In the Philippines, what people commonly call a “nonprofit organization” is usually organized as a non-stock, non-profit corporation and registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). That is the usual legal vehicle for charities, civic groups, foundations, educational and cultural organizations, professional associations, advocacy groups, faith-based ministries that are not using the corporation-sole form, homeowners’ associations that choose SEC registration, and many other entities formed not for the distribution of profits but for a lawful public, mutual, or institutional purpose.
Registration with the SEC gives the organization juridical personality. That means it becomes a legal person separate from its founders and trustees: it can hold property, enter into contracts, sue and be sued, open bank accounts, receive grants and donations in its own name, and operate with continuity independent of changes in membership or leadership. In practice, SEC registration is the starting point, not the end of compliance. A nonprofit that has been incorporated must still deal with the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR), local government requirements, labor registrations if it hires staff, and industry-specific permits when its activities fall within regulated areas.
This article explains the Philippine legal framework, when SEC registration is the correct route, what documents are required, how the process generally works, what special rules apply to foundations and foreign participation, what happens after registration, and what mistakes most often delay approval.
1. The governing law
The primary statute is the Revised Corporation Code of the Philippines (Republic Act No. 11232). A nonprofit incorporated through the SEC is generally a non-stock corporation under that law.
A non-stock corporation is one where no part of its income is distributable as dividends to members, trustees, or officers, subject only to reasonable compensation for services actually rendered. Its assets and income must be devoted to the purposes stated in its articles and bylaws. The legal consequence is important: a nonprofit may earn income, charge fees, receive grants, or own property, but it may not operate so that net earnings are distributed to insiders as profits.
2. What counts as a “nonprofit” for SEC purposes
In Philippine usage, “nonprofit,” “non-stock corporation,” “NGO,” “charity,” and “foundation” are often used loosely, but they are not identical.
A. Non-stock, non-profit corporation
This is the general SEC vehicle. It is appropriate for most organizations that are not formed to issue shares or distribute profits.
B. Foundation
A foundation is usually a non-stock, non-profit corporation with a fund or endowment established for charitable, educational, religious, cultural, or similar purposes. In SEC practice, foundations are subject to stricter documentary and funding expectations than ordinary non-stock corporations.
C. NGO
“NGO” is often a functional or sectoral label rather than a separate SEC corporate form. Many NGOs are simply SEC-registered non-stock corporations. Some later obtain additional accreditations for tax, grants, or government partnership purposes.
D. Entities not registered with the SEC
Not every nonprofit belongs at the SEC.
A different registration path may apply to:
- Cooperatives, which are generally registered with the Cooperative Development Authority (CDA);
- Religious corporations sole and certain religious societies, which have special corporate treatment under Philippine law;
- Labor organizations, which register with labor authorities;
- Homeowners’ associations, which may fall under specialized regulation depending on the organization and law involved;
- Unincorporated associations, which may exist contractually but do not enjoy the same corporate juridical personality.
So the first legal question is not merely “How do I register a nonprofit?” but “Is a non-stock corporation under the SEC the correct legal form for this organization?”
3. When SEC registration is the right choice
SEC registration is usually appropriate when the founders want an organization that:
- has a separate legal personality;
- can own or lease property in its own name;
- can receive institutional funding or formal donations;
- has a board-based governance structure;
- can continue despite changes in members or officers;
- is not intended to issue shares or distribute profits.
For most charitable, educational, advocacy, cultural, professional, and civic organizations, that answer is yes.
4. Core legal characteristics of a Philippine non-stock corporation
A proper non-stock, non-profit corporation has several defining traits.
First, it has no capital stock and issues no shares.
Second, it may have members, or it may be structured so that governance is exercised primarily through trustees as permitted by its constitutive documents and the Corporation Code.
Third, it is managed by a board of trustees, not a board of directors. That distinction matters. Stock corporations have directors; non-stock corporations have trustees.
