SEC Compliance for Alumni Associations: Consequences of Not Filing Annual Reports

If your alumni association is registered with the Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), failing to file annual reports is not just a paperwork problem. It can lead to monetary penalties, delinquent status, suspension or revocation of the association’s SEC registration, difficulty opening or maintaining bank accounts, problems receiving donations, and delays in school, government, or donor transactions. This guide explains what alumni associations must file, what happens when reports are missed, how penalties are computed, and how an inactive or non-compliant association can work its way back to good standing.

Is an Alumni Association Required to File SEC Annual Reports?

Most formally registered alumni associations in the Philippines are non-stock corporations. Under the Revised Corporation Code of the Philippines, Republic Act No. 11232, a non-stock corporation is one where no part of its income is distributed as dividends to members, trustees, or officers. Any surplus should be used to further the purpose for which the corporation was organized. The law expressly allows non-stock corporations to be organized for educational, social, civic, cultural, fraternal, professional, and similar purposes, which is why many alumni associations use this structure. (SAKLAW)

An alumni association must comply with SEC reportorial requirements if it has:

  • An SEC registration number;
  • Articles of Incorporation and By-Laws filed with the SEC;
  • A board of trustees or officers elected under its By-Laws;
  • A bank account, donations, membership dues, fundraising activities, or school-related projects under the association’s name; or
  • A need to prove legal existence to a school, bank, donor, government office, or foreign chapter.

A common mistake is assuming that a small or inactive alumni association does not need to file. SEC compliance continues even if the association has no major activity, no employees, no taxable income, or only minimal funds. If the corporation still legally exists, its annual filing obligations generally remain.

What Annual Reports Must an Alumni Association File?

For most SEC-registered alumni associations, the two core annual filings are the General Information Sheet (GIS) and the Annual Financial Statements (AFS).

Requirement What it shows Usual deadline for domestic non-stock alumni associations
General Information Sheet (GIS) Current trustees, officers, principal office, contact details, members’ meeting information, and corporate profile Within 30 calendar days from the actual annual members’ meeting
Annual Financial Statements (AFS) Financial position, income, expenses, fund balance, assets, liabilities, and notes Within 120 calendar days from fiscal year-end, unless the SEC prescribes a specific schedule
SEC MC 28 compliance Official email address and mobile number for SEC notices Upon registration or within 30 calendar days from issuance of SEC registration, license, or authority
Beneficial Ownership Declaration through HARBOR Natural persons who ultimately own, control, or exercise effective influence over the entity Integrated with GIS filing under the 2026 beneficial ownership rules

SEC Memorandum Circular No. 6, Series of 2024 states that for domestic non-stock corporations, the GIS must be filed within 30 calendar days from the actual meeting, the AFS within 120 calendar days from fiscal year-end or as otherwise prescribed by the SEC, and MC 28 information within 30 calendar days from registration or authority.

For 2026 filings, the SEC required AFS and GIS submissions through eFAST. The SEC’s 2026 schedule originally set the AFS deadline for corporations with a December 31 fiscal year-end on May 29, 2026, later extended to June 15, 2026 for covered corporations. Corporations with fiscal years ending on dates other than December 31 generally follow the 120-calendar-day rule. (Grant Thornton Philippines)

Beginning January 30, 2026, beneficial ownership information is filed through the SEC’s HARBOR system, integrated with eFAST for GIS purposes. SEC guidance also states that non-filing of the Beneficial Ownership Declaration can prevent successful GIS filing. (Grant Thornton Philippines)

Legal Basis for SEC Reportorial Requirements

Section 177 of the Revised Corporation Code requires every domestic or foreign corporation doing business in the Philippines to submit annual financial statements and a GIS to the SEC. The same provision allows the SEC to place a corporation under delinquent status if it fails to submit reportorial requirements three times, consecutively or intermittently, within five years. (SAKLAW)

The SEC also has visitorial and enforcement powers. Under Sections 178 and 179 of the Revised Corporation Code, the SEC may examine corporate records, enforce compliance, impose sanctions, and suspend or revoke a corporation’s certificate of incorporation after proper notice and hearing. (SAKLAW)

This means that SEC annual reports are not optional internal records. They are statutory filings required to keep the corporation’s legal status current.

What Happens If an Alumni Association Does Not File Annual Reports?

