{"id":1444,"date":"2026-03-25T14:52:35","date_gmt":"2026-03-25T14:52:35","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/?p=1444"},"modified":"2026-03-30T06:12:43","modified_gmt":"2026-03-30T06:12:43","slug":"netsuite-for-nonprofits","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/netsuite-for-nonprofits\/","title":{"rendered":"NetSuite for Nonprofits: Fund Accounting, Grants and Donor Management"},"content":{"rendered":"<style>\n.aax-post{font-family:'Poppins',sans-serif;color:#1a2332;max-width:820px;margin:0 auto;line-height:1.75}\n.aax-post h2{font-size:1.55rem;font-weight:600;margin:2.5rem 0 .9rem;color:#0a1628}\n.aax-post h3{font-size:1.15rem;font-weight:600;margin:1.8rem 0 .6rem;color:#1a2332}\n.aax-post p{margin:0 0 1.1rem}\n.aax-post ul,.aax-post ol{margin:0 0 1.1rem;padding-left:1.5rem}\n.aax-post li{margin-bottom:.45rem}\n.aax-post table{width:100%;border-collapse:collapse;margin:1.5rem 0;font-size:.93rem}\n.aax-post th{background:#0a1628;color:#fff;padding:.6rem 1rem;text-align:left}\n.aax-post td{padding:.55rem 1rem;border-bottom:1px solid #e8edf4}\n.aax-post tr:nth-child(even) td{background:#f5f7fb}\n.aax-post .faq-section{background:#f5f7fb;border-radius:10px;padding:1.8rem 2rem;margin:2.5rem 0}\n.aax-post .faq-item{margin-bottom:1.2rem;border-bottom:1px solid #e0e6ef;padding-bottom:1.2rem}\n.aax-post .faq-item:last-child{border-bottom:none;margin-bottom:0;padding-bottom:0}\n.aax-post .faq-question{font-weight:600;color:#0a1628;margin-bottom:.5rem}\n.aax-post .faq-answer{color:#3a4a5c;line-height:1.65}\n<\/style>\n<div class=\"sp-toc-wrap\"><nav class=\"sp-blog-toc\" id=\"spBlogToc\" style=\"display:none\"><h4><svg xmlns=\"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2000\/svg\" viewBox=\"0 0 24 24\" width=\"18\" height=\"18\" fill=\"none\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-width=\"2\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\" style=\"vertical-align:middle;margin-right:6px\"><line x1=\"8\" y1=\"6\" x2=\"21\" y2=\"6\"\/><line x1=\"8\" y1=\"12\" x2=\"21\" y2=\"12\"\/><line x1=\"8\" y1=\"18\" x2=\"21\" y2=\"18\"\/><line x1=\"3\" y1=\"6\" x2=\"3.01\" y2=\"6\"\/><line x1=\"3\" y1=\"12\" x2=\"3.01\" y2=\"12\"\/><line x1=\"3\" y1=\"18\" x2=\"3.01\" y2=\"18\"\/><\/svg>On this page<\/h4><ol class=\"sp-toc-list\" id=\"spTocList\"><\/ol><\/nav><\/div>\n\n<div class=\"aax-post\">\n\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.netsuite.com\/portal\/industries\/nonprofit.shtml\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\" target=\"_blank\">NetSuite for nonprofits<\/a> <a href=\"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/netsuite-revenue-recognition\/\" class=\"sp-content-link\">fund accounting<\/a> addresses a structural problem that general-purpose accounting software was not built to solve. A for-profit business tracks one pool of money and reports on whether it grew. A nonprofit tracks multiple pools of money simultaneously, each with its own restrictions, reporting obligations, and compliance requirements, and must demonstrate to donors, grantors, and regulators that each pool was used exactly as intended. <a href=\"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/zoho-books-vs-quickbooks-india-2026\/\">QuickBooks<\/a>, <a href=\"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/zoho-books-vs-xero\/\">Xero<\/a>, and similar tools can approximate this with workarounds, but the workarounds accumulate technical debt fast. This guide explains how NetSuite&#8217;s nonprofit edition handles <a href=\"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/netsuite-erp-implementation-cost-india\/\" class=\"sp-content-link\">NetSuite implementation overview<\/a> natively, how <a href=\"https:\/\/www.grantspace.org\/\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" target=\"_blank\">grants<\/a> and donor activity are tracked, and how it compares to the alternatives that finance teams at nonprofits most commonly evaluate.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<figure style=\"margin:36px 0;text-align:center;line-height:0;\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/inline-netsuite-for-nonprofits-1.jpg\" alt=\"netsuite for nonprofits fund accounting\" style=\"width:100%;max-width:820px;height:auto;border-radius:10px;box-shadow:0 4px 20px rgba(10,22,40,.13);\" loading=\"lazy\" \/><\/figure><h2>Why Nonprofits Need Fund Accounting Software and What Makes It Different<\/h2>\n\n<p>Fund accounting is a method of financial management in which resources are allocated to and tracked within designated &#8220;funds&#8221; rather than a single general pool. Each fund has its own set of accounts and must be balanced separately. This approach exists because nonprofit organizations frequently hold money that is restricted \u2014 that is, designated by the donor or grantor for a specific purpose and legally required to be spent only on that purpose.