not for profit organisations’ planning and compliance requirements.

Join the discussion on 26 June 2025 at 10:00 AM (SA Time): https://bit.ly/43Pi99C Immigration and Visa 101 for NGOs: Mistakes, Myths & Must-Knows1 | Xpatweb

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