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Verified · 2026-05-14 Ownership disclosure
Donation crowdfunding · United States

Best donation crowdfunding platforms in the United States

The platforms US causes and charities actually use — and how the new 2026 tax rules change what a $100 gift is worth to donor and recipient alike.

Top pick for the United States

On $100 via Credit card, Zeffy delivers $100.00 to the recipient.

What wins here: low all-in fees · automated IRS-ready receipts · 501(c)(3)-aware tooling

“With card fees broadly similar across processors, the strongest US pick is the one that keeps the platform fee low and issues a clean, IRS-ready receipt — on a $100 gift, the difference between a 0% platform fee and a 5% one dwarfs any gap in card processing.”

Recipient keeps · per $100
$100.00
Read Zeffy review →
01

Giving in the United States

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

The United States runs overwhelmingly on cards: roughly 83% of online donations are made by debit or credit card, with PayPal, ACH bank transfers and mobile wallets (Apple Pay, Google Pay, Venmo) splitting the rest. There is no low-cost national rail like Europe's iDEAL or SEPA, so the per-donation story is driven less by exotic payment methods and more by platform fees and one federal question: is the recipient a registered charity, or an individual?

That distinction decides almost everything about tax. Gifts to a 501(c)(3) public charity can be deductible for the donor; money raised by an individual for a personal cause — the classic medical or memorial campaign — is generally a non-taxable gift to the recipient but is not deductible for the giver. The major platforms split along the same line: GoFundMe dominates personal causes, while Donorbox, Givebutter, Classy (now GoFundMe Pro) and Zeffy serve registered nonprofits.

Oversight is federal and state at once. The IRS recognises and polices tax-exempt status; most states require charities to register before soliciting, enforced by state attorneys general and coordinated through NASCO. There is no single federal privacy law for donor data — state regimes such as California's CCPA/CPRA apply instead — so platforms vary widely in where and how they store supporter information.

02

Top platforms for the United States

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 the United States.

Method
# Platform · best for Recipient gets · per 100 Trustpilot Countries Residency
1
Zeffy ★ Winner
100% free for nonprofits — donor-tip funded
$100.00 card rate*
4.5/5
4 ctry CA
2
JustGiving
UK charities and individual fundraisers who want a recognised, no-platform-fee donation platform with Gift Aid support and a fully free direct-donation option.
$97.80 1.9% + $0.30
4.1/5
6 ctry
3
WhyDonate
Nonprofits — 0% platform fee, card + PayPal
$97.80 1.9% + $0.30
4.9/5
115 ctry EEA
4
Give Lively
US 501(c)(3) nonprofits seeking a fully underwritten, no-cost fundraising toolkit - campaign pages, text-to-donate, peer-to-peer, and events - backed by philanthropist founders rather than platform charges.
$97.50 card rate*
3.3/5
1 ctry US
5
GoFundMe
Personal and emergency causes — the best-known US brand
$97.50 2.2% + $0.30
3.3/5
20 ctry US
6
Givebutter
All-in-one fundraising, events and peer-to-peer
$96.80 card rate*
4.1/5
1 ctry
7
Yapla
Nonprofits, clubs, and associations in Canada and parts of Europe that want to run donations and fundraising inside a single tool alongside memberships, events, accounting, and contact management.
$95.80 card rate*
2.3/5
5 ctry
8
Mightycause
US nonprofits looking for a free or low-cost starting point for donation pages, peer-to-peer campaigns, and event fundraising.
$95.22 card rate*
3.2/5
1 ctry
9
Donorbox
Recurring giving and embeddable forms for 501(c)(3)s
$94.55 5.15% + $0.30
4.0/5
23 ctry
10
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
* platform doesn’t support this method — figure falls back to card rate See all 18 platforms in the United States →
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?

Only gifts to an IRS-recognised 501(c)(3) charity can be deductible — and how you claim it changed for 2026. Gifts to an individual's personal campaign are never deductible.