1. The SEC may impose monetary penalties per missing or late report

SEC Memorandum Circular No. 6, Series of 2024 updated the fines for late and non-submission of AFS, GIS, and MC 28 compliance. For domestic non-stock corporations, late filing penalties are based on the association’s retained earnings, fund balance, or equity, and whether the violation is a first, second, third, fourth, or fifth offense.

For late filing by a domestic non-stock corporation, the base fine generally ranges from ₱5,000 to ₱27,000 per report, depending on the fund balance/equity bracket and number of offenses.

For non-filing by a domestic non-stock corporation, the base fine generally ranges from ₱10,000 to ₱36,000 per report, again depending on the fund balance/equity bracket and offense count.

For late or non-compliance with SEC MC 28, the imposable fine under SEC MC No. 6-2024 is ₱20,000.

2. Monthly penalties may apply, subject to current SEC relief

SEC MC No. 6-2024 included monthly delay penalties for late or non-filed AFS and GIS. However, SEC Memorandum Circular No. 16, Series of 2026 suspended the per-month delay penalty for late and non-filing of AFS and GIS until December 31, 2026. The suspension does not remove the obligation to file, and the base fines under the existing penalty schedule still apply. The circular also states that the monthly delay penalty automatically resumes after the suspension period unless lifted, modified, or extended by the SEC. (bdblaw.com.ph)

For an alumni association trying to catch up in 2026, this is important: the monthly component may be suspended, but the association can still be assessed base fines, and its non-compliance record can still affect its status.

3. The association can be placed under delinquent status

Under Section 177 of the Revised Corporation Code and SEC MC No. 6-2024, the SEC may declare a corporation delinquent if it fails to submit reportorial requirements three times, whether consecutively or intermittently, within a five-year period. (SAKLAW)

For alumni associations, this often happens when officers change and no one takes over compliance. For example:

  • The 2019 officers filed reports properly.
  • The 2020 reunion was cancelled.
  • No GIS or AFS was filed for 2020, 2021, and 2022.
  • By the time a new batch of officers tries to revive the association, the SEC record may already show multiple violations.

4. Repeated non-compliance can lead to revocation

SEC MC No. 6-2024 provides that after a corporation is notified of delinquent status, a sixth offense becomes a ground for revocation of its Certificate of Registration, license to transact business, or secondary license. It also warrants monetary fines equivalent to the fifth offense plus a 100% surcharge of the total assessed fine.

Revocation is serious. A revoked alumni association loses the legal personality that allowed it to act as a corporation. It may face difficulty:

  • Maintaining a bank account under the association’s name;
  • Signing contracts with suppliers, venues, schools, or donors;
  • Receiving grants or donations;
  • Issuing official receipts or donation acknowledgments;
  • Proving authority of officers;
  • Continuing long-term projects; or
  • Representing itself as a valid SEC-registered corporation.

5. Banks, schools, donors, and partners may refuse transactions

Even before formal revocation, non-filing can cause practical problems. Banks and institutional donors often ask for updated SEC documents, such as the latest GIS, Articles of Incorporation, By-Laws, board resolution, secretary’s certificate, and proof that the corporation remains in good standing.

An alumni association with missing reports may find that:

  • The bank will not update signatories;
  • A new treasurer cannot access the account;
  • Donations cannot be deposited or released;
  • The school will not recognize the new officers;
  • A venue or supplier refuses to contract with the association;
  • A foreign alumni chapter asks for updated SEC papers before sending funds; or
  • The association cannot secure needed SEC certifications.

These problems are common when an association becomes active only during reunions, homecomings, scholarship drives, or fundraising campaigns.

6. Trustees and officers may face governance issues

SEC non-compliance can expose trustees and officers to internal disputes. Members may question whether the current officers were properly elected, whether financial reports are reliable, or whether donations were handled through a legally compliant entity.

The Revised Corporation Code also recognizes that directors, trustees, officers, or employees responsible for violations may face liability in proper cases. (SAKLAW)

This is why alumni associations should treat SEC compliance as part of good governance, not merely clerical work.

Difference Between Late Filing and Non-Filing

SEC MC No. 6-2024 distinguishes between late filing and non-filing.

