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Home » Can Trump revoke Harvard’s tax-exempt status?

Can Trump revoke Harvard’s tax-exempt status?

adminBy adminMay 2, 2025 Politics No Comments6 Mins Read
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President Donald Trump on Friday reiterated his plans to revoke Harvard University’s tax-exempt status, making clear that he intends to use the IRS against his perceived enemies.

While there are examples of colleges losing or failing to achieve tax-exempt status, this has never come on the heels of a president’s express wish. The IRS is supposed to be immune from politics, which raises questions about how the government tax collection agency will follow through and force Harvard to pay more in taxes.

The most notable example of the IRS revoking a university’s tax-exempt status occurred in the late 20th century, when the IRS enacted new regulations against racial discrimination and moved against Bob Jones University, which forbade interracial relationships among students. Bob Jones University, arguing it had a religious right to discriminate, fought the IRS in court. The resulting legal battle lasted more than a dozen years and was ultimately decided by the US Supreme Court in 1983.

Trump is now arguing that Harvard should have its tax-exempt status revoked for not doing enough to address alleged antisemitism on campus. A task force he appointed to address antisemitism on campuses froze more than $2 billion in funding to Harvard, leading to a lawsuit from the university.

Expect more lawsuits if the IRS, responding to Trump, does indeed try to revoke Harvard’s status as a tax-exempt educational organization.

First, there’s a process that should start with an audit. All 501(c)3 organizations file public forms about their finances, and Harvard is no exception.

There’s an official process by which all of this should happen. The IRS would have to contact Harvard in person or by mail. Then there could be an audit. The IRS would then determine if Harvard should lose its status and inform Harvard of its decision. Over the course of months, the IRS and Harvard would go back and forth about the audit and its determination. Ultimately, if the IRS did strip Harvard of its tax-exempt status, there’s an appeals process by which Harvard could contest the decision within the IRS. If that didn’t work, Harvard could challenge that decision in tax court. From there, it could go to other federal courts.

US law specifically prohibits presidents from directing the IRS to investigate anyone in a section entitled: “Prohibition on executive branch influence over taxpayer audits and other investigations.”

While the IRS falls under the Treasury Department, it’s important that it be as protected from politics as possible. That’s why the IRS has only two politically appointed officials, according to Mark Mazur, who was assistant secretary of treasury for tax policy at the outset of the Biden administration

The US has higher voluntary tax payment rates than other countries, Mazur told me, “because people feel that their interactions with the tax system are fair and based on law.”

If the IRS is suddenly used for political purposes, that trust could be destroyed. During the Obama administration, for instance, the IRS became embroiled in a bona fide scandal when a Treasury Department investigation found the IRS delayed conferring tax-exempt status on conservative groups.

There is already a lot of chaos at the IRS under the new Trump administration. Multiple acting commissioners have resigned, apparently the result a standoff over whether tax data could be used by immigration officials.

Back in 1983, the Supreme Court agreed that Bob Jones University should not be tax-exempt because, at the time, it banned interracial relationships among its students.

The university didn’t drop its interracial marriage policy until 2000 — in an announcement on CNN’s Larry King Live, coincidentally — although it did not regain its tax-exempt status until 2017.

The US has now come full circle to the point that one of the main gripes Trump has with Harvard is its diversity programs.

If there’s one American university that should be able to stand up to the Trump administration, it’s Harvard.

The nation’s most famous institution of higher learning has resources. Its endowment exceeds $50 billion.

It also has allies. A shocking number of Republican and Democratic lawmakers are alumni — nearly 10% of representatives and nearly 20% of senators, according to one estimate.

But for all its wealth and cachet, the institution relies on federal funding and its tax-exempt status like every other major research university.

After Harvard rejected the Trump administration’s demand for access to and review of its employment, hiring and admissions data, as well as the discontinuation of all diversity programs, Trump said on social media that the university’s tax-exempt status should be rescinded.

The long-term question will would be what would happen to Harvard without federal dollars and exemption from billions of dollars it might owe in taxes if it lost that status — not only to the federal government, but perhaps also to the state of Massachusetts.

People walk on the Harvard Business School campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on April 15, 2025.

Harvard, along with most major public and private US colleges, is exempt from paying taxes because of its status as a nonprofit organization.

Like churches and charities, universities fall under section 501(c)3 of US tax code. The idea, which is written into the law, is that their benefit to society — in this case, education and research — outweighs the need for the tax base they would provide.

Not all institutes of higher learning go this route, as Trump is intimately aware. His now-defunct Trump University was a for-profit organization that was sued for fraud by former presidents. Trump settled the lawsuits.

Tax-exempt universities, on the other hand, must refrain from endorsing candidates or influencing legislation, among other things. They must publicly provide annual reports on their activities and finances.

The IRS and the US have challenged the tax-exempt status of universities and other organizations, as occurred with South Carolina’s fundamentalist Bob Jones University.

The IRS challenged Bob Jones’ status in 1970, but the Supreme Court didn’t rule until 1983 that in order to be tax-exempt an organization must, “demonstrably serve and be in harmony with the public interest, and the institution’s purpose must not be so at odds with the common community conscience as to undermine any public benefit that might otherwise be conferred.”

For many years the IRS withheld tax-exempt status granted to religious organizations from the Church of Scientology, but reversed course in 1997 after a long and unconventional campaign by Scientologists.

Interestingly, the tax law Trump signed during his first term levied a new tax on the wealthiest universities, including Harvard. The 1.4% excise tax on universities with more than $500,000 per student in their endowments applied to 58 universities in 2022, according to the Tax Policy Center, and raised $244 million. That tax still exists today.

Lawmakers are currently revisiting that law, and it could provide another opportunity to take a hard look at the taxes paid — or not — by universities.

This story and headline have been updated with new developments.



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