Quick answer: A nonprofit merger can strengthen revenue, expand impact, and reduce overhead—but only when leaders enter the process with clear goals and careful due diligence. Key risks include donor attrition, HR disruption, unexpected costs, and gaps in succession planning.
Mergers aren't just a for-profit strategy. Nonprofits pursue them too—and for good reason. Combining forces with the right organization can amplify your mission, stretch your funding further, and build a more resilient operation. But the path from "let's explore this" to a fully integrated organization is rarely straightforward.
Before signing anything, it's worth asking: are we doing this for the right reasons, and are we truly prepared for what comes next?
The strongest mergers start with a clear strategic rationale—not just a desire to survive. Common reasons nonprofits consider merging include:
The key is intentionality. A merger pursued out of desperation rarely produces the outcomes either organization hopes for.
Donor risk is one of the most underestimated challenges in nonprofit mergers. Long-term donors may feel that a merger signals a shift away from the mission they originally supported—or that a program they care about is being discontinued.
Beyond relationship management, there's a compliance dimension. If the organization you're merging with has received restricted donations, the surviving organization is generally required to honor those restrictions. Depending on state law and the circumstances, modifying certain restrictions may require donor consent or court approval. Ignoring this can create serious legal and compliance challenges.
Workforce disruption is almost inevitable. Redundancies, staff cuts, and changes in leadership style can damage morale and result in the loss of institutional knowledge that took years to build.
Handle workforce reductions with transparency and sensitivity. Where possible, find ways to keep valued former leaders engaged—whether as board members or advisory committee participants. Most importantly, assess cultural compatibility early. Differences in remote work policies, decision-making styles, and employee engagement expectations can quietly derail an otherwise well-planned merger.
Unlike for-profit mergers, nonprofit mergers rarely involve a cash exchange. That doesn't mean they're inexpensive. Merger-related costs can include:
These expenses tend to hit cash flow hard in the short term, so financial modeling and scenario planning are essential before committing to a deal.
Succession planning is easy to push to the back burner when there's so much else demanding attention. That's a mistake. Identifying and developing successors takes time, and if a key leader departs unexpectedly during or shortly after a merger, the disruption can be significant. Even if both organizations have existing succession plans, a revised, unified version will need to be developed—and likely negotiated.
A well-executed nonprofit merger creates an organization that's more capable, more resilient, and better positioned to serve its mission for years to come. But "well-executed" requires honest assessment of your financial readiness, governance structure, and operational compatibility—before the ink dries.
At SD Mayer, we help nonprofits evaluate merger opportunities with clarity and confidence. If you're weighing a potential merger and want to understand what it really means for your organization's financial future, contact us to start the conversation.