Situation Practical meaning Consequence
Filed on time Submitted within the SEC deadline No late filing penalty
Late filing Submitted after the deadline, including filing beyond one year from the prescribed period Penalty applies; for filings beyond one year, the non-filing base fine may be used
Non-filing No submission of the required report Higher base penalties and possible delinquent-status consequences

For domestic corporations, SEC MC No. 6-2024 states that filing beyond one year from the prescribed period may be assessed using the base fine for non-filing, with monthly penalty computation capped at 12 months under that circular.

In plain language: filing late is usually better than not filing at all, but a very late filing may still be treated more severely.

Step-by-Step Guide to Fix Missed SEC Annual Reports

1. Confirm the association’s exact SEC status

Start by identifying whether the association is:

  • Active and merely late in filing;
  • Non-compliant but not yet suspended;
  • Delinquent;
  • Suspended;
  • Revoked; or
  • Registered under a different or older corporate name.

Check the exact SEC registration number, corporate name, date of incorporation, registered address, and last known officers. Old alumni associations often have outdated addresses, retired trustees, deceased signatories, or names that no longer match the school’s current branding.

2. Gather the association’s corporate records

Prepare a basic compliance file:

Document Why it matters
SEC Certificate of Incorporation Proves legal existence and registration number
Articles of Incorporation and By-Laws Shows purpose, officers, meeting rules, trustee terms, and member rights
Latest GIS filed with SEC Shows last reported trustees, officers, and principal office
Latest AFS filed with SEC Shows last financial reporting year
Minutes of annual members’ meetings Supports GIS filing dates and officer elections
Board resolutions and secretary’s certificates Needed for bank updates and authorized filings
BIR Certificate of Registration Needed for tax filings and official receipts
MC 28 proof of compliance Needed because non-compliance has its own penalty
eFAST/eSECURE access records Needed for electronic filing
HARBOR beneficial ownership information Needed for GIS filing under 2026 rules

3. Reconstruct missed meetings and officer authority

Many alumni associations fail to file because the annual members’ meeting was not held. If no meeting was held, the compliance team should check the By-Laws and SEC filing rules for the proper way to report non-holding of the meeting.

The SEC eFAST guide recognizes GIS submissions with an Affidavit of Non-Holding of Annual Meeting and indicates that the period covered may depend on the annual meeting date stated in the By-Laws and the year covered. (efast.sec.gov.ph)

If the old trustees are unavailable, the association may need to:

  1. Review vacancy rules in the By-Laws;
  2. Identify current voting members;
  3. Call a proper members’ meeting;
  4. Elect or confirm trustees and officers;
  5. Prepare minutes and secretary’s certificate;
  6. Update bank signatories only after corporate authority is clear; and
  7. File the proper GIS and supporting documents.

4. Prepare the missing AFS

The AFS should match the association’s records: membership dues, donations, fundraising income, scholarship disbursements, event expenses, bank balances, receivables, liabilities, and fund balances.

Under Section 177 of the Revised Corporation Code, AFS are generally audited by an independent CPA, but if total assets or total liabilities are less than ₱600,000, the financial statements may be certified under oath by the treasurer or chief financial officer, unless SEC rules require otherwise for the specific entity. (SAKLAW)

In practice, alumni associations should still maintain:

  • Bank statements;
  • Cash receipts and disbursement books;
  • Donation records;
  • Event liquidation reports;
  • Scholarship release records;
  • Official receipts, acknowledgment receipts, and invoices;
  • Board-approved budgets; and
  • Treasurer’s annual report.

Poor bookkeeping is one of the biggest reasons old alumni associations cannot catch up quickly.

5. File through eFAST and comply with HARBOR requirements

SEC filings are now electronic. For annual reporting, AFS and GIS are submitted through eFAST, while beneficial ownership information is handled through HARBOR beginning January 30, 2026. (Grant Thornton Philippines)

Before submission, check:

  • Correct SEC registration number;
  • Exact corporate name;
  • Correct fiscal year;
  • Correct report type;
  • Correct period covered;
  • Proper signatures;
  • PDF readability and orientation;
  • Proper GIS version;
  • HARBOR beneficial ownership submission; and
  • Consistency between GIS, AFS, By-Laws, board minutes, and BIR records.

The SEC eFAST guide notes that reports may be reverted for issues such as wrong company profile, wrong period covered, wrong submission type, or formatting defects. (efast.sec.gov.ph)

6. Request monitoring and settle assessed penalties

For missed filings, the association may need to request SEC monitoring so the SEC can determine unpaid penalties and compliance status. SEC MC No. 6-2024 states that requests for monitoring and related inquiries are handled through designated SEC offices and forms, including the Company Registration and Monitoring Department for domestic stock, non-stock, and one-person corporations.