Fourth, its purposes must be lawful, and its operations must be consistent with those purposes. A nonprofit cannot be registered with a generic or overly vague objective and then later operate as something entirely different.
Fifth, it must observe the non-distribution constraint. Surplus funds may be retained and used for programs, administration, or expansion consistent with the stated purposes, but not distributed to insiders as profits.
Finally, upon dissolution, its assets are not simply divided among founders. The rules on dissolution and asset distribution depend on the articles, bylaws, donor restrictions, the nature of the organization, and the Corporation Code.
5. Choosing the right structure before filing
Many SEC problems begin before the first document is drafted. The founders should settle five structural questions first.
A. What is the organization’s exact purpose?
The purpose clause should be specific enough to describe the actual mission, but broad enough to allow ordinary supporting activities. For example, an education nonprofit may state that its primary purpose is to promote access to literacy and community education, and secondary purposes may include training, scholarship administration, publication, partnerships, fundraising within legal limits, and property administration for those ends.
A vague clause such as “for charitable and other lawful purposes” is usually too thin. On the other hand, a purpose clause copied from a business corporation is a red flag.
B. Will it be a membership organization or not?
A membership corporation suits associations where people join, vote, elect trustees, and participate in governance. Examples include alumni associations, professional societies, civic clubs, and advocacy groups.
A non-membership or tightly structured organization is more common for some operating charities or institutions where governance is trustee-centered.
This choice affects the bylaws, quorum rules, admission and termination of members, voting rights, annual meetings, and trustee elections.
C. Is it really a foundation?
If the organization will hold an endowed fund or permanent charitable corpus and wants to call itself a foundation, the SEC typically expects compliance with the rules applicable to foundations, including minimum contribution requirements recognized in SEC practice.
D. Who will serve as incorporators and initial trustees?
The founders must ensure the people named are legally qualified and genuinely willing to assume fiduciary duties.
E. Will the organization solicit donations, receive foreign funding, run schools, operate clinics, engage in social welfare work, or process personal data?
Those activities often trigger additional regulatory steps outside the SEC.
6. Minimum legal requirements for incorporation
A. Incorporators
Under the Revised Corporation Code, a corporation may be organized by eligible incorporators, subject to the legal limits in the law. As a practical matter, non-stock incorporations submitted to the SEC are usually structured around the statutory cap applicable to incorporators.
Incorporators may be natural persons and, in some situations allowed by law, juridical entities. Their identities, nationalities, and addresses must be properly disclosed. The founders should also ensure that nationality restrictions are not violated if the nonprofit’s activities fall within partially nationalized fields or regulated sectors.
B. Trustees
A non-stock corporation must have a board of trustees of not fewer than five (5) and not more than fifteen (15).
The initial trustees are named in the Articles of Incorporation and serve until their successors are elected and qualified in accordance with law and the bylaws.
C. Residency and officer requirements
Certain roles have legal qualifications. The corporate secretary must generally be a Filipino citizen and resident of the Philippines. The treasurer must meet the residence requirements imposed by law and SEC practice. The officers actually elected should be consistent with the Corporation Code and the bylaws.
D. Principal office
The principal office must be stated in the Philippines, typically at least down to the city or municipality. The SEC generally does not accept an imprecise statement such as merely “Metro Manila.”
E. Corporate term
Under current corporate law, corporations generally have perpetual existence unless the articles provide otherwise.
7. The name of the nonprofit
The proposed corporate name is not a minor detail. It is often the first obstacle.
The name must not be:
- identical or confusingly similar to an existing corporate or business name;
- misleading as to the nature of the organization;
- contrary to law, morals, or public policy;
- deceptive in implying government affiliation or regulated status without basis.
Words like “Foundation,” “Association,” “Federation,” “Institute,” “Church,” “Ministry,” or “Charitable” should reflect the true nature of the entity. Calling an organization a “foundation” without satisfying the corresponding legal and factual expectations may invite SEC scrutiny.
