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Alternatives To Setting Up A UK Charity

A guide to alternatives to a UK charity - a Community Benefit Society, Cooperative, Credit Union, Community Amateur Sports Club (CASC), & B Corp.

Alternatives To Setting Up A UK Charity

There are alternatives to setting up a UK charity, such as an FCA Registered Mutual Society (Community Benefit Society, Cooperative or Credit Union), an HMRC registered Community Amateur Sports Club (CASC), and a B Corp.  This guide explains these alternatives, plus others, with links to more guidance on each.

What Are the Alternatives To Setting Up A Charity?

Setting up and running a charity, can involve a lot of time, workload and cost, so here are some alternatives.

  • Setting up o a Community Interest Company (CIC) - read my guide on how to choose between a CIC and a charity, with the advantages and disadvantages of each.
  • Setting Up An FCA Registered SocietyTo find out more about mutual societies, see the FAQs below or click the AI Bunny icon in the bottom right and ask it short questions. See more details below.
  • Community Amateur Sports Clubs (CASCs) are not a legal structure, but allow local amateur sports clubs to register with HMRC and benefit from a range of tax reliefs.  See more details below.
  • Work With An Existing Charity.  If you wish to raise funds for a particular cause, you could always do so for an existing charity - you can search for one here.  Working with an established charity enables you to benefit from their support and expertise.
  • Create A Named Fund.  Alternatively, you could either set up a named fund with a community foundation. It's a lot less work, but are UK only and not all foundations offer this.
  • Create A Managed Fund.  If you're confident of raising more than £20,000 pa, Prism Funds, operate Collective Funds. You won't need to register, as a charity, and they provide the administration and governance. If you have £10,000 or more to donate, you could set-up a Charities Aid Foundation charitable trust.

Setting Up a Charity Or CIC Company - Free Help

To access help and resources on anything to do with setting up a charity, CIC or any other type of non profit, visit our free online Start-Up Toolbox. We also have 3 online directories Funding FinderHelp Finder and Data Finder, Quality Mark and 60+ downloadable policies. Everything is free.

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Community Amateur Sports Club (CASC)

A Community Amateur Sports Club (CASC) is not a legal structure but a special HMRC registration that allows local amateur sports clubs to receive valuable tax reliefs, including Gift Aid. CASCs benefit from charity‑type tax advantages such as 80% mandatory business rates relief, the ability to claim Gift Aid on eligible donations, and exemptions from corporation tax.
A CASC is different from a sports charity: charities register with the Charity Commission and may register with HMRC, whereas CASCs register only with HMRC. A sports club can be a CASC or a charity, but not both. If a club wishes to become a charity, it must close the CASC and transfer its assets to a newly formed charity.

FCA Mutual Societies

A mutual society is an organisation owned by its members, where profits are reinvested to improve services rather than paid to external shareholders. Most mutual societies are regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), and some are also regulated by the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA). They must submit their AR30 annual return and accounts to the FCA within seven months of the end of their financial year.
Although mutuals are not companies, their name and reference number still appear on the Companies House register. Types of mutuals include:
  • Co‑operative Societies, which operate for the benefit of their members.
  • Community Benefit Societies, which exist to benefit the wider community and can be established as charities if they have an asset lock.
  • Credit unions are member‑owned financial co‑operatives offering lending and savings services and are dual‑regulated by the FCA and PRA.
  • Friendly societies are registered under friendly societies legislation and include working men’s clubs, benevolent societies and other specially authorised societies.

Alternatives To Setting Up A Non Profit - B Corp

The line between charities and private business is becoming more blurred and being an ethical company can have real commercial benefits, including improved customer perception and greater staff engagement. A B Corp is a business certified by the non‑profit B Lab for meeting high standards of social and environmental performance, transparency, and accountability. It’s well‑established in the US and growing in the UK, aiming to balance purpose and profit in how companies operate.

Our friends at Zeffy, who run the only free fundraising platform, are a B corp.

zeffy

What Do I Do Now?

A registered charity ourselves, we provide 8 online health checks, the huge information hub, Quality Mark and 3 online directories. It works for any non profit, not just charities.

  • Funding Finder - click through to more funders than any other grants directory, categories for Crisis Funding, Core Funding and Small Charities & Community Groups and 50+ downloadable grant lists.
  • Help Finder – find advice, pro bono support and free services and products, including companies that make financial donations.
  • Data Finder - finds data for funding bids, fundraising research, impact reporting, planning and campaigning.

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This Guide to The Alternatives to a Charity Isn't Professional Opinion

This guide to charity and CICs is for general interest.  I am not an accountant, nor a lawyer and no advice can be applicable to all organisations, in all circumstances, so this resource is no more than a guide to understanding.  I've summarised the regulatory guidance and augmented this with my own experience and Internet research, but I am not competent to provide professional advice.  I have included links to the source guidance to enable you to check this yourself and, if you think you might need professional advice, use Help Finder to find pro bono support.

Alternatives to Setting Up a UK Charity FAQs

What are alternatives to setting up a charity?

There are numerous alternatives to setting up a charity.  By far the most common is a CIC.  A less common option is an FCA registered society, such as a Community Benefit Society, Co-operative or a Credit Union.

What is a Community Amateur Sports Club (CASC)? 

A CASC is not a legal structure as such, but allows local amateur sports clubs to register with HMRC and benefit from a range of tax reliefs, including Gift Aid.

What is the difference between a CASC and a sports charity?

The difference between a CASC and a charity, is that a charity has charitable status and registers with the Charity Commission and can register with HMRC, but a CASC is only registered with HMRC.

Is a CASC a charity?

A sports club could be a CASC or a charity but not both.  CASCs are not regulated by the Charity Commission and organisations registered with HMRC as a CASC, cannot register as a charity. They would need to close down and transfer the assets to a new charity.

What is meant by mutual societies? 

A mutual society is an organisation owned by its members. Profits are usually reinvested to help improve the service, rather than paid out to external shareholders as they would be in a public limited company (PLC).

Who regulates mutual societies? 

Mutual societies are usually regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) but may be dual regulated with the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA).

What is a Co-operative Society?  

A Cooperative Society is a business run for the economic, social and cultural benefit of its members.

Is a Cooperative Society a charity? 

A Cooperative Society cannot be a charity because its beneficiaries are its own members, rather than the public.

What is a Community Benefit Society (CBC)?  

A community benefit society is a business that is run for the benefit of the wider community, re-investing profits in the community.

Can a Community Benefit Society be a charity? 

A Community benefit society can be established as a charity as long as it has an asset lock.

What is a credit union? 

A credit union is a financial co-operative owned by its members. The services credit unions can offer include deposit-taking and lending.

What is a B Corp?

A B Corp is a business certified by the non‑profit B Lab for meeting high standards of social and environmental performance, transparency, and accountability. It’s well‑established in the US and growing in the UK, aiming to balance purpose and profit in how companies operate.

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