<\/p>\n\n<p>The distinction between restricted and unrestricted funds matters in several concrete ways:<\/p>\n\n<ul>\n  <li><strong>Restricted funds cannot be used to cover general operating expenses<\/strong> even when the organisation is running a budget shortfall. Spending restricted funds on unapproved uses triggers donor notification obligations and can result in grant clawbacks.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Financial statements must show fund-level balances.<\/strong> The Statement of Financial Position (the nonprofit equivalent of a balance sheet) presents net assets separately for restricted and unrestricted categories, with further breakdowns for temporarily versus permanently restricted.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Auditors test fund segregation directly.<\/strong> An auditor reviewing a nonprofit&#8217;s books will trace individual transactions to fund codes and verify that restricted funds were spent only on approved program activities.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n<p>Standard accounting software handles this through workarounds: separate accounts, tags, classes, or spreadsheet reconciliations layered on top of the core ledger. These approaches work at small scale but break down when a nonprofit manages 10 or more concurrent grants, operates programs across multiple countries, or has a finance team that turns over frequently. Purpose-built fund accounting software eliminates the workarounds by making fund segregation a first-class feature of the ledger architecture.<\/p>\n\n<h2>Setting Up Programs, Funds, and Restricted vs Unrestricted Accounting in NetSuite<\/h2>\n\n<p>NetSuite&#8217;s nonprofit configuration uses three primary structural elements to achieve fund segregation: segments, classes, and custom records.<\/p>\n\n<h3>The Fund Segment<\/h3>\n<p>NetSuite supports custom transaction body and line segments. In the nonprofit configuration, a &#8220;Fund&#8221; segment is added to every transaction line. When a program officer logs an expense, they tag it with the applicable fund code \u2014 say, Fund 14 for a specific government health grant. The general ledger records the debit against that fund automatically. Month-end reporting can then produce a balance sheet and income statement filtered to Fund 14 exclusively, showing exactly what was spent, what remains, and whether the fund is on track relative to its award budget.<\/p>\n\n<h3>Classes for Programs<\/h3>\n<p>The Class dimension in NetSuite maps to program areas. A nonprofit running three programs (housing assistance, workforce development, and youth education) assigns one class per program. Every transaction is tagged with both a fund (the money source) and a class (the program activity). This two-dimensional tagging is what allows the Statement of Functional Expenses \u2014 a critical nonprofit financial statement \u2014 to be generated correctly, showing how much of each expense category (salaries, rent, supplies) went to each program versus general and administrative overhead.<\/p>\n\n<h3>Net Asset Classification<\/h3>\n<p>NetSuite&#8217;s chart of accounts for nonprofits separates net assets into three categories: unrestricted, temporarily restricted, and permanently restricted. Contributions and grants are coded on receipt to the appropriate net asset class. When restricted funds are spent on approved activities, a release-from-restriction journal entry moves the amount from restricted to unrestricted net assets, reflecting the completion of the donor&#8217;s or grantor&#8217;s intent. This release process is automated or semi-automated in NetSuite&#8217;s nonprofit edition, with approval workflows to ensure finance oversight.<\/p>\n\n<h2>Grant Management: Tracking Applications, Disbursements, and Reporting Obligations<\/h2>\n\n<p>Grant management in NetSuite operates at several stages of the grant lifecycle, from application through close-out reporting.<\/p>\n\n<figure style=\"margin:36px 0;text-align:center;line-height:0;\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/inline_netsuite-for-nonprofits_1.jpg\" alt=\"Grant funding application documents review\" style=\"width:100%;max-width:820px;height:auto;border-radius:10px;box-shadow:0 4px 20px rgba(10,22,40,.13);\" loading=\"lazy\" \/><\/figure>\n\n<h3>Pre-Award Tracking<\/h3>\n<p>Before a grant is awarded, the prospect sits in NetSuite as an opportunity record (or a custom grant application record in implementations that use a dedicated grant management SuiteApp). The record captures the funder, the requested amount, the application date, the program it supports, and the decision timeline. This gives development and finance teams a shared view of the grant pipeline and allows budget projections to include probable versus confirmed funding.