Winston-Salem Nonprofit Fee Waivers Guide

Events and Special Uses North Carolina 3 Minutes Read · published February 10, 2026 Flag of North Carolina

This guide explains how nonprofit organizations can request fee waivers from Winston-Salem, North Carolina municipal authorities. It covers typical eligible activities, who decides waiver requests, how to apply, what forms may be required, and enforcement risks. Use this page to prepare an application packet, identify the enforcing departments, and follow the procedural steps that municipal staff expect. For department contacts and official code text see the resources below.

Start early: municipal approval and budget review can take several weeks.

Who may qualify

Winston-Salem typically considers fee waivers for events and services that serve a demonstrable public benefit, such as charitable fundraising, community outreach, youth programming, or veteran services. Eligibility often depends on the nonprofit's legal status, the purpose and scale of the activity, and whether the organization can show need or community benefit.

How to request a waiver

Most waiver requests are submitted with the permit or rental application for the specific city service or facility. Typical steps include documenting nonprofit status, a written waiver request explaining public benefit, and any supporting financials or insurance certificates. Timelines vary by department; submit requests as early as possible and with the underlying permit application when available.

Applications & Forms

  • Special event permit or facility rental application (submit with waiver request).
  • Written fee waiver request describing the public benefit and estimated budget impact.
  • If required, proof of nonprofit status (IRS determination letter) and insurance certificates.
Some departments require the waiver request to be part of the initial permit application.

Penalties & Enforcement

Failure to obtain required permits or to follow permit conditions can lead to enforcement actions. The municipal code is the controlling instrument for city rules; specific monetary fines for unpaid or waived fees are not specified on the cited municipal code page and may be set by department policy or council action.[1]

  • Monetary fines: not specified on the cited municipal code page.
  • Escalation: whether first, repeat, or continuing offences carry higher penalties is not specified on the cited municipal code page.
  • Non-monetary sanctions: administrative denial or revocation of permit, stop-work orders, and referral to courts are commonly used measures; specific measures and thresholds are not specified on the cited municipal code page.
  • Enforcer: code enforcement, inspections, planning, or the permitting office for the department that issued the permit (see Help and Support / Resources below for contact pages).
  • Appeal/review: appeal routes and statutory time limits are not specified on the cited municipal code page; contact the issuing department for appeal procedures and deadlines.
  • Defences/discretion: departments may exercise discretion for reasonable excuses, emergency adjustments, or approved variances; formal standards are not specified on the cited municipal code page.
If you proceed without an approved waiver or permit you risk enforcement action and denial of future permits.

Applications & Forms

  • Special Event Permit or Facility Rental form — used to request the activity and submit an accompanying waiver request; specific form names or numbers are department-specific and not listed on the cited municipal code page.
  • No single universal "fee waiver" form is centrally published on the municipal code page; individual departments may have their own templates or require a written letter.

Action steps:

  • Confirm the correct permit type for your activity.
  • Prepare a waiver letter with proof of nonprofit status.
  • Contact the issuing department to confirm submission method, deadlines, and processing time.

Common violations

  • Holding an event without a required permit.
  • Failure to pay assessed fees after denial of a waiver.
  • Noncompliance with permit conditions (safety, cleanup, occupancy limits).

FAQ

How long does a waiver decision take?
Timing varies by department and workload; submit requests as early as possible and expect several weeks for review.
Can a partial waiver be granted?
Partial waivers or fee reductions may be available at department discretion; specifics are determined by the issuing department.
What if my waiver is denied?
If denied, follow the department's appeal or review process and consider alternative funding or sponsorship to cover fees.

How-To

  1. Identify the permit you need for your event or service.
  2. Gather nonprofit documentation: IRS determination letter, mission statement, and budget summary.
  3. Draft a clear waiver request explaining public benefit and any community partnerships.
  4. Submit the waiver with the permit application to the issuing department and request confirmation of receipt.
  5. Track the application, respond to requests for information, and if denied, request appeal steps in writing.

Key Takeaways

  • Start the waiver process early and submit it with the permit application.
  • Provide clear evidence of nonprofit status and community benefit.
  • Contact the issuing department for exact forms, deadlines, and appeal procedures.

Help and Support / Resources