Best donation crowdfunding platforms in the Netherlands
Which platform delivers the most of every euro to Dutch recipients — and what the tax office expects from donors and fundraisers.
On €100 via iDEAL, 4fund.com delivers €100.00 to the recipient.
“On a €100 donation via iDEAL, native ANBI receipts and EEA-only data residency make the leading pick the most defensible for a Dutch nonprofit — and the flat iDEAL fee means more of each euro reaches the cause.”
Giving in the Netherlands
Dominant payment methods, the local currency, regulators, and the tax regime — the context that decides which platform actually serves a campaign here.
The Netherlands is one of Europe's most mature donation-crowdfunding markets, and iDEAL anchors roughly 78% of online consumer payments — charitable giving included. Because iDEAL settles bank-to-bank at a low flat fee (typically €0.25–€0.35), platforms that pass that cost through deliver far more of each euro to the recipient than those routing donations over credit-card rails.
Dutch charities with ANBI status (Algemeen Nut Beogende Instelling) can issue receipts that donors deduct on income tax. Most major platforms operating here automate ANBI receipts using the charity's RSIN — but the donor and recipient sides of the tax question are quite different, which is why this guide splits them below.
On the payments side the regulator is DNB; consumer protection sits with the AFM. Donor data is governed by the AVG — the Dutch implementation of the GDPR — so platforms with EEA-only data residency carry a materially lighter compliance burden than those storing donor PII in the US.
Top platforms for the Netherlands
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.
| # | Platform · best for | Recipient gets · per 100 | Trustpilot | Countries | Residency |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | | €100.00 card rate* | 3.9/5 | 30 ctry | — |
| 2 | | €99.65 €0.35 | 4.9/5 | 115 ctry | EEA |
| 3 | | €96.85 2.9% + €0.25 | 3.3/5 | 20 ctry | US |
| 4 | | €96.85 card rate* | 4.2/5 | 36 ctry | EEA |
| 5 | | €96.76 2.95% + €0.29 | 4.0/5 | 23 ctry | — |
| 6 | | €96.61 card rate* | 2.4/5 | 1 ctry | EEA (NL host) |
| 7 | | €93.40 card rate* | 4.5/5 | 2 ctry | — |
| 8 | | €92.80 card rate* | 4.0/5 | 56 ctry | — |
| 9 | | €92.20 card rate* | 4.8/5 | 29 ctry | — |
| 10 | | €87.10 card rate* | 2.6/5 | 32 ctry | — |
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 · 2026-06-02Is my gift tax-deductible?
Gifts to an ANBI-registered charity are deductible on Dutch income tax. How much depends on whether it is a one-off gift or a registered periodic gift.
- One-off (ordinary) gifts. Deductible above a threshold of 1% of your “threshold income” (min. €60) and capped at 10% of that income.
- Periodic gifts. A written 5-year agreement with the charity is fully deductible — no threshold, no percentage cap (an overall ceiling of €250,000/yr applies).
- The charity must be an ANBI. Check the Belastingdienst ANBI register and keep the charity’s RSIN; gifts to non-ANBIs are not deductible.
- Keep your paperwork. Bank records, the platform’s donation receipt, and — for periodic gifts — the signed agreement.
| Gift type | Deductible | Threshold | Annual cap |
|---|---|---|---|
| One-off gift to an ANBI | Partly | 1% of income | 10% of income |
| Periodic gift (5-yr deed) | Fully | None | €250,000 |
| Gift to a non-ANBI | No | — | — |
- Ordinary-gift threshold (drempel)
- €400
- Ordinary-gift cap
- €4,000
- Periodic gift
- No threshold
Do I owe tax on what I collect?
It depends who you are and why people gave. A registered charity is treated very differently from an individual receiving gifts.
- Individuals may face gift tax. Money received as a gift can fall under schenkbelasting once a single donor exceeds the annual exemption.
- Many small public gifts. A genuine cause funded by many donors, each under the exemption, is typically untaxed — but one large donor over the limit is reportable.
- If it is really income. Payments for services, goods, or a business activity are income (box 1), not a gift.
- Registering as an ANBI changes everything. An ANBI can receive gifts free of gift tax and issue deductible receipts — worth it past a certain scale.
| Your situation | Likely treatment |
|---|---|
| Individual · donors under exemption | Usually untaxed |
| Individual · one donor over exemption | Gift tax may apply |
| Registered charity (ANBI) | Exempt, with conditions |
| Rewards or goods given in return | May be income / VAT |
- From a stranger / the public
- €2,418
- From parents
- €6,633
This isn’t tax advice. Crowdfunding situations vary — verify your case with the national tax authority before you file.
Local payment methods
How donors in the Netherlands actually pay — and why the method matters as much as the platform.
The default Dutch method. Bank-to-bank, low flat fee, instant confirmation — essential for any Dutch campaign.
Recurring gifts and pledges — the donor authorises a one-off or repeating pull from their account.
Mostly international donors. Percentage fees make it the most expensive path per euro.
Niche in NL; common for cross-border donors. Highest fee structure of the set.
Growing on mobile — wraps a card, so it inherits card fees.
Belgian method, offered where a campaign also targets BE donors.
Method choice changes the recipient-gets figure more than the platform does: a €0.35 flat iDEAL fee versus ~€3.15 on a card is a 9× difference on a €100 gift.
Frequently asked
Platform and tax questions, together — because most people arrive with one of each.
Which platforms work in the Netherlands?
The platforms in the table above all support iDEAL and EEA data residency. The leaders on recipient-gets via iDEAL pass through its flat fee, while platforms that route most Dutch donations over card rails deliver less of each euro to the cause.
Are donations tax-deductible in the Netherlands?
Yes, if the recipient is an ANBI-registered charity. One-off gifts are deductible above a 1%-of-income threshold and below a 10% cap; a registered 5-year periodic gift is fully deductible with no threshold. Gifts to individuals or non-ANBIs are not deductible.
Will I be taxed on money I raise?
If you are an individual, gifts from any single donor above the annual exemption can attract gift tax (schenkbelasting). Many small public gifts for a genuine cause are typically untaxed. Registered charities (ANBIs) are exempt under conditions. If you give goods or services in return, it may be income or VAT instead.
What’s the cheapest way to receive donations here?
A platform that passes through iDEAL’s flat fee. On a €100 gift, a €0.35 iDEAL fee beats a ~€3.15 card fee nine times over — so the method matters more than the platform brand.
Other countries
Same methodology, different jurisdiction.
Rankings are produced by a public editorial methodology — open to peer review. We disclose ownership, scoring weights, and every change.