<\/p>\n\n<h3>Award Setup<\/h3>\n<p>When a grant is confirmed, the award is set up as a project in NetSuite with a corresponding fund segment. The award amount becomes the project budget. Reporting periods, deliverables, and spending categories allowed under the grant terms are configured at the project level. If the grant restricts spending to specific expense categories (direct program costs only, for example, with no overhead allocation), those restrictions can be enforced through approval routing \u2014 any expense coded to the grant fund that falls outside approved categories requires finance review before posting.<\/p>\n\n<h3>Disbursement Tracking and Drawdown<\/h3>\n<p>Government and foundation grants often require the nonprofit to request drawdowns of funds rather than receiving the full award upfront. NetSuite tracks the total award, the amount drawn down to date, the amount expended, and the amount available for future requests. Drawdown requests can be generated as reports showing expenditures by budget category within the reporting period, formatted for submission to the funder.<\/p>\n\n<h3>Compliance Reporting<\/h3>\n<p>Most grants require periodic progress reports showing financial expenditure alongside programmatic outcomes. The financial component \u2014 actuals versus budget by expense category for the grant period \u2014 is produced from NetSuite&#8217;s project profitability report filtered to the grant fund. For US federal grants subject to Uniform Guidance (2 CFR 200), NetSuite&#8217;s audit trail provides the documentation required for single audit purposes.<\/p>\n\n<figure style=\"margin:36px 0;text-align:center;line-height:0;\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/inline-netsuite-for-nonprofits-2.jpg\" alt=\"netsuite for nonprofits fund accounting best practices\" style=\"width:100%;max-width:820px;height:auto;border-radius:10px;box-shadow:0 4px 20px rgba(10,22,40,.13);\" loading=\"lazy\" \/><\/figure><h2>Donor Management and Campaign Contribution Tracking<\/h2>\n\n<p>NetSuite&#8217;s nonprofit edition includes a constituent relationship management (CRM) module designed for donor management. Individual and institutional donors are stored as constituent records with a history of all gifts, pledges, and communications.<\/p>\n\n<p>Contribution types supported include:<\/p>\n\n<ul>\n  <li><strong>One-time cash gifts:<\/strong> Recorded as revenue transactions coded to the appropriate fund and campaign.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Pledges:<\/strong> A pledge creates a receivable record in NetSuite. When payment arrives, it is applied against the pledge. Unpaid pledges appear on aging reports so the development team can follow up.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Recurring donations:<\/strong> Recurring gift schedules generate expected receipts automatically and can trigger reminders when payment is due.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>In-kind contributions:<\/strong> Non-cash gifts (equipment, services) are recorded at fair market value with documentation attached to the constituent record.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Restricted gifts:<\/strong> When a donor designates a gift for a specific program or purpose, the contribution is coded to the restricted fund at the point of entry.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n<p>Campaign tracking allows development teams to measure the cost and return of each fundraising effort. A direct mail campaign, an annual gala, or a digital giving campaign each has a campaign record in NetSuite. Contributions received in response are coded to the campaign, allowing a clean calculation of net revenue per campaign after direct costs. This analysis informs future fundraising investment decisions with actual historical data rather than estimates.<\/p>\n\n<figure style=\"margin:36px 0;text-align:center;line-height:0;\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/inline_netsuite-for-nonprofits_2.jpg\" alt=\"Charity fundraising event donor management\" style=\"width:100%;max-width:820px;height:auto;border-radius:10px;box-shadow:0 4px 20px rgba(10,22,40,.13);\" loading=\"lazy\" \/><\/figure>\n\n<h2>Form 990 Preparation and Audit Readiness with NetSuite Reporting<\/h2>\n\n<p>The Form 990 (Return of Organization Exempt From Income Tax) is the primary annual compliance filing for US tax-exempt nonprofits. It requires detailed financial disclosure including revenue by source, functional expense allocation, executive compensation, and program accomplishment narratives. Similar requirements exist in other jurisdictions: the UK Charity Commission requires an annual report and accounts, Australian charities file with the ACNC, and so on.<\/p>\n\n<p>NetSuite does not produce a completed Form 990 PDF ready for filing, but it provides the precise financial reports that a CPA uses to populate the form:<\/p>\n\n<ul>\n  <li><strong>Statement of Functional Expenses:<\/strong> Total expenses broken down by both function (program, management and general, fundraising) and natural expense classification (salaries, occupancy, printing, etc.). This is Schedule Part IX of the 990 and requires the dual-classification approach that NetSuite&#8217;s Class and account structure supports natively.