Short guide: How to write a charitable purpose
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Short guide: How to write a charitable purpose
On this page
- General requirements for charitable purposes
- How to write your organization’s charitable purposes
- Helpful tips
- Special topics
General requirements for charitable purposes
To be registered as a charity, your organization must have only charitable purposes and use its resources only on charitable activities that further those purposes.
Purposes (also known as objects) are the aims, goals, or objectives of your organization. These should be stated in your organization’s governing document.
To be charitable, each purpose must fit in one of the four categories of charity and be for the benefit of the public. The four categories of charity are:
- relief of poverty
- advancement of education
- advancement of religion
- other purposes beneficial to the community in a way the law regards as charitable
- This category includes various purposes that do not fall within the other categories but which the courts have recognized as charitable. A purpose that fits under the fourth category will have to state a specific subcategory to show what benefit is conferred by the purpose.
Your organization can also have a purpose to make gifts to qualified donees (such as other registered charities).
How to write your organization’s charitable purposes
We recommend that each of your purposes include all three of the following elements:
- the category or subcategory of charity (what benefit is conferred by the purpose)
- the scope of activities (how the organization will further its purpose)
- the eligible beneficiary group (who can receive the benefit).
To do so, choose one of the options below:
Copy: use a CRA model purpose
The easiest way to write charitable purposes is to copy one of our examples from our extensive list of charitable purposes.
Simply review the examples and select the ones that accurately reflect your organization’s goals and how it wants to achieve them.
Modify: personalize a model purpose
While the CRA provides an extensive list of examples of charitable purposes, they may not exactly reflect your organization’s activities or who you intend to benefit. You may also want to adapt the wording of a model purpose to better reflect your organization’s terminology and values.
In this case, select a relevant example purpose that identifies the category or subcategory of charity that best fits your organization’s purpose (the what), and tailor it to your organization by changing how you describe:
- the scope of activities (how); or
- the eligible beneficiary group (who)
Taking a model purpose under the relief of poverty, you can change its scope of activities and adapt its wording to better reflect your organization’s work:
Model purpose:
Original: To relieve poverty by establishing, operating and maintaining shelters for the homeless.
Modified: To relieve poverty by providing basic amenities to unhoused individuals.
Create: write your own charitable purpose
While our list of charitable purposes can be helpful to many organizations, they may not meet every organization’s needs. In that case, you might want to write your own charitable purpose for your organization.
When writing your purpose, we recommend that you clearly identify:
- the category or subcategory of charity (what benefit is conferred by the purpose)
- the scope of activities (how your organization will further its purpose)
- the eligible beneficiary group (who can receive the benefit)
You must ensure that your organization’s purpose fits within one of the four categories of charity and is for the public benefit. Your organization’s purposes must also be stated clearly and precisely enough to ensure it cannot pursue non-charitable purposes. Purposes that are too broad or vague do not meet the requirements to be charitable.
Helpful tips
Here are best practice tips based on common issues identified in organizations’ purposes. While these are not requirements, we recommend following these tips when writing purposes or personalizing a model purpose.
Do: use action-based words (for example: provide basic necessities, conduct research, operate a school) that define the scope of your organization’s activities.
Do: clearly tie your scope of activities and beneficiaries to the category of charity.
Do: Use the words “for the public” to confirm that your purpose is intended to benefit the public, and not a private group of individuals.
Do: verify if provincial or territorial requirements apply to your organization’s purposes (only if your organization is incorporated).
Avoid: vague words such as to facilitate, support, assist, or coordinate (while not prohibited, they often do not clearly define what your organization will do).
Avoid: subjective words to define elements of your purpose (deserving, worthy, philanthropic, benevolent, good causes). They may not clearly show that your organization is charitable.
Avoid: fundraising, granting to non-qualified donees, or public policy dialogue and development activities (PPDDAs) as a scope of activities.
Avoid: vision or mission statements or similar aspirations in your purposes, unless it is written sufficiently in line with this guide (what, how, who).
For an in-depth guide on how to write a charitable purpose, see Guidance CG-019, Charitable purposes of a registered charity.
Special topics
If your organization wants to make gifts to qualified donees
Your organization can have a purpose to make gifts to qualified donees, such as other registered charities. This type of charitable purpose does not need to include the what, how, and who.
For examples of purposes to make gifts to qualified donees, see Examples of charitable purposes.
If your organization wants to make grants to non-qualified donees
Your organization can make qualifying disbursements to grantee organizations (also known as grants to non-qualified donees) to fund charitable activities that further your organization’s charitable purposes.
To do this, your organization must have a charitable purpose that fits within one of the four categories of charity (including the what, how, and who).
That charitable purpose does not need to refer to “making qualifying disbursements to grantee organizations.” However, a charity’s purpose that fits in one of the four categories of charity (including the what, how and who) can also state it allows making qualifying disbursements to grantee organizations.
Both of the following charitable purposes to advance education would allow a charity to make grants:
- To advance education by providing books, equipment, and educational aids to students.
- To advance education by providing books, equipment, and educational aids to students, through the making of qualifying disbursements to grantee organizations.
Note: the additional wording limits the charity to making qualifying disbursements to further its purpose.
If your organization wants to carry on public policy dialogue and development activities
Your organization can carry on unlimited public policy dialogue and development activities (PPDDAs) that further its stated charitable purposes.
However, your organization cannot have a political purpose. This means that when writing your organization’s purpose, you should avoid referring to influencing the laws, decisions, or policies of the government. This is the case even if most or all of your organization’s activities are PPDDAs. Instead, your organization’s purpose must describe the public benefit it seeks to achieve.
See Guidance CG-027, Public policy dialogue and development activities by charities.
If your organization wants to carry on PPDDAs to advocate for the implementation of public policies to preserve wetlands or other ecologically sensitive land, you can draft its purpose as follows:
- To protect the environment for the benefit of the public by conserving or restoring ecosystems and biodiversity on a long-term basis.
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2026-04-22