Troop Finance Report - Girl Scouts Nebraska 2025

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  1. Click ‘Get Form’ to open the Troop Finance Report in the editor.
  2. Begin by filling in the Service Unit or School name and your Troop number. Indicate the level of your troop by checking all applicable boxes.
  3. Enter the number of girls in your troop, along with the Leader’s Name, Phone, and Email for contact purposes.
  4. Provide your bank details including Bank Name, Address, City, Zip Code, Routing Number, and Account Number.
  5. List two signers on the account who are registered Girl Scout members along with their emails. Include the Membership Specialist's information as well.
  6. Fill out the Income and Expenses sections accurately. Record all relevant financial activities such as registrations, dues collected, product program payments, and any other income or expenses.
  7. If your ending balance exceeds $1,000, note future plans for those funds. Check if your troop is disbanding and specify what will happen to remaining funds.
  8. Finally, ensure that all required signatures are provided at the bottom of the form before submitting it to maintain compliance with GSUSA policies.

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And the FAQ on their web page says most of the profit goes to the local council (which is typically a group of counties within your state), and a smaller amount (10-20% of the profit) goes to the troop (thats the local club in your city/area).
One hundred percent of the money that a council and its troops raise through the Girl Scout Cookie Program stays with that council and its troops. Let there be no question: all of the revenue from cookie activitiesevery penny after paying the bakerstays with the Girl Scout council.
The bakery is paid about 25 to 35 percent of the profits; 45 to 65 percent is used by the regional council to cover programming costs; and 10 to 20 percent is kept by the local troop whose members decide how to spend their portion of the funds.
Average Girl Scouts of the USA Unit Leader weekly pay in the United States is approximately $517, which is 31% below the national average.
Troops and individual scouts both participate in the cookie profits. But the extent to which they reap the rewards varies by council. Using the same financial statements above, wed estimate troops retain an average of around 18%, or $1.10 per box.
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The individual troops get about . 70 cents to a 1.00 per box sold, the service unit gets some (more local but a step above troop level), the council gets some (camps, programs, training), GSUSA gets some and the baker is paid for the actual cookies.
While the girls theoretically get $4 and change, the troop gets around $0.18/box. The rest goes to the local council and national programs to support camps and underprivileged kids.

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