As a practical drafting point, it is wise to prepare two or three fallback names.
8. The Articles of Incorporation: what they must contain
The Articles of Incorporation are the nonprofit’s charter. They create the corporation and define its legal identity.
For a Philippine non-stock corporation, the articles generally contain:
Corporate name The exact name sought to be registered.
Specific purpose or purposes The primary purpose should be clear and lawful. Secondary purposes may be added, but they should remain consistent with the nonprofit character of the organization.
Principal office The city or municipality in the Philippines where the principal office is located.
Corporate term Usually perpetual unless limited by the articles.
Names, nationalities, and addresses of the incorporators
Number of trustees Which must be within the statutory range for non-stock corporations.
Names, nationalities, and addresses of the first trustees
Statement that the corporation is non-stock and non-profit The articles should make clear that no part of the income is distributable as dividends to members, trustees, or officers, except reasonable compensation for services actually rendered.
Other lawful provisions The articles may include additional provisions consistent with law, such as membership structure, asset disposition rules upon dissolution, limitations on powers, or governance features.
For some nonprofits, especially foundations, the SEC may expect details regarding initial contributions or funding commitments and supporting proof of such contributions.
9. The Bylaws: the nonprofit’s operating constitution
If the articles are the charter, the Bylaws are the operating constitution.
The bylaws usually govern:
- qualifications, rights, and obligations of members;
- admission, suspension, expulsion, or termination of members;
- classes of membership, if any;
- meeting schedules and notice requirements;
- quorum and voting rules;
- election, term, qualification, and removal of trustees;
- powers and duties of officers;
- committee structure;
- fiscal administration and internal controls;
- amendment procedures;
- conflict-of-interest rules and custody of records.
A nonprofit’s bylaws should not be treated as boilerplate. They are often the document that determines whether internal disputes later become manageable or destructive.
For example, a membership-based nonprofit that does not clearly define who is a member, when membership begins, who may vote, and how membership is terminated is essentially inviting future governance litigation.
10. Additional documentary requirements often encountered
Apart from the Articles and Bylaws, SEC processing usually involves supporting documents, depending on the nature of the applicant and the filing system in use.
These may include:
- name verification or reservation results;
- cover sheets or SEC-prescribed forms;
- written undertakings or certifications;
- proof of address for the principal office;
- tax identification numbers of incorporators or trustees where required in forms;
- notarization or authentication of incorporators’ signatures, depending on the SEC’s current filing rules;
- for juridical incorporators, board resolutions authorizing participation and naming signatories;
- for foreign entities or nonresident participants, properly authenticated corporate documents when applicable;
- for regulated purposes, favorable endorsements or clearances from relevant agencies.
In practice, the SEC may require more than one round of compliance if the nonprofit’s purpose touches on education, finance, social welfare, religious work, healthcare, lending, insurance-like activity, or other specially regulated fields.
11. Special rules for foundations
A great deal of confusion surrounds foundations.
In SEC practice, a foundation is generally expected to show a significant initial fund or contribution dedicated to charitable or similar purposes. The long-standing SEC position has been that a foundation must have a minimum contribution of at least ₱1,000,000, with at least 25% of that amount contributed, and in no case less than ₱100,000 initially paid or transferred, subject to the SEC’s implementing rules and documentation requirements.
That means a group should not casually use the word “foundation” in its corporate name unless it is prepared to meet the corresponding legal and evidentiary burden.
Foundations are also more likely to be asked for:
- a statement of contributions or endowment;
- proof of deposited funds or transferred property;
- details on intended charitable administration;
- restrictions on use of donated principal.
If the organization does not truly have an endowed or contributed fund structure, it may be more appropriate to register simply as a non-stock, non-profit corporation rather than a foundation.
12. The SEC filing process
The SEC has, in recent years, used electronic filing platforms and submission systems for company registration and document submission. The exact portal name, filing path, and procedural sequence can change through SEC circulars and platform updates, but the legal flow generally remains the same.
