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District of Columbia NonprofitForm a 501(c)(3) nonprofit in District of Columbia for $0 service fee plus the $80 state fee. Articles, bylaws, board minutes, Form 1023 or 1023-EZ filing, state charitable registration handled.
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District of Columbia Nonprofit Formation, 2026

How to form a nonprofit in District of Columbia for $0 service fee.

District of Columbia state filing fee is $80. Standard processing is 15 to 20 business days. We file Articles of Incorporation as a nonprofit with the DC Department of Licensing and Consumer Protection, prepare 501(c)(3)-compliant bylaws and board minutes, obtain your EIN, file IRS Form 1023 or 1023-EZ for federal tax exemption, and handle District of Columbia charitable solicitation registration.

$0 service fee 501(c)(3) application included State charity registration
SOC 2 Type II secure 4.9 rating · 8,200+ reviews Filed with the state and IRS
Federal tax exemption501(c)(3)
Internal Revenue Service
Exempt Organizations
APPROVED
Determination of tax-exempt status
District of Columbia Nonprofit Corporation
State filing$80
IRS form1023 / 1023-EZ
Processing15 to 20 business days
Board minimum3 directors
StatusTax-exempt · 501(c)(3)
Saved to your encrypted vault501
(c)(3)
Donations are tax-deductible
Grant-eligible from day one
How District of Columbia nonprofits work

From District of Columbia formation to tax-exempt mission.

STEP 1
District of Columbia formationArticles filed
STEP 2
EIN + bylawsIRS SS-4 filed
STEP 3
501(c)(3) grantedDonations deductible
Board of Directors 3 minimum, unrelated, independent oversight of mission and finances
Executive Director Runs day-to-day operations; can be paid (reasonable comp)
Donors + grants Tax-deductible to donors after 501(c)(3) determination letter
The District of Columbia nonprofit sector

Why District of Columbia for your mission.

Federal contracting and lobbying dominate. Highest per-capita federal spending in the US. Biennial (not annual) report cycle. Personal income tax up to 10.75%.

State GDP$155BTotal state output
Population673kCensus estimate
Small businesses~80,000Per SBA
NotableHighest per-capita federal spendingEconomic distinction
Sectors District of Columbia nonprofits commonly support
Federal governmentLobbying & advocacyLaw firmsHospitality & tourismHealthcare
Top cities

Where District of Columbia nonprofits operate.

Washington
The District. Federal government, lobbying, K Street law firms, think tanks.
Georgetown
Embassies, retail, hospitality.
Capitol Hill
Federal contractors, government affairs.
Dupont Circle
Embassy row, nonprofits.
Foggy Bottom
GWU, State Department.
Is a District of Columbia nonprofit right for you

When the nonprofit structure fits.

FORM A DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA NONPROFIT IF
  • Your mission is charitable, religious, educational, scientific, or public-benefit
  • You want donations to be tax-deductible to donors (requires 501(c)(3))
  • You plan to apply for grants from foundations or government
  • You can recruit at least 3 unrelated board members
  • You accept that profits cannot be distributed to owners
  • You will operate consistently within District of Columbia or across multiple states
FORM AN LLC OR CORP INSTEAD IF
  • You want to keep ownership and profits
  • You are running a for-profit business with charitable side activity
  • You cannot commit to ongoing board governance and Form 990 filing
  • You want to fundraise capital from equity investors (impossible for 501(c)(3))
  • Your mission is better served as a B-Corp or LLC with social purpose
What we'll set up for you

A clean handoff, in four steps.

You give us the basics. We handle the state, the IRS, and the compliance clock so you can focus on the business.

01 · Name + Brand

A name that's actually available.

Real-time check against the state register, USPTO trademark database, and matching domains.

02 · State filing

Filed with the Secretary of State.

We submit your Articles, pay the state fee on your behalf, and return the stamped certificate.

03 · Federal IDs

EIN + the right tax setup.

Federal Employer ID with the IRS, plus state tax accounts when your business needs them.

04 · Stay compliant

Registered Agent + deadline tracking.

Your agent on file in every state, with every renewal and annual report tracked in one calendar.

Filing timeline

From District of Columbia formation to 501(c)(3) determination.

1
Week 1
District of Columbia ArticlesFiled with the DC Department of Licensing and Consumer Protection. EIN issued.
2
Week 2
Bylaws + boardBylaws, initial minutes, conflict of interest policy.
3
Week 2-6
Form 1023 / 1023-EZFiled with the IRS. 1023-EZ for most under $50k revenue.
4
Week 4-24
501(c)(3) grantedIRS determination letter. Tax-deductible donations begin.
Compare to nearby states

District of Columbia nonprofit vs neighbors.

Virginia$100Northern Virginia has lower taxes, faster processing
Maryland$100Lower cost than DC, suburbs of DC
Delaware$110Holding company alternative
District of Columbia Nonprofit$80Form where you operate. Nonprofit fees are lower than LLC in most states.
Local resources

District of Columbia nonprofit resources.

DC Department of Small and Local Business DevelopmentCapital city small business support
DSLBD Certification ProgramsCBE and other SBE programs
Washington DC ChamberCapital region chamber
Greater Washington Hispanic ChamberHispanic business community
FAQ

District of Columbia Nonprofit questions.

