Trustees’ Report for 2024_25
Richmond Orchestra. Charity number 276187
Governance
The names of the three trustees and the principal contact address for the charity are as shown on the Charity Commission website. In the course of the year no changes were made.
The governing document is the orchestra’s constitution as revised in November 2012; available on request. Trustees are members of the orchestra who volunteer themselves and are approved at an AGM.
Objectives
The aim of the orchestra is “the enjoyment, practice and public performance of orchestral music by amateur players from the local and surrounding communities”. Our main activities are holding between thirty and thirty-five weekly rehearsals and staging up to four concerts, one of which is directed at a young audience. We also set up occasional workshops, two or three times per year, to give young soloists or composers and opportunity to work with a live orchestra.
Activities
During the year 2024_25 we put on concerts featuring symphonies by Franck and Tchaikovsky, and were joined by a local school choir in a performance of Holst’s Planets Suite. We welcomed a pianist supported by the Countess of Munster Trust and collaborated with a local choral society in a concert featuring Brahms’ Requiem.
Financial policy
The orchestra’s regular income comes mostly from members’ subscriptions, Gift Aid on subscriptions and from concert receipts. This was supplemented during the year by a grant of £2500 from The Humphrey Richardson Taylor Charitable Trust. Occasional grants and donations also supplement income.
Reserves policy: we aim to maintain a minimum bank balance of £8000, this being an estimate of the income expected in a single concert season, or term, in case of the complete financial failure of one of the main concerts.
The orchestra’s finances are healthy, and for two consecutive years have shown an increase in our reserves.
Caroline Steele
(Treasurer)
Richmond Orchestra – Notes on Accounts for 2024-25 (Financial Year: 1-Aug-2024 to 31-Jul-2025)
SUMMARY POSITION
The Orchestra’s finances are healthy, closing the year with just shy of £30 000 in reserve. For the second successive year we have ended the year in profit.
This is due to the great efforts made to secure the services of friends and amateurs to play as extras in concerts, a successful re-application to HRTCT, and a substantial gift-aid reclaim from member fees. We increased membership subscriptions for the first time in eight years in response to increased hire of venues both for rehearsals and for concerts.
Concert-day losses, previously averaging £1 600, reduced markedly this year to £800. This was helped by support from the Countess of Munster trust for soloist fees in the Spring concert and excellent box-office takings in the Summer concert.
INCOME
Member subscriptions, which increased for the first time in 8 years, contributed around £12 300 and we recouped around £2 800 on gift-aid. These constitute the most significant portion of our income, and it is vital that we maintain, and ideally grow, our healthy level of regular membership.
The request for a grant from HRTCT was made this year on the grounds that our reserves were reducing markedly year-on-year, and we were awarded £2 500. Our balance sheet this year would not appear to justify application again this year for a grant.
Concert receipts reflected audience figures of 96, 129 and 280 respectively for each concert.
EXPENDITURE
The major part of our expenditure remains putting on concerts, with performance venue costs increasing year on year. Rehearsal venue hire and professional fees have not changed significantly in recent years.
Fees for professional extras and percussion hire are a significant concert expenditure and have had to rise to align with MU/MM rates, but we remain extremely grateful to all those who play without a fee.