Step 1: Prepare the organizational documents
Draft the Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws carefully and consistently. The organization’s name, purpose, principal office, incorporators, trustees, and governance provisions must align across all documents.
Step 2: Secure or confirm the corporate name
The proposed name is screened for availability and compliance.
Step 3: Complete the SEC forms and supporting papers
The SEC will require prescribed forms and supporting uploads or submissions depending on the filing route.
Step 4: Execute and authenticate the documents
Signatures, acknowledgments, and notarization should follow the SEC’s current documentary rules.
Step 5: Submit the application and pay fees
The organization files with the SEC through the current online or manual process and pays the assessed filing fees.
Step 6: Respond to SEC comments, if any
Many applications are not denied outright but returned for correction. Typical comments concern vague purposes, defective bylaws, inconsistent addresses, improper naming, missing proof for a foundation, or governance clauses that conflict with law.
Step 7: Receive the SEC Certificate of Incorporation
Once approved, the SEC issues the Certificate of Incorporation. At that point, the nonprofit comes into legal existence.
13. Filing fees and costs
The SEC charges filing and legal research fees under its schedule of fees, and those amounts can change. In addition to SEC fees, practical setup costs may include notarization, document preparation, name verification, and, if applicable, documentary requirements for a foundation or foreign participants.
For a legal article, the important point is not the exact peso amount, which may change, but the rule: SEC registration is a fee-bearing regulatory process, and the amount depends on the filing type and applicable schedules.
14. Common SEC issues that delay approval
A. The purpose clause is too broad or too commercial
A nonprofit may carry out revenue-generating activities only as means to its nonprofit purposes. If the purpose clause reads like a for-profit business charter, the SEC may object.
B. “Foundation” is used without foundation-level compliance
This is a recurrent mistake.
C. The principal office is incomplete
The city or municipality must be properly stated.
D. Trustee structure is defective
A non-stock corporation must have the legally required number of trustees.
E. The bylaws contradict the articles or the Corporation Code
For example, granting powers to officers that belong by law to the board, or setting voting rules inconsistent with statutory rights.
F. Membership provisions are unclear
If the organization is member-based, the bylaws must define membership, voting, and discipline clearly.
G. The nonprofit character is not sufficiently stated
The non-distribution principle should be express, not implied.
H. Lack of proof for contributed funds in a foundation
Where required, proof must be real and documentable.
15. Foreign nationals and foreign-funded nonprofits
Foreign participation is legally possible in many nonprofit settings, but it must be approached carefully.
Three different issues must be separated.
A. Foreign incorporators or trustees
These may be allowed depending on the purpose and the nationality restrictions governing the activity. If the nonprofit’s work falls within an area reserved or partially reserved to Filipinos, nationality rules become critical.
B. Foreign donations or grants
Receiving foreign grants does not by itself eliminate SEC registration or change the entity’s Philippine character, but it may create additional reporting, banking, contractual, anti-money-laundering, and sectoral compliance obligations.
C. Foreign nonprofit branches or representative offices
A foreign nonprofit that wants to operate directly in the Philippines is a different case from a locally incorporated Philippine non-stock corporation. It may need to qualify under the rules applicable to foreign corporations or adopt another lawful structure.
16. What SEC registration does not do
SEC registration does not automatically:
- grant tax exemption;
- authorize public solicitation of funds everywhere in the country;
- exempt the organization from local permits;
- authorize operation of schools, clinics, financial programs, or social welfare institutions without separate permits;
- make donations automatically deductible for donors;
- exempt the organization from labor, data privacy, anti-money-laundering, accounting, or reportorial requirements.
That distinction is fundamental. The SEC creates the corporation; it does not clear every other legal hurdle.
