9:00 AM - 5:00 PM Central
Stay current on the most important accounting, auditing, tax, and ethics developments impacting not-for-profit organizations in 2026. This comprehensive ACPEN Signature program delivers a practical, executive-level update designed for CPAs, auditors, CFOs, controllers, and advisors serving the nonprofit sector.
On the tax front, the program covers the sweeping charitable giving changes under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), effective beginning in 2026. Topics include the new deduction floor for itemizers, revised corporate giving thresholds, the non-itemizer charitable deduction, the permanent 60% cash contribution limit, and the new scholarship tax credit. Our panel will also explore the expansion of the 21% excise tax on compensation exceeding $1 million to any employee and the doubling of the endowment tax rate depending on the student-adjusted endowment size.
We will also discuss how donor-advised funds (DAFs) and IRA gifts fit well within this revised charitable giving landscape. Of course, we will also address the latest tax developments affecting charities and donations. The course will include a tax update and review of any new key issues in completing IRS Form 990, and related Schedules. It is more important than ever for non-profits to understand and complete this annual tax form to ensure that the organization and its donors are also protected so they can accomplish their corporate intentions and goals.
On the accounting standards front, although there are no major new updates to GAAP affecting NFPs since last year’s FASB Update, the FASB has issued a number of Accounting Standards Updates (ASUs) that improve various areas of GAAP affecting some or many NFPs. Among the updates we’ll discuss are: ASU 2025-05, which provides simplifications in applying the recent credit losses standard (Codification Topic 326) to various accounts receivable, such as from students, patients, and other customers; ASU 2025-06, which modernizes the guidance on capitalization of development costs for internal-use software; and a pending ASU, expected to be issued in Spring 2026, on the accounting for environmental credit programs.
As the FASB has been wrapping up its current generation of projects, it undertook a new public agenda consultation in 2025 to help determine its next generation of projects. Informed by the feedback received, the FASB has already added several new projects, some of which are relevant to some or many NFPs. These include projects on whether certain Crypto Assets such as stablecoins should be classified as cash equivalents and on making targeted improvements to the Equity Method of Accounting. We’ll discuss these and any other NFP-relevant projects the FASB adds prior to the FASB Update.
The FASB Update will also include helpful implementation reminders on standards issued in recent years that are now effective, such as those on fungible Crypto Assets such as Bitcoin (ASU 2023-08) and on improvements to Income Tax Disclosures (ASU 2023-09).
The auditing update will include a review of Statements on Auditing Standards 146 (Quality Management), 147 (Inquiries of the Predecessor), 148 (Amendments to AU-C 935); 149 (Audits of Group Financial Statements),as well as exposure drafts on confirmation and fraud, that will impact audits conducted in 2026 and beyond, with emphasis on practical application to NFP organizations.
The program also will provide a review of recently enacted Ethics Interpretations, including Public Interest Entities, Section 529 Plans, Executive or Employee Recruiting, Simultaneous Employment or Association, and Tax Services as well as consideration of exposure drafts currently outstanding. Qualifies as one hour of ethics CPE.
*Please Note: If you need credit reported to the IRS for this IRS approved program, please download the IRS CE request form on the Course Materials Tab and submit to terri.storer@acpen.com
Speakers:
Jeffrey D. Mechanick, CPA, M.B.A.
J. Michael Inzina, CPA, CGFM, CGMA
C. Clinton Davis, CPA, JD