  • It must be a qualified charity. Use the IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search to confirm 501(c)(3) status; gifts to individuals or personal GoFundMe campaigns are not deductible.
  • Itemizers: a new 0.5%-of-AGI floor (2026). Under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, itemizers can deduct charitable cash gifts only to the extent they exceed 0.5% of adjusted gross income, up to a 60%-of-AGI ceiling.
  • Non-itemizers: a new above-the-line deduction (2026). Even if you take the standard deduction, you can deduct up to $1,000 (single) or $2,000 (married filing jointly) in cash gifts to qualifying charities.
  • Keep your records. A bank record or written acknowledgement is required; gifts of $250 or more need a contemporaneous written acknowledgement from the charity.
What's deductible (2026)
Gift typeDeductible?Condition
Cash gift to a 501(c)(3) — itemizerYesAbove 0.5% of AGI; up to 60% of AGI
Cash gift to a 501(c)(3) — non-itemizerYes (new for 2026)Up to $1,000 single / $2,000 joint
Gift to an individual / personal causeNo
Key 2026 figures Operator-verified
Cash-gift AGI ceiling
60% of AGI
Itemizer floor (new)
0.5% of AGI
Non-itemizer deduction (new)
$1,000 / $2,000
Verified · 2026-06-02 IRS (irs.gov)
If you are raising money

Do I owe tax on what I raise?

Genuine gifts to an individual for a personal cause are generally not taxable income — but selling something, or running an ongoing activity, changes that. Registered charities follow separate rules.

  • Genuine gifts aren't income. Money freely given out of generosity, with nothing of value provided in return, is generally a non-taxable gift to the recipient.
  • Rewards or sales are different. If donors receive goods or services, the proceeds can be taxable income — and may be treated as a sale rather than a gift.
  • A 1099-K isn't a tax bill. For 2026 a Form 1099-K is generally issued only above $20,000 and 200 transactions; receiving one does not by itself make the money taxable — you report and adjust it on Schedule 1.
  • Gift tax falls on the donor, not you. The recipient owes no income tax on a gift; a donor giving any one person more than $19,000 in 2026 files a gift-tax return but rarely owes, thanks to the large lifetime exemption.
Likely treatment
Your situationLikely treatment
Personal cause · genuine giftsNot taxable income
Donors receive goods or servicesMay be taxable income / a sale
Registered 501(c)(3) charityExempt, with conditions
Ongoing business activityTaxable income
1099-K & gift tax (2026) Operator-verified
1099-K reporting threshold
$20,000 + 200 txns
Pure gift (no goods/services)
No 1099-K required
Annual gift-tax exclusion
$19,000 per donor

This isn't tax advice. Crowdfunding situations vary and the 2026 rules are new — confirm your case with the IRS or a tax professional before you file.

Verified · 2026-06-02 IRS (irs.gov)
04

Local payment methods

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

Credit / debit card83% PayPal10% ACH bank transfer8% Apple Pay / Google Pay12% Venmo8%
Credit / debit card Primary 83% adoption

The default US method. Percentage-based fees (typically ~2.2–2.9% + $0.30), so larger gifts cost more in absolute terms.

PayPal 10% adoption

Popular for one-off online gifts; widely trusted, with a fee structure broadly in line with cards.

ACH bank transfer 8% adoption

Lower-cost bank-to-bank rail favoured for recurring gifts; settlement is slower than card.

Apple Pay / Google Pay 12% adoption

Fast-growing on mobile checkout; each wraps a card, so card fees still apply.

Venmo 8% adoption

Common for informal, peer-to-peer giving and offered by a growing share of nonprofits.

In the US the recipient-gets figure moves less with payment method than in euro markets — cards dominate and processing rates are similar. The bigger levers are the platform fee and whether the recipient is a 501(c)(3), which decides the donor's deduction.

05

Frequently asked

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

Which platforms work in the United States?

All the platforms in the table above operate in the US. GoFundMe leads for personal and emergency causes, while Donorbox, Givebutter, Classy (GoFundMe Pro) and Zeffy focus on registered 501(c)(3) nonprofits with recurring giving, events and receipting tools. The ranking weighs the platform fee and receipt automation heavily, since card processing rates are similar across providers.

Are donations tax-deductible in the United States?

Only gifts to an IRS-recognised 501(c)(3) charity, and only if you handle the deduction correctly. For 2026, itemizers can deduct cash gifts above a 0.5%-of-AGI floor (up to 60% of AGI), and non-itemizers can deduct up to $1,000 (single) or $2,000 (married filing jointly). Gifts to individuals or personal campaigns are not deductible.

Will I be taxed on money I raise?

Genuine gifts to an individual for a personal cause are generally not taxable income. It changes if donors receive goods or services in return, or if you're effectively running a business. A Form 1099-K (issued for 2026 above $20,000 and 200 transactions) doesn't by itself make the money taxable — you report and adjust it. Registered charities are exempt under their own rules.

What's the cheapest way to receive donations here?

Because cards dominate and processing rates are similar, the biggest lever is the platform fee. A 0% platform fee versus 5% is a far bigger difference on a $100 gift than any gap in card processing — so a low-fee, receipt-automating platform delivers the most 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 →