What Cheer Flower Farm
| Fiscal year | Revenue | Expenses | Net | Reserve mo. | Staff % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2017 | 50,000 | 7,134 | 42,866 | 72.1 | — |
| 2018 | 910,130 | 230,534 | 679,596 | 37.6 | 60% |
| 2019 | 351,538 | 303,453 | 48,085 | 30.5 | 57% |
| 2020 | 333,091 | 293,952 | 39,139 | 33.1 | 53% |
| 2021 | 99,966 | 288,772 | −188,806 | 25.8 | 50% |
| 2022 | 508,659 | 431,456 | 77,203 | 19.9 | 41% |
| 2023 | 1,464,446 | 519,663 | 944,783 | 38.3 | 40% |
In its most recent public year (2023), this organization brought in $944,783 more than it spent. Its reserves stood at about 38.3 months of spending, down from 72.1 in 2017. Staff pay was 40% of spending.
Reserve months = net assets ÷ average monthly spending; net assets count everything the organization owns beyond its debts — buildings and donor-restricted funds included, not just cash. Staff pay = salaries, wages, and officer compensation; it excludes benefits and payroll taxes. The IRS releases this data years after the fact — this organization's newest public year is 2023. Years refer to the calendar year in which the organization's fiscal year ended. Short-form filers do not publicly report donor-restricted balances or staffing costs. Source filings
What Cheer Flower Farm's IRS filings as a feed — one entry per filing year, through 2023. Add the address to any feed reader; in Slack, send /feed subscribe with it (pasting the link alone won't subscribe). How this feed works