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Verified · 2026-05-14 Ownership disclosure
Donation crowdfunding · Luxembourg

Best donation crowdfunding platforms in Luxembourg

The platforms that fit a small, multilingual, highly cross-border market — and how a Luxembourg donation is deducted by the donor and treated for the fundraiser.

Top pick for Luxembourg

On €100 via Credit card, 4fund.com delivers €100.00 to the recipient.

What wins here: card + SEPA support · automated don déductible certificate · EEA data residency

“In a market this cross-border, the strongest pick combines broad card and SEPA support with an automated donation certificate for the Luxembourg deduction and EEA-only data residency — worth more to a Luxembourg cause than any single local rail.”

Recipient keeps · per €100
€100.00
Read 4fund.com review →
01

Giving in Luxembourg

Dominant payment methods, the local currency, regulators, and the tax regime — the context that decides which platform actually serves a campaign here.

Luxembourg is a small but unusually international donation market: roughly 47% of residents are foreign nationals and three official languages circulate, so campaigns routinely mix local and cross-border donors. Domestically, mobile payments lead — Payconiq (formerly Digicash, and now migrating to the pan-European Wero) became the most-used local e-payment method, with cards close behind. But most international crowdfunding platforms don't pass Payconiq through, so card remains the broadly-supported rail and the realistic default for a public campaign.

Because there is no single low-cost domestic rail that every platform supports the way iDEAL anchors the Netherlands, the per-donation story leans on processing fees and on the deduction mechanism rather than on one payment method. Donors who give to an approved public-interest body can deduct the gift on Luxembourg income tax, and most established charities issue the certificate platforms need to evidence it.

Financial services are supervised by the CSSF, with the Banque centrale du Luxembourg (BCL) overseeing payment and settlement infrastructure. Donor data falls under the RGPD — Luxembourg's GDPR regime — policed by the CNPD, so platforms with EEA-only data residency carry a lighter compliance burden than those storing donor PII outside the bloc.

02

Top platforms for Luxembourg

Ranked by how much of every 100 donated reaches the recipient under the local method (switch it to see the ranking move). We exclude platforms without Trustpilot reviews; the full catalogue is on the index.

Recipient-gets is shown for Credit card — the dominant method in Luxembourg.

Method
# Platform · best for Recipient gets · per 100 Trustpilot Countries Residency
1
4fund.com ★ Winner
Individuals, charities, and small organisations across the EEA who want a multilingual, no-commission fundraiser backed by an established Polish crowdfunding operator with EU payment-institution licensing.
€100.00 card rate*
3.9/5
30 ctry
2
WhyDonate
EU nonprofits — 0% fee, card + SEPA, RGPD-native
€97.80 1.9% + €0.30
4.9/5
115 ctry EEA
3
GoFundMe
Personal causes — broad cross-border brand reach
€97.50 2.2% + €0.30
3.3/5
20 ctry US
4
Leetchi
Group collections across the cross-border region
€96.85 2.9% + €0.25
4.2/5
36 ctry EEA
5
Donorbox
Embeddable donation forms with receipts
€94.55 5.15% + €0.30
4.0/5
23 ctry
6
GoGetFunding
Individual fundraisers running personal, medical, or emergency campaigns who prefer a fundraiser-paid platform fee over donor tipping, with broad international country availability.
€92.80 6.9% + €0.30
4.0/5
56 ctry
7
Chuffed
Nonprofits, social enterprises, and community-cause organisers in 29 supported countries who want a 100%-free, tip-funded platform and are willing to complete identity verification before launching.
€92.20 7.8%
4.8/5
29 ctry
8
Steady
European creators, independent journalists, podcasters, and publishers who want recurring income from paying members rather than one-off donation campaigns.
€87.10 12.9%
2.6/5
32 ctry
* platform doesn’t support this method — figure falls back to card rate See all 9 platforms in Luxembourg →
03

Donation & taxes

The two questions readers most want answered — laid out as separate tracks so a donor and a fundraiser each find their own.

Tax is the reason many people land here. We split it cleanly: what a donor can deduct, and what a fundraiser might owe.

Researched · verified · 2026-06-02
If you are donating

Is my gift tax-deductible?

Gifts to an approved public-interest organisation are deductible on Luxembourg income tax as special expenses (dépenses spéciales), provided your total annual giving clears a small floor.