C Steele
Hon Treasurer
September 2025
Printed 17/08/2025
Richmond Orchestra Income and Expenditure Year: 1 August 2024 to 31 July 2025
| INCOME Regular Income: Members Subscriptions Income Tax Gift Aid Miscellaneous Total Regular Income Grants & Donations: HR Taylor Trust Friends/Patrons Donations/Bequests (SGC23-24) Total Grants & Donations Concert Receipts: Autumn Concert SGC Concert Spring Concert Summer Concert Total Concert Receipts Total Fund Raising Receipts |
Difference £12,315 £10,498 £1,818 £2,842 £2,549 £293 £311 £174 £138 2023/24 2024/25 |
Difference £12,315 £10,498 £1,818 £2,842 £2,549 £293 £311 £174 £138 2023/24 2024/25 |
|---|---|---|
| £15,468 £13,221 £2,248 £2,500 £2,500 £0 £0 £0 £0 £0 £500 (£500) |
||
| £2,500 £3,000 (£500) £1,429 £1,172 £258 £1,976 £1,164 £812 £1,880 £1,402 £478 £3,231 £2,116 £1,115 |
||
| £8,516 £5,853 £2,663 |
||
| £0 | ||
| TOTAL INCOME | £26,484 £22,074 £4,410 |
|
| EXPENDITURE Regular Expenditure: Rehearsal Fees Rehearsal Venue Charges Depreciation Publicity Administration/Insurance Miscellaneous Total Regular Expenditure Concert Expenditure: Autumn Concert SGC Concert Spring Concert Miscellaneous Summer Concert Total Concert Expenditure Total Fund Raising Expenses |
Difference £6,755 £6,460 £295 £3,080 £3,080 £0 £74 £84 (£10) £166 £45 £121 £468 £350 £118 £87 £194 (£107) 2024/25 2023/24 |
|
| £10,630 £10,213 £417 £2,885 £3,369 (£484) £1,966 £1,164 £802 £2,398 £2,699 (£301) £71 £0 £71 £3,704 £3,418 £286 |
||
| £11,024 £10,650 £374 |
||
| £0 | ||
| TOTAL EXPENDITURE | £21,654 £20,863 £791 |
|
| …of which charged to JA fund | £350 £220 £130 |
|
| TOTAL SURPLUS /(DEFICIT) | £4,831 £1,211 £3,619 |
|
| ANALYSIS OF SURPLUS / (DEFICIT) Regular Income net of Expenditure (less JA fund contribution) Grants, Donations, Friends, etc Concert Surplus / (Deficits): Autumn Concert Mozart SGC Concert Spring Concert Workshops Summer Concert Total Concert Surplus / (Deficit) Fund Raising |
Difference £4,838 £3,008 £1,830 £5,188 £3,228 £1,960 £2,500 £3,000 (£500) (£1,456) (£2,198) £10 £0 (£518) (£1,297) (£71) £0 (£473) (£1,302) 2024/25 2023/24 |
|
| (£2,508) (£4,797) £2,289 £0 £0 £0 |
||
| TOTAL SURPLUS /(DEFICIT) | £4,831 £1,211 £3,619 |
|
| Musical activities Surplus / (Deficit) £2,331 (£1,789) £4,119 i.e. not including fundraising, grants, donation, bequests, etc |
Printed 08/10/2025
Richmond Orchestra Balance Sheet 31 July 2025
| Richmond Orchestra Balance Sheet 31 July 2025 |
|
|---|---|
| ASSETS AND LIABILITIES: Fixed Assets: All items Total Fixed Assets: Current Assets: Debtors - Amounts Receivable Prepayments Cash in Hand Barclay's Accounts Total Current Assets Total Creditors - Amounts Due (1) |
Difference £247 £320 2024/25 2023/24 |
| £247 £320 (£74) £0 £0 £0 £0 £0 £0 £72 £70 £3 £29,941 £25,119 £4,821 |
|
| £30,013 £25,189 £4,824 £0 (£80) £80 |
|
| TOTAL NET ASSETS | £30,260 £25,429 £4,831 |
| ACCUMULATED FUND: Opening Balance Add Surplus / (Deficit) for Year Adjustments for Prior Years (2) |
£25,429 £24,148 £1,281 £4,831 £1,211 £3,620 £0 £70 (£70) |
| ACCUMULATED FUND CLOSING BALANCE | £30,260 £25,429 £4,831 |
| … of which JA fund | £5,850 £6,200 (£350) |
Footnotes
(1) late invoices/expense claims, uncashed cheques
(2) writing off uncashed cheque Sum23
Caroline Steele
Hon. Treasurer
Printed 17/08/2025
Richmond Orchestra Concert Accounts 2024/25
| Income Tickets Adverts in programme Bar takings Sponsorship Expenditure Hall Hire Instrument Hire Music Hire Performance Fees Soloists Fees & Expenses Brass Harp Strings Percussion/Timps Woodwind Others Total Extras Programme Printing Flowers Publicity Bar costs Ticket printing Other TOTALS: Income Expenditure Profit (Loss) Number of tickets sold |
