Charities Act 2022: information about the changes being introduced
Information on the changes being introduced by the Charities Act 2022.
Applies to England and Wales
This page is about changes being introduced by the Charities Act 2022, which will amend the Charities Act 2011.
The changes are expected to come into force in autumn 2022, spring 2023 and autumn 2023.
An overview of the full changes can be found on this page: Charities Act 2022: implementation plan. This includes:
- changes to how charities sell, lease or transfer land (due to come into effect in spring 2023)
- greater flexibility to make use of ‘permanent endowment’ – this is money or property originally meant to be held by a charity forever (due to come into effect in spring 2023); and
- changes to how charities can amend their governing documents (due to come into effect in autumn 2023)
This page provides short summaries of the changes plannedthat to come into forceeffect inon autumn31 2022.October.
We will publish updated guidance when the changes take effect.
Paying trustees for providing goods to the charity
Charities already have a statutory power that they can use, in certain circumstances, to pay trustees for providing a service to the charity beyond usual trustee duties, or goods connected to that service.
This statutory power is being changed by the Charities Act 2022. As a result, charities will be able to pay trustees in certain circumstances for just providing goods to the charity.
So, using the statutory power, trustees could be paid for:
- services only, for example estate agency or computer consultancy
- services and associated goods, for example plumbing or painting service and any associated materials such as plumbing parts or paint
- following implementation of the Act in autumn, goods only, for example supplying stationery to the charity
Read our updated guidance:
Fundraising appeals that do not raise enough or raise too much
Sometimes, appeals do not raise the amount needed to deliver the aim you wanted, or raise too much so that there are funds leftover. Or circumstances may change and you cannot use the donations as you intended.
The Charities Act 2022 will reduce complexity surrounding what trustees need to do in these situations. For example:
- the current requirement in some circumstances for charities to wait six months for donors to ask for a refund will no longer apply
- there will be a simpler process for obtaining our authority; this will replace the need for the Commission to make a scheme
- if the donations that can be spent on new purposes (different to the purposes you raised them for) are less than £1000, trustees can act without the Commission’s involvement if they comply with the new legal requirements
Read our new guidance:
Power to amend Royal Charters
These charities will be able to use a new statutory power to change sections in their Royal Charter which they cannot currently change, if that change is approved by the Privy Council.
Read our updated guidance:
Other provisions
Other changes planned to come into effect inon autumn31 2022.October.
The Charity Tribunal will have the power to make “authorised costs orders” following application to it by the charity. The order would authorise payments in relation to proposed or ongoing Tribunal proceedings out of the funds of the charity. Read our guidance about decision reviews and the Charity Tribunal.
In addition, the Act will:
- confirm that the Commission’s scheme-making powers include making schemes for charitable companies
- confer trust corporation status automatically to existing and future corporate charities in respect of any charitable trust of which the corporation is (or, in the future, becomes) a trustee
- update provisions relating to giving public notice to written consents and orders of the Charity Commission under various sections of the Charities Act 2011
- mean that when a charity changes its governing document by parliamentary scheme, under section 73 of the Charities Act 2011, the scheme will by default always be under a lighter touch parliamentary process (known as the negative parliamentary procedure)
Last updated
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Updated as a result of Charities Act 2022 provisions that have come into effect on 31 October 2022.
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Timetable change
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First published.