Regulator publishes revised financial guidance

The Charity Commission has today published four updated sets of financial guidance for charities and their advisers covering risk management; financial difficulties and insolvency; reserves and internal financial controls.

The four sets of guidance are:

• Charities and Risk Management (CC26)

• Financial Difficulties and Insolvency (CC12)

• Charities and Reserves (CC19)

• Internal Financial Controls (CC8)

The guidance has been revised to reflect new developments and the challenging economic climate that charities now face.

It covers the main points of financial management, planning and control in the context of charity law and good practice.

The Commission's latest Economic Survey of Charities showed that 47% of charities thought the sector would feel the effects of the recession later than the private and public sectors, and take longer to recover.

This guidance, available on the Commission's website, is the latest in a number of steps taken by the Commission to support charities through the downturn and follows the publication of the 'Big Board Talk - 15 questions all charities need to ask' and our four Economic Surveys of Charities.

Andrew Hind, chief executive of the Charity Commission, said: "Careful management of risks, strong internal financial controls and a clear reserves policy form the cornerstone of a well managed charity.

"At a time when many charities are reviewing their financial and risk management, it is important that they have the right tools to be able to mitigate risk, overcome financial difficulties and to be clear about how to manage reserves and establishinternal financial controls. In an uncertain economic climate, it is more important than ever for charities to review and actively manage the risks they face. Regardless of a charity's size, this revised guidance is something for all trustees to read."

Updates include a new risk grid (Charities and Risk Management); guidance on controls over internet banking and safeguards against fraud and financial crime (Internal Financial Controls); a checklist of key questions for trustees to establish their charity's financial position (Financial Difficulties and Insolvency) and guidance on setting reserves in the context of financial and risk management (Charities and Reserves).

The four new sets of guidance can be found on the Charity Commission's website at www.charitycommission.gov.uk.

    Share Story:

Recent Stories


Charity Times video Q&A: In conversation with Hilda Hayo, CEO of Dementia UK
Charity Times editor, Lauren Weymouth, is joined by Dementia UK CEO, Hilda Hayo to discuss why the charity receives such high workplace satisfaction results, what a positive working culture looks like and the importance of lived experience among staff. The pair talk about challenges facing the charity, the impact felt by the pandemic and how it's striving to overcome obstacles and continue to be a highly impactful organisation for anybody affected by dementia.
Charity Times Awards 2023

Mitigating risk and reducing claims
The cost-of-living crisis is impacting charities in a number of ways, including the risks they take. Endsleigh Insurance’s* senior risk management consultant Scott Crichton joins Charity Times to discuss the ramifications of prioritising certain types of risk over others, the financial implications risk can have if not managed properly, and tips for charities to help manage those risks.

* Coming soon… Howden, the new name for Endsleigh.