Operating Reserve
An operating reserve is a designated pool of unrestricted funds that a nonprofit maintains to cover unexpected expenses or revenue shortfalls, typically 3-6 months of operating costs.
An operating reserve is a fund of unrestricted cash and liquid assets that a nonprofit sets aside to cover unexpected expenses, revenue shortfalls, or temporary cash flow gaps. Financial best practices recommend maintaining 3-6 months of operating expenses in reserve.
Why It Matters for Fundraising
Operating reserves provide the financial stability that allows nonprofits to take strategic risks, weather unexpected challenges, and invest in growth opportunities. Funders and donors view adequate reserves as a sign of good management, not hoarding. Ironically, organizations sometimes need to fundraise specifically for reserves — communicating this need without triggering donor concerns requires careful messaging.
Building Reserves
Most nonprofits build reserves gradually by budgeting small annual surpluses, directing one-time windfalls to the reserve fund, or running specific reserve-building campaigns. The board should establish a formal reserve policy that defines the target amount, how reserve funds can be accessed, and the plan for replenishing funds after use.