Virtual Assistant for Nonprofit Accounting: Fund Tracking, Grant Reporting, and Compliance

VirtualAssistantVA Team·

Why Nonprofit Accounting Is Different

Nonprofit accounting operates under different rules than for-profit bookkeeping. Instead of tracking profit, nonprofits must track how funds are received, restricted, and used across multiple programs and funding sources. This creates accounting requirements that most general bookkeepers aren't trained for:

  • Fund accounting — Tracking restricted vs. unrestricted funds separately
  • Grant tracking — Recording grant receipts, expenses, and balances by grant
  • Program expense allocation — Distributing shared costs across programs and administrative functions
  • Form 990 preparation — Annual IRS filing with complex reporting requirements
  • Donor reporting — Acknowledgment letters, pledge tracking, and gift records
  • Audit support — Documentation and schedules required by independent auditors

A virtual assistant with nonprofit accounting experience can handle the bookkeeping, reporting, and documentation workflows that support all of these requirements.

Fund Tracking: The Core of Nonprofit Bookkeeping

Fund accounting requires that every transaction be classified not just by account (expense type) but also by fund (which budget or program it belongs to). A VA can:

  • Maintain the fund structure in your accounting software (QuickBooks Nonprofit, Aplos, Sage Intacct)
  • Code every transaction to the appropriate fund and program
  • Track restricted fund balances to ensure spending stays within allowed categories
  • Generate fund balance reports showing available resources by fund
  • Alert the finance team when a restricted fund is approaching its balance limit

Restricted vs. Unrestricted Funds

  • Unrestricted funds — Can be used for any organizational purpose
  • Temporarily restricted funds — Must be used for a specific purpose or within a specific time frame
  • Permanently restricted funds — Principal must be maintained; typically endowment funds

Your VA must understand how to record releases from restriction when restricted funds are spent for their intended purpose — a specific journal entry that moves funds from restricted to unrestricted.

Grant Reporting: Tracking Every Dollar

Grant funders typically require detailed reports showing how grant funds were spent and what outcomes were achieved. The financial portion of grant reporting requires:

  • A detailed income and expense report for the grant period
  • Documentation of how shared costs were allocated to the grant
  • Bank statements and receipts supporting reported expenses
  • A reconciliation between the grant budget and actual spending

A VA can:

  • Set up a grant tracking workbook or spreadsheet for each active grant
  • Record grant-related expenses as they occur
  • Pull grant expenditure reports from accounting software
  • Compile supporting documentation
  • Prepare the financial portion of grant reports for review by your finance director or executive director
  • Track grant reporting deadlines and send reminders

Grant Management Tracker

A well-organized VA maintains a master grant tracker that shows:

Grant Funder Award Amount Period Report Due Status
Program A Grant Foundation X $50,000 Jan-Dec 2026 Jan 31, 2027 Active
General Operating Community Fund $25,000 July-June Aug 31, 2026 Active

This tracker prevents missed reporting deadlines — which can jeopardize current and future funding.

Compliance Documentation

Nonprofits face ongoing compliance requirements. A VA can support:

Form 990 Preparation Support

  • Compile revenue and expense totals by category
  • Gather information on major program activities and expenses
  • Prepare supporting schedules (compensation, grants paid, etc.)
  • Organize documentation for the preparer (CPA or enrolled agent)

Donor Acknowledgment Letters

Under IRS rules, nonprofits must provide written acknowledgment for contributions of $250 or more. A VA can:

  • Generate acknowledgment letters from your donor database
  • Customize letters for different gift types (cash, in-kind, payroll deduction)
  • Mail or email letters within the required timeframe
  • Log acknowledgments sent in your donor tracking system

Board Meeting and Financial Reporting

  • Prepare monthly financial statements for board review (P&L, balance sheet, budget vs. actual)
  • Format reports per your board's preferred format
  • Distribute board packet components to the executive director or board chair
  • Maintain records of financial reports presented at each meeting

Audit Support

  • Organize transaction files and supporting documentation by account
  • Prepare audit schedules and supporting schedules
  • Respond to auditor document requests
  • Ensure all grant files are complete and accessible

Accounts Payable and Receivable

  • Process vendor invoices and ensure proper fund coding
  • Schedule and process approved payments
  • Record grant draw requests and incoming grant payments
  • Reconcile receivables to grant award letters

Payroll Support

Many nonprofits allocate employee time across multiple programs for grant reporting. A VA can:

  • Collect and organize timesheets
  • Calculate program/grant time allocation percentages
  • Ensure payroll journal entries reflect correct program allocations

For guidance on working with accounting software, see virtual assistant for QuickBooks Online: setup, reconciliation, and reporting.

What to Look for in a Nonprofit Accounting VA

  • Prior nonprofit or fund accounting experience
  • Familiarity with QuickBooks Nonprofit, Aplos, or Blackbaud Financial Edge
  • Understanding of fund accounting principles
  • Experience with grant reporting documentation
  • Attention to detail and comfort with compliance requirements

Ready to Hire?

Nonprofit accounting is too specialized for a general bookkeeper — and too time-consuming for an executive director to manage alone. A trained VA with nonprofit accounting experience can keep your funds tracked, your grants reported, and your compliance documentation in order. Ready to hire a virtual assistant? Virtual Assistant VA connects you with trained VAs who specialize in nonprofit accounting — so your organization stays compliant, your funders stay satisfied, and your team stays focused on the mission.

Need Help With Your Business?

Get a free consultation — our VA experts will match you with the right assistant.

Ready to Boost Your Productivity?

Let a dedicated virtual assistant handle the tasks that slow you down. More time for what matters most.