17. Post-registration obligations: what must be done after the SEC approves
A. Organizational meeting
After incorporation, the trustees should hold the organizational meeting to:
- adopt or confirm the bylaws if needed;
- elect officers;
- approve opening bank accounts;
- adopt internal policies;
- authorize BIR and local registrations;
- fix the fiscal year;
- approve accounting controls and custody of records.
Minutes should be properly prepared and kept.
B. BIR registration
The nonprofit must register with the Bureau of Internal Revenue. It may need:
- a taxpayer identification setup or update;
- books of account;
- authority to print or use invoices/receipts if applicable;
- registration of official receipts for donations or service income, depending on operations.
An important legal point: SEC incorporation does not equal tax exemption.
A non-stock corporation may fall under the exempt organizations described in the National Internal Revenue Code, particularly those organized and operated exclusively for purposes recognized by law, but exemption is not self-executing in practice. The organization must still comply with BIR requirements and, where applicable, secure recognition or certification of tax-exempt status.
C. Local government permits
If the nonprofit maintains an office, it may need barangay clearance, mayor’s permit, and related local clearances, depending on the city or municipality and the nature of operations.
D. Employer registrations
If the nonprofit hires staff, it must comply with labor and social legislation, including registrations and remittances involving:
- SSS
- PhilHealth
- Pag-IBIG
- labor standards compliance
E. Data privacy compliance
If the organization collects donor, beneficiary, employee, student, patient, parishioner, or member information, it must comply with the Data Privacy Act and National Privacy Commission requirements where applicable.
F. Sector-specific licenses
A nonprofit engaged in education, healthcare, social welfare placements, adoption, microfinance, housing, environmental regulation, or other supervised sectors may need further licensing.
G. Permit to solicit or raise funds
Where the organization intends to conduct public fundraising or solicit charitable contributions, separate permits may be required under laws and regulations on solicitations and charitable drives.
18. Tax status: the most misunderstood part
Many founders assume that once the SEC approves the nonprofit, all income becomes tax-free. That is incorrect.
The better legal statement is this: a nonprofit’s possible tax privileges depend on the tax law, the actual operations of the organization, and BIR compliance.
A non-stock nonprofit may still be taxable on:
- income from activities unrelated to its exempt purpose;
- improperly documented receipts;
- transactions treated as compensation or business income;
- property or local taxes unless exempted by law or local rules;
- VAT or percentage tax issues, depending on the activity and structure.
Similarly, donors do not automatically receive deductibility merely because they donated to an SEC-registered nonprofit. For full donor deductibility or donee-institution recognition, the organization may need separate accreditation and BIR recognition, and some nonprofits pursue accreditation through recognized accrediting bodies such as the Philippine Council for NGO Certification (PCNC), depending on the donation and tax context.
The rule of thumb is simple: SEC registration creates the nonprofit corporation; tax exemption and donor deductibility are separate questions.
19. Governance duties of trustees and officers
Trustees of a nonprofit owe fiduciary obligations. Even in the absence of shareholders, the governance standards are serious.
Trustees and officers must:
- act within the purposes of the corporation;
- avoid conflicts of interest and self-dealing except as allowed by law and properly approved;
- protect corporate assets;
- keep accurate records;
- ensure compliance with reportorial obligations;
- act in good faith and with loyalty to the organization, not to factional interests.
A nonprofit is not a private wallet for its founders. Excessive allowances, insider transactions, undocumented reimbursements, and informal cash handling create both corporate and tax risk.
20. Annual and continuing compliance with the SEC
Registration is not the end of SEC oversight. Non-stock corporations are generally expected to comply with reportorial obligations, which may include annual filings and other submissions required by law, SEC memoranda, or the organization’s classification.
Depending on the nonprofit’s size, status, and activities, this may include:
- annual financial statements;
- general information filings;
- notices or disclosures when changes occur in trustees, officers, principal office, or articles/bylaws;
- special compliance for entities considered of public interest or otherwise specially regulated.
Failure to file can lead to penalties, delinquent status, and eventually revocation or other sanctions.