Autumn £1,230.88 £0.00 £198.36 £0.00 £682.50 £250.00 £179.24 £700.00 £250.00 £190.00 £170.00 £0.00 £130.00 £0.00 £62.00 |
Spring £1,650.58 £0.00 £229.63 £0.00 £610.00 £300.00 £152.40 £755.00 £100.00 £40.00 £0.00 £0.00 £0.00 £0.00 £78.00 |
Summer £3,230.69 £0.00 £0.00 £0.00 £900.00 £979.00 £185.88 £755.00 £0.00 £0.00 £340.00 £0.00 £205.00 £0.00 £116.25 |
SGC £0.00 £0.00 £0.00 £1,976.20 £0.00 £335.00 £436.20 £745.00 £0.00 £20.00 £170.00 £0.00 £260.00 £0.00 £0.00 |
Totals £6,112.15 £0.00 £427.99 £1,976.20 £2,192.50 £1,864.00 £953.72 £2,955.00 £350.00 £250.00 £680.00 £0.00 £595.00 £0.00 £256.25 |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| £552.00 £96.14 £0.00 £95.35 £79.99 £0.00 £0.00 £1,429.24 £2,885.22 (£1,456) |
£118.00 £102.96 £50.50 £59.95 £149.12 £0.00 £0.00 £1,880.21 £2,397.93 (£518) |
£661.25 £122.42 £35.00 £65.35 £0.00 £0.00 £0.00 £3,230.69 £3,703.90 (£473) |
£450.00 £0.00 £0.00 £0.00 £0.00 £0.00 £0.00 £1,976.20 £1,966.20 £10.00 |
£1,781.25 £321.52 £85.50 £220.65 £229.11 £0.00 £0.00 £8,516.34 £10,953.25 (£2,437) |
||
| Duke Street Church Berlioz - Francs Juges Boulanger - D'un matin de printemps Lalo - Cello Concerto Franck - Symphony |
All Saints East Sheen Rachmaninov - Piano #1 Tchaikovsky - Symphony #6 Borodin - Prince Igor |
(PRS fee deducted at source) Landmark Centre Also Sprach, Moonlight, Blue Danube Clare de Lune, Star Trek Holst - Planets Suite |
All Saints East Sheen Faure - Cantique Gershwin - Rhapsody in Blue Brahms - German Requiem |
|||
| 96 | 129 | 280 |
Independent examiner’s report to the trustees of the Richmond Orchestra
I report to the trustees on my examination of the accounts of the Richmond Orchestra (the Trust) for the year ended 31 July 2025.
Responsibilities and basis of report
As the charity trustees of the Trust you are responsible for the preparation of the accounts in accordance with the requirements of the Charities Act 2011 (‘the Act’).
I report in respect of my examination of the Trust’s accounts carried out under section 145 of the 2011 Act and in carrying out my examination I have followed all the applicable Directions given by the Charity Commission under section 145(5)(b) of the Act.
Independent examiner’s statement
I have completed my examination. I confirm that no material matters have come to my attention in connection with the examination giving me cause to believe that in any material respect:
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accounting records were not kept in respect of the Trust as required by section 130 of the Act; or
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the accounts do not accord with those records; or
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The accounts do not comply with the applicable requirements concerning the form and content of accounts set out in the Charities (Accounts and Reports) Regulations 2008 other than any requirement that the accounts give a ‘true and fair view which is not a matter considered as part of an independent examination.
I have no concerns and have come across no other matters in connection with the examination to which attention should be drawn in this report in order to enable a proper understanding of the accounts to be reached.
Signed:
Name: Jonathan Owers BSc Address: 10 Francis Court, 20 Little Queens Road, Teddington, TW11 0JD Date: 19th Oct 2025