Frequently Asked Questions
Everything you need to know about 501(see), nonprofit data, and how it works.
Data
Where does 501(see) data come from?
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Directly from IRS Form 990 e-file data. We normalize it across 20+ schema versions and all three form types (990, 990-EZ, 990-PF) into a consistent, searchable format.
How many nonprofits are in 501(see)?
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Over 1.8 million tax-exempt organizations that have filed electronically with the IRS. This includes public charities, private foundations, and other exempt organization types (501(c)(3), 501(c)(4), 501(c)(6), and more).
How fresh is the data?
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Updated monthly from IRS releases. The IRS publishes new e-filed returns on a rolling basis, typically with a 6-12 month lag from the filing date. We always show which tax year a filing is from so you know exactly what you're looking at.
What types of 990 forms are covered?
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All three main types: Form 990 (standard return for larger public charities), Form 990-EZ (shorter version for smaller orgs), and Form 990-PF (private foundations). Each has different data available. Form 990-N (e-Postcard) filings are not included because they contain only basic identification information.
Does 501(see) include all types of tax-exempt organizations?
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Yes. While most people think of 501(c)(3) charities, the database includes all exempt organization types that file electronically: 501(c)(4) social welfare organizations, 501(c)(6) business leagues, and others.
What grant data is included?
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Grants from both public charities (reported on 990 Schedule I) and private foundations (reported on 990-PF Part XV). You can search by funder name, recipient name, amount, state, and year. This is one of the most complete searchable grant datasets available outside of enterprise tools like Candid.
What officer and compensation data is available?
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Names, titles, hours per week, and compensation for every officer, director, trustee, and key employee listed on the filing. Compensation includes reportable pay from the organization, pay from related organizations, and estimated other compensation (benefits, deferred comp, etc.).
Using 501(see)
Do I need to be technical to use 501(see)?
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No. The web interface lets you search, filter, and explore nonprofit data without writing any code. Developers and technical users can also connect via the REST API for automated workflows, integrations, and AI agent access.
Does the search require exact spelling?
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No. The search handles approximate and misspelled names. Searching "habitat humanity" will still find "Habitat for Humanity International." You can also search by EIN if you have it.
Can I export data?
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Yes. Paid plans include CSV export with no per-record fees. If you can search it, you can export it. The Pro plan also includes JSON export and full API access for bulk workflows.
How does the API work?
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Sign up, get an API key, start making requests. No application form, no waiting for approval, no sales call. The API follows an OpenAPI 3.1 spec with semantic field names (like total_revenue instead of f9_01_rev_tot_cy) and returns structured JSON.
What does "AI-ready" mean?
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501(see) includes an MCP (Model Context Protocol) server, which means AI tools like Claude can query nonprofit data directly as part of a conversation or workflow. The API also returns structured JSON designed for LLM tool-use. If you're building AI-powered applications that need nonprofit data, you can plug in without building a custom integration.
Pricing and comparison
How is 501(see) different from GuideStar or Candid?
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GuideStar (now part of Candid) starts at $3,499/year for premium access and gates their API behind a sales process starting at $4,800/year. 501(see) starts at $0 with a free tier, and paid plans are $99-149/month with no annual contracts. Both products draw from the same underlying IRS data.
How is 501(see) different from ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer?
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ProPublica is free and great for one-off lookups. But it doesn't have searchable grant data, bulk filtering, CSV export, or an actively maintained API (theirs hasn't been updated since 2016). 501(see) is built for the workflow that comes after the quick lookup: filtering, comparing, exporting, and integrating.
Are there per-record or per-export fees?
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No. Your subscription includes export. No per-record charges, no surprise fees for downloading a CSV, no metered API billing that spikes unexpectedly.
Are there per-seat fees?
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No. All plans include unlimited users. This is a significant difference from competitors like CauseIQ and legacy GuideStar plans, which charge per user.
Is there a free tier?
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Yes. The free tier lets you search and browse all 1.8M+ organizations with latest-year financial summaries. Paid plans add multi-year history, officer compensation, grant data, CSV export, and API access.
What if I cancel?
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All plans are month-to-month. Cancel anytime, no penalty, no annual lock-in. Early adopter pricing is locked in for as long as you keep your plan.
Still have questions?
Try the live demo on the homepage, or join the waitlist to get in touch.
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