Grants & Funding for Nonprofit Startups

Grants and impact investors for mission-driven nonprofit startups

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Grant Programs
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Accelerators
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Answered FAQs

Funding Landscape for Nonprofit Founders

Nonprofit startups operate in a distinct funding ecosystem that blends government grants, foundation giving, impact investing, and earned revenue. The most successful nonprofit startups treat fundraising with the same rigor as venture-backed companies — building a clear theory of change, tracking measurable outcomes, and cultivating long-term funder relationships. Federal and state grant programs provide billions in non-dilutive capital for nonprofit organizations each year. Foundation giving has grown to over $80 billion annually in the US. Impact investors — from community development financial institutions to dedicated social enterprise VCs — provide additional capital for nonprofits with earned revenue models. The key is understanding which capital sources align with your mission and stage.

  • +Access to billions in foundation and government grant funding unavailable to for-profits
  • +Tax-exempt status makes donations and grants tax-deductible for donors
  • +Impact investing ecosystem growing significantly with ESG mandates
  • +Community Development Financial Institutions provide favorable-rate loans

Top Grant Opportunities

Additional opportunities available in our full grants database.

VCs and Angel Investors

Our VC database contains thousands of verified funds. Use the search below to find investors that match your specific profile.

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Accelerators and Programs

Browse our full accelerator database for more programs.

Success Stories

Khan Academy

$1.5M+ from Gates Foundation

Sal Khan

Sal built Khan Academy as a nonprofit and raised from the Gates Foundation and Google.org based on demonstrated educational impact at scale.

Code.org

$65M+

Hadi Partovi

Code.org raised from Microsoft, Google, Amazon, and dozens of foundations after demonstrating massive reach in computer science education.

Your Action Plan

A step-by-step fundraising roadmap tailored for nonprofit founders.

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Establish 501(c)(3) status quickly

Apply for IRS tax-exempt status as early as possible. Most foundation grants and government programs require established 501(c)(3) status. The process takes 3-6 months.

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Build your theory of change document

A clearly articulated theory of change — inputs, activities, outputs, outcomes, impact — is the nonprofit equivalent of a VC pitch deck. Foundation program officers require it.

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Apply to Grants.gov systematically

Create a quarterly calendar of federal grant deadlines relevant to your mission. Federal grants are the highest-dollar non-dilutive capital available and take time to develop relationships with program officers.

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Research foundations in Candid

Candid indexes foundation grants by issue area, geography, and organization size. Identify 20-30 foundations that match your mission and develop tailored outreach to each.

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Develop earned revenue alongside grants

Nonprofits with earned revenue (program fees, licensing, consulting) have more fundraising flexibility and stronger financial sustainability than grant-dependent organizations.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a nonprofit startup receive venture capital?

Traditional VC investment requires equity, which is incompatible with nonprofit structure. However, impact investors, program-related investments from foundations, and social enterprise funds can invest in nonprofits through loans or recoverable grants.

What is the difference between a nonprofit and a social enterprise?

Nonprofits are 501(c)(3) organizations that cannot distribute profits to owners or shareholders. Social enterprises can be for-profit companies with a social mission. Some founders structure a hybrid: a nonprofit for grants and a for-profit entity for earned revenue.

How long does it take to get 501(c)(3) status?

Typically 3-6 months for a standard application. Expedited processing is available in some cases. Some funders will accept a "pending 501(c)(3)" application with a fiscal sponsor in the interim.

What is a fiscal sponsor and when do I need one?

A fiscal sponsor is an established 501(c)(3) that can receive tax-deductible donations on your behalf while your application is pending. Fractured Atlas, IFCO, and Community Initiatives are common fiscal sponsors.

Are there accelerators specifically for nonprofits?

Yes. Fast Forward, Echoing Green, Acumen Fellows, Ashoka, and Village Capital all support nonprofit and social enterprise founders. Many require demonstrated impact or a specific program stage.

Explore More Resources

Funding Guides for Other Founder Types