February 20, 2026
INPAS Overview

Get a quick overview of the International Nonprofit Accounting Standard (INPAS) and what it means for nonprofit organizations around the world. This episode highlights the main objectives, structure, and adoption process for NPAS.

  • The origins and purpose of INPAS, developed from IFR4NPO

  • Key objectives: improving financial reporting quality, transparency, and comparability for nonprofits

  • Which organizations can adopt INPAS and how it applies internationally

  • Main sections covered in INPAS, including guidance on grants, restricted funds, and narrative reporting

  • Details on the immediate effective date and upcoming comprehensive course from GLS

Check out our CPE webcasts for more great training.

INPAS Overview — What Nonprofits Need to Know

At Galasso Learning Solutions, we know how important it is for nonprofit organizations to maintain financial transparency, credibility, and comparability across the globe. This week, we’re excited to share a high-level overview of something that promises to make a big difference: the International Nonprofit Accounting Standard (INPAS). Whether you work directly in the nonprofit sector or advise organizations that do, INPAS is a topic you’ll want to have on your radar.

What Exactly Is INPAS?

INPAS, launched in October 2025, stands for the International Nonprofit Accounting Standard. It’s a groundbreaking achievement, developed as a primary output from the International Financial Reporting for Nonprofit Organizations (IFR4NPO), which began back in 2019. The core goal? To bring much-needed consistency, transparency, and reliability to the nonprofit financial reporting world.

The standard offers accrual-based guidance and a solid framework specifically tailored to nonprofit organizations. Think of it as the nonprofit version of international accounting standards, providing a structure for recognition, measurement, presentation, and necessary disclosures, all while reflecting the unique realities of nonprofit work.

Who Will Be Using INPAS?

Implementation of INPAS is being considered country by country. In some places, nonprofits may be required to adopt it; in others, organizations might voluntarily choose to implement its guidance if allowed. Either way, INPAS is here to raise the quality and comparability of financial reporting in the nonprofit sector.

Key Objectives of INPAS

At its heart, INPAS aims to:

  • Improve the quality and credibility of nonprofit financial reports.

  • Enable transparency so stakeholders can accurately compare different nonprofit organizations.

  • Support the creation of financial statements useful for decision-making and accountability.

  • Address nonprofit-specific issues such as presenting funds with use restrictions or accounting for grants, donations, and other contributions.

Before INPAS, there wasn’t an internationally recognized, nonprofit-specific accounting framework. Now, organizations can ensure their reporting is relevant, reliable, and consistent, no matter where they’re based.

What Does INPAS Cover?

INPAS organizes its guidance into several key areas:

  • What is a nonprofit organization? Defining what qualifies.

  • Who are the users of nonprofit financial statements? Ensuring financial reports are understandable, not just by number-savvy board members, but by a broader audience.

  • Accounting for grants and donations. Handling the lifeblood of nonprofit funding.

  • Presenting funds with use restrictions. Effectively showcasing resources “with” or “without” donor restrictions.

  • Disclosure of expenses and narrative reporting. Helping users see the full picture.

When Does INPAS Take Effect?

INPAS became effective immediately upon launch in October 2025. This means organizations interested in early adoption can implement the guidance right away, provided their jurisdiction allows it.

What’s Next?

This blog just scratches the surface. If you’re looking for a detailed, section-by-section dive into INPAS and its practical application for your organization, stay tuned! We’re developing a comprehensive new course at Galasso Learning Solutions that breaks down everything you need to know, differences from previous accounting practices, deep dives into each area, and real-world examples to bring the guidance to life.

Plus, if your team is ready to take their audit skills to the next level, don’t miss our Audit Staff Level Training program, designed for everyone from new hires to experienced seniors, offered throughout the year.

Thanks for joining us for this overview of the International Nonprofit Accounting Standard. We look forward to helping you and your nonprofit organization achieve transparency, accountability, and excellence in your financial reporting!

Jaclyn Veno CPA | Auditing Level Training | CPE

Melisa Galasso, CPA, CSP, CPTD

Melisa F. Galasso is the founder and CEO of Galasso Learning Solutions LLC. A CPA with nearly 20 years of experience in the accounting profession, Melisa designs and facilitates courses in advanced technical accounting and auditing topics, including not-for-profit and governmental accounting.

Her passion is providing high-quality CPE that is meaningful, creates efficiencies and improves quality, and positively impacts ROI. She also supports essential professional development, audit level training, and train the trainer efforts.

Melisa is a Certified Speaking Professional, a Certified Professional in Talent Development (CPTD), and has earned the Association for Talent Development Master Trainer™ designation. Her passion for instructional design and adult learning techniques is one of the differentiators that set her apart from other CPE providers.

She also serves on the FASB’s Not-for-Profit Advisory Committee (NAC), AICPA Council, and the AICPA’s Women’s Initiative Executive Committee (WIEC). She also serves as a Subject Matter Expert for the Center for Plain English Accounting. She previously served on the AICPA’s Technical Issues Committee (TIC), the VSCPA’s Board of Directors, and is a past Chair of the NCACPA’s A&A committee. In addition, Melisa is the author of Money Matters for Nonprofits: How Board Members Can Harness the Power of Financial Statements by Understanding Basic Accounting which is available on Amazon or anywhere you purchase books online.

Melisa received a Top 50 Women in Accounting Award in 2021 by Ignition, is a 2020 Enterprising Women of the Year Award recipient, and was honored as a “40 under 40” by CPA Practice Advisor in 2017, 2018, and 2019. She was also named the 2019 Rising Star by her regional NAWBO chapter, received the Don Farmer award for achievement in technical content instruction, and earned several other awards for public speaking and technical training.