Does my District of Columbia nonprofit need to file federally for 501(c)(3)?
Yes, if you want donations to your nonprofit to be tax-deductible to donors. District of Columbia forms your nonprofit corporation; the IRS grants 501(c)(3) status separately via Form 1023 or 1023-EZ. We handle both: the District of Columbia formation and the federal 501(c)(3) application.
What is Form 1023-EZ and can my District of Columbia nonprofit use it?
Form 1023-EZ is a shorter (~3-page) IRS application for tax exemption. Most new nonprofits with gross receipts under $50,000 and assets under $250,000 qualify. About 65% of new nonprofits qualify. We assess eligibility and file the right form (1023 or 1023-EZ) for your District of Columbia nonprofit.
Does District of Columbia require charitable solicitation registration?
Most states (40+ states have this requirement) require nonprofits to register with the state attorney general or charity bureau before legally soliciting donations. We handle District of Columbia charitable solicitation registration after the nonprofit is formed, plus other states where you plan to fundraise.
How many board members must a District of Columbia nonprofit have?
District of Columbia typically requires at least 3 directors for a nonprofit corporation. The IRS also expects at least 3 unrelated directors for 501(c)(3) credibility. Directors should not be related by blood, marriage, or business interest in a way that would compromise independent oversight.
Can my District of Columbia nonprofit pay its founders?
Yes, as long as compensation is reasonable for the work performed. The IRS reviews this in the 1023/1023-EZ application. Common practice: founders serve as Executive Director with a defensible salary based on comparable nonprofits of similar size and scope. The board (not the founder) should approve compensation.
When does the District of Columbia nonprofit Form 990 need to be filed?
Form 990 (or 990-EZ, or 990-N depending on revenue) is due 4.5 months after fiscal year-end. So a calendar-year nonprofit files by May 15. Missing 3 consecutive years auto-revokes 501(c)(3) status. We track this in your compliance calendar from year one.
How long until my District of Columbia nonprofit can accept tax-deductible donations?
You can accept donations from day one of District of Columbia formation. However, donations are only tax-deductible to donors after the IRS issues the 501(c)(3) determination letter. The determination is typically retroactive to the formation date if you apply within 27 months. 1023-EZ approval is usually 2-4 weeks; full 1023 is 3-6 months.
Can my District of Columbia nonprofit sell goods or services?
Yes, as long as the activities are substantially related to the exempt purpose. District of Columbia nonprofits often generate revenue through program services, events, grants, and (with limits) unrelated business income. Excess unrelated business income (UBI) creates tax liability and can threaten 501(c)(3) status.

Start your District of Columbia Nonprofit in 5 minutes.

Tell us about your mission. We file with the DC Department of Licensing and Consumer Protection, prepare bylaws and board minutes, obtain your EIN, file Form 1023 or 1023-EZ, and register for District of Columbia charitable solicitation.

Pay only state fee 501(c)(3) included Form 990 tracked

Related searches: form a nonprofit in District of Columbia · District of Columbia 501c3 cost · District of Columbia nonprofit filing fee · District of Columbia charitable registration · how to start nonprofit in District of Columbia · District of Columbia Form 1023-EZ · District of Columbia Form 990 · nonprofit incorporation District of Columbia

Built for real businesses

Nonprofits we have formed in District Of Columbia.

501(c)(3) team · District Of Columbia
501(c)(3) team · District Of Columbia
Board governance
Board governance
Mission-driven · District Of Columbia
Mission-driven · District Of Columbia
How it works

How we deliver, end-to-end.

Four-step path from request to confirmation. State and IRS turnaround varies; our steps run in parallel where possible to compress the timeline.

1

Intake + scope

You tell us what you need through a short intake form (or a call for complex matters). We confirm scope, surface any gating issues (deadlines, missing documents, entity status), and quote any state fees that pass through at cost.

2

Prepare + verify

Our specialists draft the filing, verify entity details against state databases, run internal QA, and route any items needing your sign-off. You see drafts before anything gets submitted.

3

File with the authority

We submit directly to the state Secretary of State, FinCEN, IRS, USPTO, or whichever authority your filing requires. We pay state fees at cost and track the submission identifier in your account.

4

Confirmation + vault

Stamped certificate, IRS notice, or filing receipt arrives in your SOC 2 encrypted document vault the moment we receive it. Next filing deadline auto-added to your compliance calendar where applicable.

Why File.Business

Built on the same infrastructure used by 220,000+ businesses.

SOC 2 Type II audited

Independent annual security audit covering access control, change management, incident response, and data handling. Current report on request.

All 51 US jurisdictions

Every state plus DC plus Puerto Rico - direct filings, not third-party reseller. We hold registered-agent qualifications in every state we operate.

Deadline guarantee

If we miss a filing deadline on a service you pay us to manage, we pay the state penalty. Specific to each plan and the filings it includes.

4.9 from 8,200+ verified reviews

Independently verified by Trustpilot + Google + our own NPS infrastructure. Customer success team within reach by email, chat, or phone.

60-day money-back promise

Change your mind in the first 60 days and we refund our service fee in full. State filing fees pass through at cost and are non-refundable once paid to the state.

E&O insured

Errors and omissions coverage protects you from service errors. Carrier and certificate available on request for enterprise clients.

SOC 2 Type II audited
220,000+ businesses. 60-day money-back. State fees passed through at cost.
Your operating system, not a transaction
Every deadline auto-tracked across your entities. Compliance Score visible year-round.
Transparent pricing
No hidden fees. No upsells at checkout. State fees disclosed upfront.

Start your business in the next 5 minutes.

No state-fee markup. Pay only the state fee. 60-day money-back guarantee.

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