  • A €120 annual floor. Your total donations for the year must reach at least €120 before any of it is deductible.
  • Capped at 20% of net income. The deduction is limited to the lower of 20% of your total net income or €1,000,000 per year.
  • Excess carries forward. Amounts above the cap can be carried forward to the two following tax years under the same conditions.
  • The recipient must be approved. It must be a recognised public-interest body, an approved development NGO, the Fonds culturel national, or a comparable charity in the EU/EEA — gifts to private individuals are not deductible. Keep the organisation's certificate.
What's deductible (2025 income year)
SituationDeductibleFloorAnnual cap
Gift to an approved Luxembourg bodyYes€120 total/yr20% of income
Gift to an EU/EEA approved charityYes€120 total/yr20% of income
Gift to a private individualNo
The limits in short (2025) Operator-verified
Minimum total to deduct
€120 / year
Maximum deduction
20% of net income
Absolute ceiling
€1,000,000
If you are raising money

Do I owe tax on what I collect?

It depends how the gift is made and who you are. Genuine donations collected hand-to-hand or online — without a notarial deed — are typically outside registration duty, but trading and notarised gifts follow different rules.

  • Manual gifts usually escape duty. A don manuel — a gift of money transferred without a notarial deed — is generally accepted without registration, so no registration duty (droit d'enregistrement) is due. Most online crowdfunding gifts fall here.
  • Notarised gifts are taxed by relationship. If a gift is formalised by notarial deed, registration duty applies and the rate rises with the distance of the family relationship — highest between unrelated persons. Check the rate with the Administration de l'enregistrement (AED).
  • If it's really income. Money given in return for goods, services, or a business activity is income — and may trigger VAT — not a gift.
  • Charities and ASBLs differ. A recognised public-interest body can receive gifts and issue the certificate donors need to deduct; that status changes the treatment entirely.
Likely treatment
Your situationLikely treatment
Individual · online/hand gifts, no deedTypically no registration duty
Notarised gift between unrelated personsRegistration duty applies
Goods or services given in returnMay be income / VAT
Recognised public-interest bodyCan receive gifts + issue certificates
The key distinction Operator-verified
Don manuel (no deed)
Usually no duty
Notarised donation
Duty by relationship
Verify with
AED

This isn't tax advice. Luxembourg gift treatment turns on how the gift is made and your status — confirm your case with the Administration de l'enregistrement and the Administration des contributions directes before you file.

04

Local payment methods

How donors in Luxembourg actually pay — and why the method matters as much as the platform.

Payconiq (mobile)51% Credit / debit card37% SEPA Direct Debit8% Bank transfer (virement)6% PayPal7%
Payconiq (mobile) Primary 51% adoption

The leading domestic e-payment method (formerly Digicash, migrating to Wero). Dominant locally, but rarely supported by international crowdfunding platforms.

Credit / debit card 37% adoption

The broadly-supported rail across platforms and the realistic default for a cross-border campaign. Percentage fees, so larger gifts cost more in absolute terms.

SEPA Direct Debit 8% adoption

Recurring and pledged gifts — a low-cost euro-zone bank pull where the platform supports it.

Bank transfer (virement) 6% adoption

Still common for larger or older-donor gifts; manual but cheap.

PayPal 7% adoption

Convenient for cross-border one-off gifts; fee structure typically sits above card.

With no single dominant rail that every platform passes through cheaply, the recipient-gets figure here turns on processing fees and on whether the platform supports SEPA at cost — card-only routing is the most expensive per euro.

05

Frequently asked

Platform and tax questions, together — because most people arrive with one of each.

Which platforms work in Luxembourg?

The platforms in the table above operate across the EU and accept Luxembourg campaigns. Because Payconiq — the dominant local mobile method — is rarely passed through by international crowdfunding platforms, card and SEPA support and an automated donation certificate matter more than any single local rail.

Are donations tax-deductible in Luxembourg?

Yes, if the recipient is an approved public-interest body, an approved development NGO, the Fonds culturel national, or a comparable EU/EEA charity. Your total annual giving must reach at least €120, and the deduction is capped at the lower of 20% of net income or €1,000,000, with excess carried forward two years. Gifts to private individuals are not deductible.

Will I be taxed on money I raise?

Genuine donations collected without a notarial deed — including most online and hand-to-hand gifts — are generally outside registration duty. Notarised gifts attract registration duty that rises with the distance of the family relationship. If donors receive goods or services in return, it may be income or VAT instead. Confirm your case with the AED.

What's the cheapest way to receive donations here?

A platform that supports SEPA at cost and passes card fees through transparently. With no single dominant low-cost rail across platforms, card-only routing is the most expensive per euro, so SEPA support and low processing fees deliver more of each gift to the cause.

06

Other countries

Same methodology, different jurisdiction.

How we rank

Rankings are produced by a public editorial methodology — open to peer review. We disclose ownership, scoring weights, and every change.

Read methodology →