How do we account for pledges? | |
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- How Do We Account for Pledges? What Pledges Should Be Recorded? What Are the Accounting Entries for Recording Pledges? How Do We Account for Uncollected Pledges? Reporting Issues --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
How Do We Account for Pledges? A pledge is a promise, either written or verbal, to make a contribution at a later date. For example, a donor may pledge to make contributions totaling $10,000 over the next three years. In another example, a donor may pledge to make contributions of $50 each month through payroll deduction for the upcoming year. Pledges may also involve non-cash contributions, such as a pledge to donate artwork at the end of next year. By showing Pledges Receivable on the Balance Sheet, a nonprofit organization shows the amount of money it can reasonably expect to receive in the future in pledged contributions. In the past, organizations have had some leeway in the timing of recognizing pledges as income. In 1993, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) issued Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 116, Accounting for Contributions Received and Contributions Made, that set down firm guidelines for pledge accounting.
What Pledges Should be Recorded? A pledge must be bona fide to be recorded in the accounting system. Some indicators that a pledge is valid include written evidence created by the donor using words such as ìpromise,î ìagree,î or ìbinding,î or whether the pledge appears to be legally enforceable.
Pledges are either conditional or unconditional. An unconditional pledge is a promise by a donor to give a gift to the nonprofit in the future. The nonprofit does not need to meet any specific requirements before receiving the gift, and there are no other conditions stipulated by the donor. The examples at the beginning of this article illustrate unconditional pledges. Statement 116 asserts that unconditional pledges must be recorded in the financial record when they are made.
A conditional pledge is contingent on the occurrence of an uncertain future event. For example, a donor might promise to contribute $1,000 if the organization obtains a matching gift of $2,000 from new sources. Conditional pledges are recorded on the books only when the condition is met, so this pledge would not be recorded as revenue until the matching gift is obtained. (Once a condition has been met, in the above case when a matching gift has been obtained, the pledge becomes unconditional, and is recorded.) Prior to meeting donor-imposed conditions, conditional pledges are included in the footnotes to the financial statements.
What are the Accounting Entries for Recording Pledges? Suppose that at the end of the 2004 fiscal year, you have two unfulfilled pledges: one is a pledge to make a gift of $1000 during the next year; the second pledge promises gifts of $2,000 per year in each of the next three years, for a total of $6,000.
The end-of-year journal entry to record these unconditional pledges is:
Pledges receivable $7,000 Contributions Receivable $7,000
To record newly received unconditional pledges When the pledge payment of $1,000 is received in 2005, the entry is:
Cash $1,000
Pledges Receivable $1,000
To record receipt of a pledge It is important to note that the $1,000 is recognized as revenue in 2004, and not in 2005 when the cash was actually received.
In an example of a conditional pledge, a donor may pledge $25,000 to renovate a half-way house on the condition that the building is purchased. This pledge would be mentioned only in a footnote until the nonprofit buys the building. At that point the pledge would be recorded and recognized as revenue.
How Do We Account for Uncollected Pledges? Accounting for collectible pledges is similar to accounting for uncollectible accounts receivable. For example, suppose $20,000 in unconditional pledges were made to your organization during the year and your experience indicates that, on average, 20 percent of these will not be collected. An expense account can be established called Allowance for uncollectible pledges. The following journal entry would be made at the end of the year:
Uncollectible pledges expense $4,000
Allowance for uncollectible pledges $4,000
To record estimate of uncollectible pledges
The allowance account would subtract from the value of pledges receivable on your balance sheet: Pledges receivable $20,000
Less: Allowance for uncollectible pledges $4,000
Net pledges receivable $16,000 |
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