How to register a charity (CC21b)
How to register your charity once it has been set up, what you need before you start your application and what happens after you apply.
Applies to England and Wales
When to apply to register your charity
Usually, you must register with the Charity Commission if your charity isĀ based in England or WalesĀ and has over Ā£5,000 income per year. The commission will take action to secure compliance if it identifies a charity which isnāt registered but should be.
If your charity is a charitable incorporated organisation (CIO) it must register whatever its income.
Only apply to register your charity once itāsĀ set up. This means you have:
- decided what your charityās purpose is
- decided what type of charity structure it will have
- written a governing document
- chosen a name
- recruited trustees
- decided how your charity will be funded
How to apply to register a charity
Use the Charity Commissionās āApply to register a charityā service.
If you are applying to register a new CIO please ensure its name does notĀ require Companiesā House approval.
This service is available in Welsh. To apply in Welsh, log in and select āWelsh versionā.
We will only accept Welsh applications submitted through this service.
Once you start, youāll get a reference number that allows you to save the form and come back to it at any time within 3 months of starting it.
Watch the commissionās video tutorial explaining the process of applying to register a charity.
Charities that donāt have to register
Small unincorporated charities
If your charity is based in England and Wales and isnāt a CIO, you donāt have to apply to register it if its annual income is less than Ā£5,000. But you can stillĀ apply to HM Revenue and Customs for recognition as a charityĀ to get charity tax breaks and claim gift aid.
You can apply to the commission to register this sort of charity voluntarily but the commission will only consider applications in exceptional circumstances. For example, if you can prove that your charity has been offered significant funds but has to provide a registered charity number before it can receive the funds.
āExceptedā charities
Some charities donāt have to register with the commission if their income is below a particular threshold (currently Ā£100,000 a year). These āexcepted charitiesā include:
- churches and chapels of some Christian denominations (and funds connected with them)
- charitable funds of the armed forces
- Scout and Guide groups
If your charity is a local branch of a larger charity it may not have to register unless itās independent (for example, it controls its own funds). Check with your parent organisation to see if you need to register.
Read the Commissionās guidanceĀ Excepted charitiesĀ for more information.
Other charities that canāt register
The Commission canāt register charities that arenāt based in England and Wales -Ā Ģż²¹²Ō»åĢżĀ have their own charity regulators.
Some charities canāt register with the Commission because theyāre regulated by a different organisation (theyāre āexemptā). TheseĀ exempt charitiesĢż¾±²Ō³¦±ō³Ü»å±š:
- most universities in England
- many national museums and galleries
- some school governing bodies or academy trusts
How to apply to register your charity
Before you start, make sure youāve read the Commissionās guidance onĀ how to set up a charityĀ and onĀ how to write your charityās purposes.
Read the application questions, including the instruction notes, carefully and answer them fully.
Your application needs to satisfy the Commission that:
- your organisation is a charity and should register
- your trustees understand their role and responsibilities
We are currently experiencing high volumes of applications and regret to inform you that the Commission may take up to 45 working days to ask you for more information or clarification. For example, because:
- you donāt answer all the questions fully
- you arenāt using aĀ model or approved governing document
- you donātĀ write your charityās purposes clearly, explain what they are and how you will carry them out
- you donāt fully explain how your charityās purposes areĀ for the public benefitĀ and will beĀ carried out for the public benefit
- you or a third-party adviser(s) have used generic text, including text generated through AI tools, which is not specific to the charity you want to register
- your charityās purposes are new or unusual
The Commission will return your application to you to resubmit if itās unclear or incomplete.
Submit your application well in advance if you need to register your charity by a particular date.
Tell the Commission about any special circumstances that may affect your application - for example if your charity needs to be set up urgently, such as a disaster appeal, but the trustees havenāt had time to meet and agree its governing document.
Information about your charity
You need to provide:
- your charityās main bank or building society details (sort codes, account/roll numbers)
- your charityās public contact details, including a postal address - this cannot usually be a PO Box address except in special circumstances (such as for a refuge)
- a copy of your charityās governing document as a PDF file - which has beenĀ signed or witnessed as necessary
- if your charity is a company: a copy of the certificate of incorporation and memorandum
- proof that your charityās income is over Ā£5,000 (unless itās a CIO) - this can be its latest annual accounts, a recent bank statement or a formal offer of funding from a recognised funding body
Information about your trustees
Each trustee must read and sign theĀ trustee declaration formĀ to confirm they can act as a trustee of the organisation named on the declaration form. The Commission cannot accept electronic signatures.
The Commission will check that all those named in the application as trustees are eligible.
You need to scan this in and send it as a PDF file. You also need:
- the full name of each trustee (this is displayed on the public register of charities)
- the full address and post code of each trustee (this isnāt displayed on the public register of charities)
- their previous names, dates of birth and contact details, including email address if they have one (this isnāt displayed on the public register of charities)
- to say if any trustees (or people connected to them) will personally benefit from the charity in any way
If your charity works with vulnerable people (including children), youāll need to confirm that youāve read the Commissionās guidance onĀ protecting vulnerable groups including childrenĀ and sign a declaration that the trustees have carried out all necessary checks required by law.
By signing the trustee declaration form, the trustees confirm their responsibility to provide information which is true, complete and correct and that they understand it is a criminal offence under section 60 of the Charities Act 2011 to knowingly make a false or misleading statement.
What happens after you apply
You will get an automated email to confirm your application has been received.
The Commission will assess the information youāve provided within 48 hours to make sure:
- your organisation is required to register as a charity - if itās not required to register the Commission wonāt consider your application, except in special circumstances
- youāve answered all the necessary questions in full
- youāve provided the factual information about the charity and trustees to enter in the register of charities
- each trustee is eligible to act as a trustee, including carrying out checks with other agencies
If your application doesnāt provide enough information for the Commission to decide whether your organisation is a charity, it will be returned. If this happens you will be asked to resubmit it.
The Commission willĀ make a decisionĀ based on the information provided and any relevant law, to:
- register your organisation as a charity
- register your organisation as a charity on condition that the trustees take certain actions, which the Commission may follow up after registration
- reject your application on the grounds that your organisation isnāt set up as a charity
If your application is successful
If the Commission decides your organisation is a charity and should be registered, it will:
- enter your charity on the register of charities - your charityās register entry should appear on the public register within 48 hours of you being notified of this decision
- email your charity number to your charityās main contact
- email each trustee, for whom you have provided an email address, a list of online guidance relevant to theirĀ role as trustee
If you havenāt already done so, donāt forget to register withĀ HM Revenue and CustomsĀ for tax relief.
If the Commission has registered your charity on condition its trustees take certain actions, it may:
- monitor your charityās activities after registration
- ask you for evidence that the trustees have taken the required actions
The Commission may takeĀ regulatory actionĀ if the trustees havenāt taken the required actions.
If your application is unsuccessful
The Commission will confirm to you in writing the reasons your application was rejected. You can either:
- reapply, providing you have addressed the reasons for rejection
- ask the Commission to review its decision to reject your application
- appeal to the Charity Tribunal
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