After assessment, the association should review:

  • Which years are being assessed;
  • Whether the penalty is for GIS, AFS, MC 28, or multiple reports;
  • Whether the association is treated as late-filing or non-filing;
  • Whether the 2026 suspension of monthly penalties applies;
  • Whether the assessment reflects the correct fund balance/equity bracket; and
  • Whether any prior payments or confirmations are already on record.

7. Keep the association compliant after catching up

Once the association has caught up, create a compliance calendar:

  • Set the annual members’ meeting date based on the By-Laws;
  • File GIS within 30 calendar days after the actual meeting;
  • File AFS within the SEC-prescribed period;
  • Update beneficial ownership information when required;
  • Report changes in registered email, mobile number, office address, or officers;
  • Keep minutes and financial records every year; and
  • Store eFAST submissions, approvals, payment confirmations, and SEC notices in one shared compliance folder.

Common Scenarios for Alumni Associations

“Our association has been inactive for years. Do we still need to file?”

Yes, if the SEC corporation still exists. Inactivity does not automatically erase reportorial obligations. If there was no operation, the association may need to submit the proper financial report and supporting affidavit, depending on the SEC’s applicable filing rules and eFAST requirements.

“The old officers migrated or cannot be contacted.”

This is common for alumni groups. Review the By-Laws, identify the remaining trustees or voting members, document attempts to contact unavailable officers, and properly elect or appoint replacements. If documents must be signed abroad for Philippine use, notarization, consular acknowledgment, or apostille issues may arise depending on where the document is executed and where it will be used. The DFA notes that apostille services apply to Philippine public documents for use abroad, while foreign documents generally follow the rules of the issuing country before use in the Philippines. (Apostille Philippines)

“We collect dues and donations, but we are non-profit. Are we automatically tax-exempt?”

No. SEC registration as a non-stock, non-profit corporation is different from BIR tax exemption. BIR rules on Section 30 corporations and Certificates of Tax Exemption are separate from SEC compliance. BIR issuances clarify the tax treatment of non-stock, non-profit corporations and the issuance of Certificates of Tax Exemption by Revenue Regions for covered entities. (Bir Cdn)

Tax exemption also generally relates to income tax and does not automatically exempt the association from withholding tax, VAT implications, percentage tax issues, documentary requirements, or BIR filing obligations. (PwC)

“Can we just register a new alumni association instead of fixing the old one?”

Sometimes a new corporation is possible, but it can create confusion if the old association still exists, has a similar name, owns bank accounts, holds funds, or is recognized by the school. The SEC may also consider name similarity, existing corporate records, and whether the new entity could mislead members or the public. If the old association has assets, contracts, or bank accounts, abandoning it may create more problems than restoring compliance.

Documents Usually Needed to Catch Up

Purpose Common documents
Verify SEC status SEC registration number, Certificate of Incorporation, old GIS, old AFS
Update governance Articles, By-Laws, minutes, notices, attendance sheets, proxies if allowed, trustee/officer acceptance
File GIS Completed GIS form, meeting details, officer/trustee information, beneficial ownership submission, affidavit if no meeting was held
File AFS Financial statements, bank statements, schedules of dues/donations, expense records, treasurer’s certification or CPA audit as applicable
MC 28 compliance Official email address, official mobile number, board authorization, proof of submission
Bank update Latest GIS, board resolution, secretary’s certificate, IDs of signatories, SEC documents, BIR registration
BIR/tax compliance BIR COR, books, receipts/invoices, annual returns or information returns, withholding tax records, CTE documents if applicable
Foreign-based officers Properly notarized, consularized, or apostilled documents when required

Practical Timeline

Task Realistic timing
Locate old SEC and corporate records A few days to several weeks
Reconstruct meetings and officer authority 1 to 4 weeks, longer if members are abroad
Prepare missing financial records 1 to 8 weeks, depending on record quality
CPA review or audit, if needed 2 to 8 weeks
eFAST/HARBOR preparation and submission A few days once records are complete
SEC review, reversion, correction, or acceptance Varies; allow time for corrections
Penalty monitoring and payment assessment Varies by SEC office and backlog
Bank or school recognition after SEC cleanup Often 1 to 3 weeks after complete documents are available

The main bottleneck is usually not the SEC portal itself. It is the lack of clean internal records: missing minutes, unclear officers, unavailable signatories, incomplete bank statements, and unrecorded donations.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the penalty for not filing GIS for an alumni association in the Philippines?

