Beyond Attendance: The Legal Duties of Nonprofit Board Members

May 30, 2026 | Mission Possible

By: Offit Kurman

Serving as an officer or director of a nonprofit organization is both an honor and a serious legal responsibility. Whether your organization is a large regional association or a small community-based nonprofit, the individuals who sit on the board are held to defined legal standards — standards that exist to protect the organization, its members, and the public it serves.

This article outlines the core governance obligations that apply to every nonprofit board member, including the three fiduciary duties imposed by state law, the board’s proper role in organizational management, and several practical obligations that are easy to overlook but carry real legal consequences.

Modern Governance Demands Active, Informed Leadership

Nonprofits today operate in an environment of heightened public scrutiny, legal complexity, and accountability. The days when a board member could fulfill his or her obligations simply by showing up for quarterly meetings and voting on motions are long past. Effective governance now requires directors to be proactive, to engage with the organization between formal meetings, to participate meaningfully in leadership transitions, and to approach every board communication and decision with deliberation.

Passive participation is not just ineffective; it can be a legal liability. A director who sits back, defers entirely to others, and casts uninformed votes risks violating the very duties assumed upon joining the board.

The Board Governs — It Does Not Manage

One of the most important distinctions in nonprofit governance is the line between policy and management. The board of directors is the organization’s governing body, with ultimate responsibility for its mission and direction. But that responsibility does not extend to the day-to-day administration of the organization. Operational decisions —staffing, program delivery, vendor relationships, and the like — are properly delegated to paid staff, designated committees, or empowered officers.

This principle holds even for smaller nonprofits that lack a professional staff. The board’s role is to set policy and ensure that results align with the organization’s mission and governing documents. When boards stray into micromanagement, they create confusion, undermine staff authority, and expose themselves to unnecessary risk. The best boards define clear boundaries, delegate appropriately, and hold leadership accountable for outcomes.

The Three Fiduciary Duties

State law imposes three legally enforceable fiduciary duties on every officer and director of a nonprofit organization: the duty of care, the duty of loyalty, and the duty of obedience. These duties are not optional — they cannot be waived by agreement, and they apply regardless of whether the organization is large or small, well-funded or volunteer-run. Every decision made in the course of board service should be evaluated against all three.

Continue reading on jdsupra.com