Nonprofit Financial Management: What Grant Funders Look for in Applicant Finances

Every grant application involves financial scrutiny — funders need to know that applicants can manage grant funds responsibly, will remain financially viable during the grant period, and have appropriate financial governance in place. Understanding what funders look for in applicant finances helps organisations prepare stronger applications and demonstrate financial credibility.

Why financial health matters to funders

Funders invest in organisations, not just projects. Even the best project proposal fails if the organisation:
- Has insufficient cash to bridge payment delays
- Lacks financial controls to prevent misuse of funds
- Is carrying debts that threaten its viability
- Has governance that doesn't provide financial oversight

Financial due diligence protects both funders (ensuring their investment achieves its purpose) and the organisations receiving grants (ensuring they aren't over-committed).

What financial documents funders typically require

Audited or reviewed financial statements

Most funders with grants above a threshold (often $20,000–$50,000) require:
- Annual financial statements for the past 1-3 years
- Either audited statements (by a registered auditor) or reviewed statements (less rigorous)
- Balance sheet (assets, liabilities, equity)
- Income statement (revenue, expenses, surplus/deficit)
- Notes to accounts (key policies, major items explained)

Small charities without audited accounts may provide:
- GST returns as a financial record proxy
- Internal accounts prepared by a bookkeeper
- Treasurer's report for small incorporated societies

Current year budget

An operating budget for the current financial year — showing where the organisation's income is coming from and how it is being spent.

Project budget

A specific budget for the proposed project — what will the grant money fund, and what is the total project cost.

Bank statements

Some funders (particularly gaming trusts) request recent bank statements — a direct view of current cash position.

Key financial ratios funders assess

Current ratio (liquidity)

Current ratio = Current assets ÷ Current liabilities

Measures whether the organisation can pay its short-term obligations. A ratio of 1.0 means current assets exactly cover current liabilities. A ratio above 1.5 is generally comfortable; below 1.0 suggests cash flow risk.

Days of operating reserves

Operating reserves ÷ Average daily expenditure = Days of reserves

Measures how long the organisation could operate without new income. Many funders consider 3 months (approximately 90 days) to be a comfortable reserve level. Below 30 days indicates financial fragility.

Debt-to-equity ratio

Total liabilities ÷ Total equity = Leverage ratio

High leverage (significant debt relative to net assets) raises questions about financial sustainability.

Reliance on any single funder

If 80% of income comes from one funder, the organisation is highly vulnerable to that relationship changing. Funders prefer organisations with diversified income sources — demonstrating that the organisation won't collapse if any single funder exits.

Revenue concentration

Similarly, review whether income is stable (memberships, long-term contracts) or volatile (donations, project grants). High volatility requires higher reserves.

Operating reserves

Why reserves matter

Operating reserves — unrestricted funds held for general operating purposes — serve as a financial buffer:
- Covering unexpected expenses
- Bridging gaps between grant disbursements and expenses
- Managing income variability

What level of reserves is appropriate

The appropriate reserve level depends on:
- Income volatility (higher volatility → higher reserves needed)
- Commitment exposure (staff on permanent contracts need reserves to fund them)
- Grant payment timing (organizations waiting months for grant payments need reserves)

Common guidance suggests 3-6 months of operating expenses as a target, though smaller community organisations may operate with less.

Restricted vs unrestricted reserves

Reserves held for a specific purpose (restricted — e.g., building maintenance) are not available for general operations. Funders want to see unrestricted reserve levels.

Financial governance red flags

Grant assessors look for signs of weak financial governance:

No formal audit or review

Organisations above a size threshold without external financial review raise concerns about oversight.

Unresolved audit findings

If audited accounts include qualified opinions or significant audit findings, funders want to understand what happened and what's been done to address it.

Persistent deficits

Organisations running year-on-year operating deficits are burning reserves. A one-year deficit may be explained; persistent deficits signal a structural problem.

Significant related-party transactions

Transactions between the organisation and board members, staff, or associated entities without arm's-length process raise conflict of interest concerns.

Late filing of annual accounts

Late or missing annual returns to Charities Services (NZ), ACNC (Australia), or Companies Office signal disorganised governance.

Declining cash

Cash declining year-on-year, even alongside a technical surplus, can indicate problems (e.g., accrual-basis income not yet received in cash).

How to present your finances in a grant application

Narrative explanation

Don't just attach financial statements — explain what they show. If the previous year had an unusual deficit (COVID impact, one-off expense), explain it. If reserves are low, explain why and what your plan is. Provide context that the numbers alone can't give.

Show financial trajectory

3 years of trend data is more informative than one year. If the organisation is growing, show that growth trajectory. If reserves declined, show the plan to rebuild.

Demonstrate financial controls

Describe your financial governance:
- Who authorises expenditure
- How financial statements are reviewed (Finance Committee, board review)
- How conflict of interest in financial matters is managed
- Bank account signatories and approval thresholds

Budget realism

Project budgets should be realistic — not padded with contingencies, but not stripped back to look cheap either. Include overhead (administration, rent, utilities) at actual rates. Funders who have funded many projects know when a budget is unrealistically lean.

Building financial capacity

Organisations with weak financial management can take steps to strengthen before major grant applications:
- Engage a bookkeeper or financial manager
- Move to accounting software (Xero, MYOB, QuickBooks)
- Establish a Finance Committee with board-level oversight
- Commission a first-ever external review or audit
- Build operating reserves through fundraising or surplus

Some funders specifically provide capacity building grants for financial management strengthening — worth seeking if financial weakness is holding back your funding prospects.


Tahua's grants management platform supports funders with financial due diligence workflows — including financial health dashboards, ratio tracking, budget comparison tools, and the governance monitoring features that help grantmakers assess financial risk across their application portfolios.

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