For a domestic non-stock corporation, non-filing of GIS may fall under the SEC MC No. 6-2024 non-filing penalty table, where base fines generally range from ₱10,000 to ₱36,000 per report, depending on fund balance/equity and number of offenses. Repeated violations can also lead to delinquent status and possible revocation.

What is the penalty for late filing of AFS by a non-stock alumni association?

For domestic non-stock corporations, late filing of AFS under SEC MC No. 6-2024 generally carries base fines ranging from ₱5,000 to ₱27,000 per report, depending on the fund balance/equity bracket and whether it is a first to fifth offense.

Are monthly SEC penalties still being charged in 2026?

SEC MC No. 16, Series of 2026 suspended the per-month delay penalty for late and non-filing of AFS and GIS until December 31, 2026. The base fines still apply, and the duty to file remains. The monthly penalty is scheduled to resume after the suspension period unless the SEC changes or extends the relief. (bdblaw.com.ph)

Can an alumni association be revoked for not filing annual reports?

Yes. Under SEC MC No. 6-2024, after the corporation is notified of delinquent status, a sixth offense can be a ground for revocation of its Certificate of Registration, license, or secondary license, with additional monetary consequences.

What if the alumni association had no income?

No income does not automatically mean no SEC filing. The association may still need to file its GIS and financial statements or appropriate no-operation documents. The AFS should reflect the actual financial condition, even if there were no dues, donations, or events.

Does SEC non-filing affect the association’s bank account?

It can. Banks commonly require updated SEC documents, board resolutions, secretary’s certificates, and proof of current officers before changing signatories or allowing major transactions. If the latest GIS is years old, the bank may refuse to recognize new officers.

Is a school-based alumni association automatically covered by the school’s SEC filings?

Usually no. If the alumni association has its own SEC registration, it is a separate juridical entity from the school. It must file its own GIS, AFS, and related SEC reports unless it was never separately incorporated.

Can foreign alumni officers sign SEC documents from abroad?

Yes, but practical authentication issues may arise. Documents signed abroad for use in the Philippines may need proper notarization, consular acknowledgment, or apostille/legalization depending on the document, country, and receiving institution. Plan extra time for officers based abroad.

Does SEC compliance make donations tax-deductible?

Not by itself. SEC registration and good standing help prove legal existence, but BIR rules on tax exemption and donor deductibility are separate. Non-stock, non-profit corporations may need the appropriate BIR Certificate of Tax Exemption or accreditation, depending on the tax benefit being claimed. (PwC)

Should an inactive alumni association dissolve instead of filing annual reports?

If the association no longer has a real purpose, no assets, no bank account, no projects, and no members willing to continue, dissolution may be considered. But dissolution itself requires proper corporate action, settlement of obligations, and SEC filings. It should not be treated as a shortcut to ignore existing penalties or unresolved records.

Key Takeaways

  • SEC-registered alumni associations are usually non-stock corporations, and they must file annual reports even if they are small, inactive, or non-profit.
  • The main annual SEC reports are the GIS and AFS, with MC 28 and beneficial ownership requirements also relevant.
  • For domestic non-stock corporations, late filing penalties can reach ₱27,000 per report, while non-filing penalties can reach ₱36,000 per report, depending on the association’s fund balance/equity and offense count.
  • As of SEC MC No. 16, Series of 2026, monthly delay penalties for late or non-filing of AFS and GIS are suspended until December 31, 2026, but base fines and filing duties remain.
  • Failure to file three times within five years can lead to delinquent status; repeated violations after notice can lead to revocation.
  • Non-filing creates real-world problems with banks, schools, donors, tax filings, officer authority, and member trust.
  • The best cleanup approach is to confirm SEC status, reconstruct corporate records, update officer authority, prepare missing AFS and GIS, comply through eFAST/HARBOR, request monitoring, settle assessments, and maintain a yearly compliance calendar.

Disclaimer: This content is not legal advice and may involve AI assistance. Information may be inaccurate.