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Year-End/Annual Reports for NGOs/NPOs: What to Include and What to Avoid, with Template

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Here’s a clear, practical guide to year-end reports for NGOs/NPOs that you can use to plan, write, or evaluate your own report. What matters most, what doesn’t, and a comparison chart with 10 real examples and links.

Without fail, this report usually falls to the communications section to collect, revise, submit for approval and publish.


What a Year-End Report Should Do

A year-end report (often called an annual report) is a communication tool you share with donors, board members, grantmakers, volunteers, partners, and sometimes the public. It should:

  • Document your mission and impact for the year.
  • Show how funds were used with clear financials.
  • Tell real stories that make impact tangible.
  • Thank supporters and team members.
  • Point to future plans and needs.

These elements build trust and help secure support next year. (National Council of Nonprofits)

Formal requirement vs. outreach tool.
Legal reporting (e.g., IRS Form 990 in the U.S.) is required for tax-exempt status and is a public record but it’s not a communications piece for donors. An annual report is optional but very useful. (Bloomerang) In Europe, it is a legal obligation to publish a year-end report if you have been charity or non-taxable status.


What to Include (and Why)

Mission & context. Briefly remind readers who you are and why you exist. (Givebutter)
Highlights. Showcase 3-5 major accomplishments with numbers and short descriptions. (Aplos)
Impact stories. Real quotes or brief cases anchor abstract numbers in human experience. (Bonterra)
Financial summary. Revenues vs. expenses, allocation to programs vs. admin, and a clear explanation of funding use. (Givebutter)
Supporter recognition. Acknowledge major donors, volunteers, partners. (National Council of Nonprofits)
Goals for next year. Show direction and needs. (Givebutter)
Call to action. Invite readers to give, volunteer, or engage next year. (The Commons)


What Is Not Relevant (Usually Obvious)

  • Excessive internal detail (e.g., meeting minutes, full board discussion logs).
  • Unverified or inflated impact claims (harms credibility).
  • Irrelevant narrative tangents that distract from mission.
  • Full financial ledgers (summary is fine; detailed audit available on request).

Practical Examples (Chart)

Below is a table of strong NGO/NPO year-end report examples with direct links. These show a mix of PDF, web, and interactive reports used by organizations.

These organizations publish reports that show their work in ways donors understand without excess detail. They also maintain public archives of earlier reports, which helps readers track progress across years.

Links takes you to a full report or report hub.

OrganisationYearFormatNotable StrengthLink
Feeding America2024PDFClear visuals and strong datahttps://www.feedingamerica.org/about-us/annual-report
Blood Cancer UK2024PDFGood mission framing with patient storieshttps://bloodcancer.org.uk/about-us/annual-report
WWF2024Web and PDFClear financials and project summarieshttps://www.worldwildlife.org/pages/annual-report
Rhode Island Foundation2024WebStrong storytelling and image usehttps://rifoundation.org/annualreport
American Heart Association2023–24PDFDetailed program data in simple languagehttps://www.heart.org/en/about-us/annual-report
Girls Who Code2024Interactive webEngaging digital format and clean metricshttps://girlswhocode.com/annual-report
Save the Children2023PDFBalanced data and narrativehttps://www.savethechildren.org/us/about-us/resource-library/annual-report
National Park Foundation2024PDFClear charts and donor recognitionhttps://www.nationalparks.org/about-foundation/annual-report
Habitat for Humanity2024Web and PDFStrong focus on measurable resultshttps://www.habitat.org/about/annual-reports
Atlanta Humane Society2024PDFShort format with clean program numbershttps://atlantahumane.org/about/annual-report

Notes:
These links are typical base URLs. Annual report pages are usually under “About Us/Reports/Annual Report” or similar and may require navigating from the homepage.

Sources used to identify these examples include curated lists and reviews of nonprofit annual reports. Specific reports change year to year. (Bloomerang)

Template

Year-End Report Template for NGOs and NPOs

Title Page
Organisation name
Year
Short tagline
Photo that reflects your work

Letter From Leadership
Two or three short paragraphs
State purpose, key achievements, and overall direction
Keep tone factual and forward facing

Mission Statement
One paragraph that states your mission
Describe who you serve and why your work matters

Year Highlights
Use three to five points with data
• Number of people served
• Number of programs delivered
• Key outcomes reached
• Major partnerships
• Important milestones

Impact Story
Short case story, two or three paragraphs
Include one quote from a beneficiary, partner, or field staff

Program Overview
Summaries for each major program
Keep each section to four or five lines
State goals, reach, and specific results

Financial Summary
One page with three elements
• Total income
• Total expenses
• Program vs administration spending
Include a simple pie or bar chart

Donor and Partner Recognition
Thank supporters
List major donors if appropriate
Acknowledge volunteers or key partners

Next Year’s Goals
Short list of clear priorities
State planned activities and growth areas

Call to Action
Invite readers to donate, subscribe, or join an event
Keep the invitation clear and direct

Contact Information
Website
Email
Address
Social channels


Quick Checklist (Before You Publish)

A strong annual report balances data with human stories and numbers with narrative.


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