10 Questions Nonprofit Board Members Should Ask When Presented with a Deficit Budget
Approving a deficit budget is one of the most critical decisions a nonprofit board will make. And yet, it’s often rushed, softened, or passed with statements like:
- “We’ll make it up in fundraising.”
- “This is just how nonprofits operate.”
- “We don’t want to cut mission.”
Let’s be clear:
A deficit budget is not just a financial document. It is a strategic decision with real consequences.
It can be appropriate.
It can also be reckless.
The difference comes down to the questions the board asks before approving it.
- Is this a one-time deficit or part of a pattern?
This question sets the tone for everything else.
A one-time deficit might be:
- A planned investment in a new program
- A temporary timing issue with grant funding
- A strategic decision to use reserves
But recurring deficits signal something deeper:
- Chronic underfunding
- Overspending
- A mismatch between mission ambitions and financial reality
Board takeaway:
If you’ve approved deficit budgets for multiple years in a row, you don’t have a budget issue, you have a business model problem.
- What specifically is causing the deficit?
“Expenses are higher than revenue” is not an answer.
Push for clarity:
- Which programs are losing money?
- Is this driven by payroll growth?
- Have revenues declined or just not kept pace?
Example:
- A deficit driven by a new strategic program is very different from one caused by rising administrative costs with no plan.
Board takeaway:
You are not approving “a deficit.”
You are approving the underlying choices that created it.
- What assumptions is this budget built on?
Every deficit budget has hidden optimism baked into it.
Common assumptions include:
- “We expect to receive a new grant”
- “Fundraising will increase this year”
- “We’ll control expenses”
None of these are guarantees.
Ask for specifics:
- Is the grant already awarded or just applied for?
- What evidence supports increased donations?
- What controls ensure expenses won’t exceed budget?
Board takeaway:
If the assumptions feel uncertain, the deficit is likely larger than it appears.
- What happens if those assumptions don’t happen?
This is where governance becomes real.
Ask leadership to walk through:
- A conservative scenario (e.g., revenue is 10% lower)
- A worst-case scenario (e.g., funding is delayed)
Example: If a major grant is delayed by 90 days:
- Can payroll still be met?
- Will you need to draw on reserves or borrow?
Board takeaway:
Approving a deficit without understanding downside risk is essentially approving a best-case budget.
- How exactly will the deficit be funded?
This is one of the most important and most skipped questions.
A deficit must come with a clear funding source:
- Operating reserves
- Investment drawdowns
- Line of credit
If the answer is vague (“we’ll cover it through operations”), press harder.
Board takeaway:
A deficit without a funding plan is not financially viable. It’s just unexplained shortfall.
- How will this impact our reserves?
Numbers matter here.
Ask:
- What are our current reserves?
- How much of those will be used?
- What will remain after this year?
Example: If reserves drop from 6 months of cash to 2 months, the organization moves from stable to high risk immediately.
Board takeaway:
Reserves are a strategic asset, not a cushion to quietly absorb ongoing deficits.
- Are restricted funds being used or indirectly relied on?
Boards often miss this because it’s not always obvious.
Ask directly:
- Do we have cash we cannot use for operations?
- Are we relying on timing differences (spending now, funding later)?
Subtle red flag: “We’ll cover it temporarily until funding comes in.”
Board takeaway:
Using restricted funds, even temporarily, creates both compliance risk and a false sense of liquidity.
- What cost reductions were considered but not included?
This question changes the entire conversation.
Instead of accepting the budget as presented, ask:
- What cuts were on the table?
- Why were they rejected?
- What would a break-even version of this budget look like?
This forces transparency.
Board takeaway:
If the board is only presented with a deficit option, it’s not being given a real choice. It’s being given a preferred outcome.
- What is the plan to return to a balanced budget?
A deficit must come with an exit strategy.
Ask:
- Is this expected to continue next year?
- What changes will eliminate the deficit?
- What metrics will the board monitor along the way?
Look for:
- Specific actions (not general intentions)
- A timeline (not “eventually”)
Board takeaway:
Without a plan, a deficit becomes the new baseline, not a temporary decision.
- What message does approving this send?
This is the governance lens.
Approving a deficit signals:
- To management: what the board will tolerate
- To donors: how resources are managed
- To auditors/regulators: the organization’s financial discipline
Ask yourselves:
- Are we being thoughtful or just avoiding hard conversations?
- Would we make this same decision if reserves were already tight?
- Are we comfortable defending this decision publicly?
Board takeaway:
Boards don’t just approve budgets; they define financial accountability culture.
Deficit budgets are not inherently bad. But they should never be routine, rushed, or poorly understood.
Strong boards don’t just ask: “Can we approve this?” They ask: “Do we fully understand what we are choosing and what it will cost us six months from now?”
Because by the time a deficit shows up as a crisis…it’s already too late for better questions.
Contact Us
"*" indicates required fields