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Activities Narrative Drafter Part IV
The hardest part of Form 1023 is Part IV, the narrative description of your activities. It is the heart of the application, and the IRS uses it to decide whether your activities qualify as exempt under Section 501(c)(3). The narrative needs to be clear and specific: what you do, who carries it out and who benefits, when and where and how often, how it is funded, and how each activity furthers a charitable, educational, or other exempt purpose. This automation turns your structured answers into that narrative.
How to use it
- Open the Narrative Builder tool from the sidebar and fill in the program fields (what you do, who you serve, where, when, why it qualifies, and how it is funded). The more concrete you are, the better the draft.
- Click "AI: draft my Part IV narrative."
- The drafted narrative appears in an editable preview and becomes your Part IV narrative. Review and correct it before you file.
Its guardrails
- It uses only your facts. It will not invent programs, names, dollar amounts, or details you did not provide.
- It marks gaps, it does not fill them. Where something is missing it inserts a clearly [bracketed placeholder] for you to complete before filing.
- It writes for a 501(c)(3) exempt purpose, connecting each activity explicitly to the charitable, educational, religious, or other purpose you selected.
- You review it. The draft is a starting point, not a final filing.
Signing in
The drafter uses your All In One Nonprofit account, so you need to be signed in. If you are signed out, the tool shows a sign-in link. Signing in also lets the tool sync your application across your devices.
Included with your All In One Nonprofit All-Access subscription. See
pricing for details.
General guidance, not legal or tax advice. The AI draft is a preparation aid. Have a qualified attorney or accountant review your Form 1023 before you file it.