Surplus funds

In AP Business, surplus funds are the revenue a nonprofit organization has left over after paying all its expenses, which it reinvests into its mission rather than distributing as profit to owners or shareholders.

Verified for the 2027 AP Business with Personal Finance examLast updated June 2026

What are surplus funds?

Surplus funds are what's left when a nonprofit organization's revenue (donations, grants, program income) is higher than its expenses for the year. If a nonprofit takes in $200,000 and spends $180,000, the remaining $20,000 is surplus.

Here's the part that trips people up: surplus is NOT profit, even though the math looks identical. A for-profit business can hand its leftover money to owners or shareholders. A nonprofit can't. Under the AP Business framework (EK 1.5.C.3), nonprofits serve the public good rather than generating profit for their own benefit, so any surplus gets plowed back into programs, services, and the organization's mission. Think of it as fuel for the mission, not a payout.

Why surplus funds matter in AP Business with Personal Finance

This term lives in Unit 1: Businesses, Competition, and New Ideas, specifically Topic 1.5 Vision. It directly supports learning objective AP Business 1.5.C, which asks you to describe the goals of businesses, social enterprises, and nonprofit organizations. The whole point of distinguishing surplus funds is to show you understand WHY different organizations exist. A business chases profit (EK 1.5.C.1). A nonprofit chases mission, and surplus is how it keeps that mission running (EK 1.5.C.3). Knowing how each type handles leftover money is the cleanest way the CED separates these three organization types.

Keep studying AP Business with Personal Finance Unit 1

How surplus funds connect across the course

Nonprofit organization (Unit 1)

Surplus funds only exist as a concept because of how nonprofits work. A nonprofit can earn more than it spends, but it legally reinvests that surplus into the mission instead of distributing it to owners. The two terms are basically one idea seen from two angles.

Social enterprise (Unit 1)

A social enterprise blurs the line by chasing profit AND social goals at once (EK 1.5.C.2). Comparing how a social enterprise uses profit versus how a nonprofit uses surplus is a clean way to test whether you actually understand the spectrum of organization goals.

Mission statement (Unit 1)

A nonprofit's mission statement (EK 1.5.B.2) tells you exactly where surplus funds should go. The mission defines the long-term goals, and surplus money is what funds those goals year after year.

Grant funding and donations (Unit 1)

Grants and donations are usually where a nonprofit's revenue comes from in the first place. Track that money in, subtract expenses, and what's left is the surplus that gets recycled into more programs.

Are surplus funds on the AP Business with Personal Finance exam?

Expect this in multiple-choice questions that hand you a nonprofit's numbers and ask you to name the leftover money or explain what happens to it. A typical stem gives you a nonprofit that collects $500,000 in donations and grants, spends most of it on salaries, facilities, and programs, and has $75,000 remaining, then asks what that $75,000 is called or how it must be handled. The correct answer is always some version of "surplus, reinvested into the mission, not distributed as profit." The trap answer treats it like business profit. No released FRQ has used this term verbatim, but it supports the goals-of-organizations comparison that 1.5.C rewards.

Surplus funds vs profit

Profit is leftover money a for-profit business can distribute to owners or shareholders. Surplus is leftover money a nonprofit must reinvest into its mission. Same arithmetic (revenue minus expenses), completely different rules about who gets it.

Key things to remember about surplus funds

  • Surplus funds are the revenue a nonprofit has left after paying all its expenses.

  • A nonprofit reinvests surplus into its mission and programs; it cannot distribute it as profit to owners or shareholders.

  • Surplus and profit involve the same math (revenue minus expenses) but follow different rules about where the money goes.

  • This term is the cleanest way the CED distinguishes nonprofits (mission-driven) from businesses (profit-driven) under objective 1.5.C.

  • On MCQs, if a question gives you a nonprofit's leftover money, the answer is surplus reinvested into the mission, not profit.

Frequently asked questions about surplus funds

What are surplus funds in AP Business?

Surplus funds are the money a nonprofit organization has left after covering all its expenses for the year. Instead of paying it out as profit, the nonprofit reinvests it into its mission, programs, and services (EK 1.5.C.3).

Is surplus the same as profit?

No. The calculation is identical (revenue minus expenses), but a for-profit business can distribute profit to owners or shareholders, while a nonprofit must reinvest surplus into its mission. The difference is who gets the money, not how it's calculated.

How is a nonprofit's surplus different from a social enterprise's profit?

A social enterprise (EK 1.5.C.2) earns profit while pursuing social goals and may distribute some of that profit. A nonprofit (EK 1.5.C.3) serves the public good only and channels every dollar of surplus back into its mission rather than to any owner.

Can a nonprofit organization make money?

Yes, a nonprofit can absolutely take in more than it spends, and that extra money is called surplus. What it can't do is hand that money to owners or shareholders, since it has to reinvest it in the organization's mission.

Where do surplus funds come from for a nonprofit?

Usually from donations, grants, and program income. When that revenue exceeds expenses like salaries, facilities, and program costs, the leftover amount becomes the surplus the nonprofit recycles into more programs.

Keep studying AP Business with Personal Finance

Connect this key term to the AP exam workflow: review the course, practice questions, and check related study tools.