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Revenue by source report:<\/strong> Contributions, government grants, program service revenue, investment income, and other revenue separated by type and compared to the prior year.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Program accomplishments narrative support:<\/strong> Program-level financials showing total expense by program, which feeds the program descriptions required in 990 Part III.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Executive compensation records:<\/strong> Payroll data in NetSuite can be used to pull compensation for officers and key employees required in Schedule J.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n<p>Audit readiness is a function of documentation completeness and trail integrity. NetSuite maintains a full audit log of every transaction, including who created it, when it was approved, and any subsequent modifications. For financial statement audits, auditors can be given read-only access to NetSuite and query transaction-level detail directly rather than working from exported spreadsheets. This reduces audit preparation time significantly and eliminates the version control problems that arise when finance teams provide data via spreadsheet extracts.<\/p>\n\n<h2>Budget vs Actual Reporting by Program and Fund<\/h2>\n\n<p>Budgeting in NetSuite for nonprofits operates at multiple dimensions simultaneously. An annual operating budget is entered at the account, class (program), and department level. Fund-level budgets are entered for each grant and restricted fund. These two budget types coexist and can be reported independently or combined.<\/p>\n\n<p>The most operationally useful report for a nonprofit CFO is the budget versus actual by program, updated monthly. This report shows:<\/p>\n\n<ul>\n  <li>Each program as a column or row group.<\/li>\n  <li>Budgeted revenue and expense for the year, prorated to the period.<\/li>\n  <li>Actual revenue received and expenses incurred to date.<\/li>\n  <li>Variance in both dollar terms and percentage.<\/li>\n  <li>Projection to year-end if current run rate continues.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n<p>NetSuite&#8217;s saved searches and financial report builder allow this report to be configured once and run on demand. Executive directors and program managers can access a read-only version of the report in the NetSuite portal without requiring finance to export and distribute a spreadsheet every month. This self-service model is particularly valuable at nonprofits where program managers are responsible for managing to a program budget but lack the accounting background to interpret a trial balance.<\/p>\n\n<h2>NetSuite vs Blackbaud Financial Edge vs QuickBooks Nonprofit: Comparison<\/h2>\n\n<table>\n  <thead>\n    <tr>\n      <th>Criterion<\/th>\n      <th>NetSuite for Nonprofits<\/th>\n      <th>Blackbaud Financial Edge NXT<\/th>\n      <th>QuickBooks Nonprofit<\/th>\n    <\/tr>\n  <\/thead>\n  <tbody>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Fund accounting<\/td>\n      <td>Native, segment-based, multi-fund<\/td>\n      <td>Native, purpose-built for nonprofits<\/td>\n      <td>Approximated via classes and tags; limited<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Grant management<\/td>\n      <td>Strong via <a href=\"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/zoho-books-project-accounting-india\/\">project accounting<\/a> and custom segments<\/td>\n      <td>Strong, especially with Raiser&#8217;s Edge integration<\/td>\n      <td>Minimal; requires third-party tools<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Donor management<\/td>\n      <td>Built-in CRM module; mid-level capability<\/td>\n      <td>Best-in-class via Raiser&#8217;s Edge NXT integration<\/td>\n      <td>Not included; requires DonorPerfect or similar<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Form 990 support<\/td>\n      <td>Financial reports cover 990 data requirements<\/td>\n      <td>Strong 990 reporting templates<\/td>\n      <td>Basic; requires manual preparation<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td><a href=\"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/netsuite-multi-entity-india\/\" class=\"sp-content-link\">Multi-entity<\/a> \/ international<\/td>\n      <td>Strong; full multi-subsidiary consolidation<\/td>\n      <td>Limited multi-entity support<\/td>\n      <td>Not available<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Scalability<\/td>\n      <td>High; suited to mid-size and large nonprofits<\/td>\n      <td>High; suited to large nonprofits and foundations<\/td>\n      <td>Low; typically suitable below $5M annual revenue<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Pricing model<\/td>\n      <td>Per user\/month; 40% Social Impact discount available<\/td>\n      <td>Per user\/month; higher base cost<\/td>\n      <td>Low monthly subscription<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Best for<\/td>\n      <td>Growing nonprofits needing ERP + fund accounting together<\/td>\n      <td>Large nonprofits with complex fundraising operations<\/td>\n      <td>Small nonprofits with simple fund structures<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n  <\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n\n<p>Blackbaud&#8217;s edge is in constituent management and fundraising sophistication \u2014 Raiser&#8217;s Edge NXT is the industry benchmark for major gifts programs, capital campaigns, and planned giving. NetSuite&#8217;s edge is in general ERP capability: inventory, multi-entity consolidation, procurement, and operational reporting that nonprofits with commercial activities or international programs require. QuickBooks Nonprofit is best understood as a starting point rather than a long-term platform; most organisations outgrow it between $3 million and $8 million in annual operating budget as grant complexity and program count increase.<\/p>\n\n<div class=\"faq-section\">\n  <h2>Frequently Asked Questions<\/h2>\n  <div class=\"faq-item\">\n    <p class=\"faq-question\">Does NetSuite have a nonprofit-specific edition?<\/p>\n    <p class=\"faq-answer\">Yes. NetSuite for Nonprofits is a purpose-built edition that includes fund accounting, program and grant tracking, donor management, and Form 990 reporting. It is available at a discounted rate for qualifying nonprofit organizations through the Social Impact programme.<\/p>\n  <\/div>\n  <div class=\"faq-item\">\n    <p class=\"faq-question\">How does NetSuite handle restricted fund accounting?<\/p>\n    <p class=\"faq-answer\">NetSuite uses a combination of Classes (for programs), Departments, and custom segments to segregate restricted funds. Transactions are tagged at the line level with the applicable fund, which prevents co-mingling and allows balance-by-fund reporting required for donor and grant reporting.<\/p>\n  <\/div>\n  <div class=\"faq-item\">\n    <p class=\"faq-question\">Can NetSuite generate a Form 990 directly?<\/p>\n    <p class=\"faq-answer\">NetSuite cannot produce a completed Form 990 PDF ready for filing, but it provides the financial reports \u2014 statement of functional expenses, revenue by source, program allocations \u2014 that accountants use to populate the 990. Many nonprofits use these exports in combination with tax preparation software.<\/p>\n  <\/div>\n  <div class=\"faq-item\">\n    <p class=\"faq-question\">How does NetSuite compare to Blackbaud Financial Edge for large nonprofits?<\/p>\n    <p class=\"faq-answer\">Blackbaud Financial Edge NXT is purpose-built for nonprofits and has deeper native fundraising and constituent management features. NetSuite is stronger on general ERP capabilities, international operations, and multi-entity consolidation. Large nonprofits with complex international programs or commercial revenue often choose NetSuite for the broader operational coverage.<\/p>\n  <\/div>\n  <div class=\"faq-item\">\n    <p class=\"faq-question\">What is the NetSuite Social Impact discount for nonprofits?<\/p>\n    <p class=\"faq-answer\">Oracle NetSuite offers qualifying nonprofits and social enterprises a 40% discount on licensing through its Social Impact programme. Eligibility requirements include nonprofit status and alignment with NetSuite&#8217;s Social Impact criteria, verified during the sales process.<\/p>\n  <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>For nonprofit finance teams evaluating netsuite for nonprofits fund accounting, the clearest indicator of fit is operational complexity: multiple concurrent grants with different reporting periods, programs operating across more than one country, or a commercial revenue stream alongside charitable activities. At that level of complexity, purpose-built fund accounting in a full ERP platform pays for itself within the first audit cycle.<\/p>\n\n<\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>On this page NetSuite for nonprofits fund accounting addresses a structural problem that general-purpose accounting software was not built to solve. A&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":1668,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1444","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-blog"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1444","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1444"}],"version-history":[{"count":6,"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1444\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":2062,"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1444\/revisions\/2062"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/1668"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1444"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1444"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1444"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}