21. Amendment of the articles or bylaws after registration
A nonprofit can later amend its articles or bylaws, but only in the manner provided by the Corporation Code and its own governing documents.
Common amendments include:
- change of name;
- change of principal office;
- expansion or revision of purposes;
- restructuring membership classes;
- increasing or decreasing the number of trustees within the legal range;
- revising governance or voting provisions.
Amendments are not effective merely because the board or members informally agreed; they generally require formal approval and SEC filing where the law requires it.
22. Dissolution and distribution of assets
Dissolution of a nonprofit is legally sensitive because the assets are impressed with the organization’s purposes.
On dissolution, the rules depend on:
- the Corporation Code;
- donor restrictions;
- whether assets were held upon trust;
- the articles and bylaws;
- the nature of the nonprofit;
- creditors’ rights.
In general, after liabilities are settled, assets of a genuine nonprofit are not treated like profits to be divided among founders. They are typically disposed of in the manner provided by law and the governing documents, often to another organization with similar purposes where appropriate.
This is another reason the articles and bylaws should contain a carefully drafted dissolution clause.
23. Sample legal pathway: ordinary nonprofit versus foundation
Ordinary non-stock, non-profit corporation
This is best where a group of founders wants to organize a charity, association, ministry, educational initiative, or advocacy institution without committing an endowed fund structure. The main legal burden is proper drafting of the articles, bylaws, trusteeship, and regulatory compliance.
Foundation
This is best where there is an actual dedicated charitable fund or endowment and the founders are ready to document the required contribution and administer the organization as a foundation.
Choosing the wrong label at the outset creates avoidable SEC objections.
24. Practical drafting tips that matter legally
A nonprofit application is much stronger when:
- the purpose clause is concrete and mission-based;
- secondary purposes support, rather than overshadow, the primary purpose;
- the bylaws clearly identify whether the organization has voting members;
- trustee qualifications and election rules are explicit;
- conflict-of-interest and financial control clauses are included;
- the dissolution clause reflects nonprofit asset restrictions;
- the use of the words “foundation,” “charity,” “church,” “academy,” “institute,” or “federation” is justified by the facts.
25. A concise checklist of the incorporation process
In legal sequence, the process usually looks like this:
- Determine that SEC non-stock incorporation is the correct legal form.
- Choose a compliant corporate name.
- Define the primary and secondary purposes precisely.
- Decide whether the corporation will be member-based.
- Select qualified incorporators, trustees, and officers.
- Prepare the Articles of Incorporation.
- Prepare the Bylaws.
- Gather supporting documents and certifications.
- File with the SEC under its current filing system and pay fees.
- Comply with any SEC comments or deficiencies.
- Obtain the Certificate of Incorporation.
- Hold the organizational meeting and elect officers.
- Register with the BIR and secure books/receipts as needed.
- Obtain local permits and employer registrations where applicable.
- Secure any sector-specific permits, fundraising authority, or tax-exemption recognition required for operations.
26. The bottom line
To register a nonprofit organization with the SEC in the Philippines, the organization is ordinarily formed as a non-stock, non-profit corporation under the Revised Corporation Code. The founders must prepare legally compliant Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws, choose a lawful and available name, identify qualified incorporators and at least five trustees, define a proper principal office and nonprofit purposes, and file the application with the SEC together with the required supporting documents and fees. If the entity is to be a foundation, stricter funding and documentary requirements apply. Once the SEC issues the Certificate of Incorporation, the organization acquires juridical personality, but it must still complete BIR registration, local permits, labor and privacy compliance where applicable, and any special permits needed for fundraising or regulated activities. Most importantly, SEC registration by itself does not automatically confer tax exemption or deductible-donation status.
A properly registered nonprofit is not merely a group with good intentions. It is a juridical entity governed by corporate law, tax rules, fiduciary standards, and continuing regulatory obligations. The strength of the organization later often depends on how carefully it was structured at the beginning.