Fund Accounting That Scales From One Parish to an Entire Diocese
Nonprofit fund accounting is fundamentally different from commercial accounting. Every dollar carries restrictions — donor-imposed, grant-imposed, or board-designated — and the organization is legally obligated to track those restrictions from receipt through expenditure. For a single-entity nonprofit with three funds, this is manageable in any accounting system. For a diocese with 80 parishes, a school system, a cemetery trust, and a capital campaign that spans multiple fiscal years, the complexity overwhelms tools designed for commercial businesses.
EezyFinance addresses this structural challenge with a multi-entity fund accounting architecture that treats each entity — parish, school, chapter, affiliate — as an autonomous unit with its own chart of accounts, its own bank reconciliation, and its own reporting cycle, while providing the central office with consolidated visibility across all entities. Each entity's staff enters their own transactions, manages their own vendors, and produces their own board reports. The central office sees everything in real-time without requiring manual uploads, spreadsheet consolidation, or month-end reporting packages.
The fund structure supports unlimited fund types: unrestricted operating, temporarily restricted, permanently restricted (endowments), agency funds, capital campaign funds, and board-designated reserves. Each fund maintains its own trial balance, and inter-fund transfers are tracked with full audit trails. When a parish transfers restricted capital campaign funds to the diocese for a construction project, both entities record the transaction with matching entries that eliminate cleanly in consolidation.
For dioceses and national organizations managing dozens or hundreds of entities, the consolidation engine handles inter-entity eliminations automatically. Assessments, subsidies, shared service allocations, and internal loans are identified and eliminated without manual journal entries. The consolidated financial statements comply with FASB ASC 958 requirements for net asset classification and functional expense presentation.
The chart of accounts is templated at the organizational level, ensuring consistency across entities while allowing local customization. When the central office adds a new natural account or functional classification, the change propagates to all entities. When a parish needs a local sub-account for a specific ministry, they can create it within the template structure without affecting other entities.
Grant Compliance: From Award Letter to Final Drawdown
Federal grants — whether from HHS, HUD, DOE, or passed through state agencies — impose the most rigorous financial tracking requirements that most nonprofits encounter. The Uniform Guidance (2 CFR 200) mandates specific cost allocation methodologies, time-and-effort reporting, procurement standards, and financial reporting formats. A missed SF-425 filing, an unallowable cost charged to a federal award, or inadequate documentation of cost allocation methodology can result in questioned costs, disallowed expenditures, or suspension of future funding.
EezyFinance's grant management module tracks each award from the notice of grant award through final closeout. The award setup captures the grant period, approved budget by cost category, CFDA number, indirect cost rate, and any special conditions. As expenditures are incurred, they are coded to the grant and cost category at the point of entry. The system validates that each charge falls within the approved budget category, within the grant period, and within the remaining available balance before posting.
Drawdown reporting is automated. For grants on a reimbursement basis, EezyFinance generates drawdown requests based on posted expenditures, matching the format required by PMS, ASAP, or state payment systems. For grants on an advance basis, the system tracks cash-on-hand requirements and calculates the minimum advance needed to cover projected expenditures, minimizing the federal cash balance that triggers compliance concerns under 2 CFR 200.305.
Cost allocation across multiple funding sources — a common requirement for nonprofits operating programs supported by federal, state, foundation, and unrestricted funds — is handled through allocation methodologies that can be configured per cost type. Shared costs like rent, utilities, and administrative salaries are allocated using base measures (square footage, FTE count, direct cost ratios) that comply with the organization's approved cost allocation plan.
The single audit preparation module (for organizations expending $750,000 or more in federal awards) generates the Schedule of Expenditures of Federal Awards (SEFA), tracks major program determinations, and produces the internal control documentation that auditors request. Organizations that have historically spent weeks preparing for their single audit reduce preparation time to days because the data is already structured for audit consumption.
Donor Reporting That Connects Gifts to Impact
The relationship between a nonprofit and its major donors depends on trust, and trust depends on transparency. When a donor contributes $500,000 to a scholarship fund, they expect to know how many students received scholarships, what those students are studying, and how much of the fund remains. When a foundation awards a $2 million program grant, the program officer expects quarterly financial reports that reconcile to the approved budget and narrative reports that connect expenditures to outcomes.
Most nonprofit accounting systems can produce financial reports — fund balances, revenue and expense summaries, budget-to-actual comparisons. What they cannot do is connect financial data to programmatic outcomes in a way that tells a donor story. EezyFinance bridges this gap by integrating financial data with program metrics stored in EezyCRM.
For scholarship funds, the system tracks each award disbursement against the fund, records the recipient (anonymized in external reports), links to the student's academic program, and calculates the fund's remaining corpus and projected future awards based on spending policy and investment returns. The donor receives an annual stewardship report that shows exactly how their gift was used, how many students it supported, and how the fund has grown or been drawn down.
For grant-funded programs, EezyFinance produces financial reports in the format each funder requires — which varies significantly across federal agencies, state departments, and private foundations. Federal SF-425 reports are generated automatically from posted expenditures. Foundation reports are generated from customizable templates that combine financial summaries with narrative sections populated by program staff. The result is a professional, accurate report that satisfies compliance requirements while telling the program's story.
Endowment reporting deserves special attention because it involves the intersection of investment performance, spending policy, and underwater endowment restrictions under UPMIFA (Uniform Prudent Management of Institutional Funds Act). EezyFinance tracks each endowment fund's historic gift value, accumulated investment returns, appropriated spending, and current market value. When market declines push an endowment fund below its historic gift value (an 'underwater' fund), the system flags the restriction and prevents spending beyond what the board's policy allows.
For organizations running capital campaigns, the system tracks pledges, pledge payment schedules, pledge fulfillment rates, and campaign progress against goal — segmented by donor level, solicitation channel, and campaign phase. Campaign leadership receives real-time dashboards showing where the campaign stands, which donor segments are ahead or behind projections, and which pledges are at risk of non-fulfillment.