Best donation crowdfunding platforms in France
Which platform delivers the most of every euro to French causes — and how the réduction d’impôt changes what a €100 gift is really worth.
On €100 via Credit card, 4fund.com delivers €100.00 to the recipient.
“For a French association, the strongest pick pairs low card-processing fees with automated reçus fiscaux — the receipt that lets a donor claim their 66% (or 75%) income-tax reduction is worth far more than a few basis points on processing.”
Giving in France
Dominant payment methods, the local currency, regulators, and the tax regime — the context that decides which platform actually serves a campaign here.
France runs on cards: the domestic Carte Bancaire network, co-badged with Visa and Mastercard, carries the large majority of online payments, with PayPal and mobile wallets (Apple Pay, Google Pay) growing fast. There is no bank-transfer rail like the Dutch iDEAL dominating checkout, so the per-donation story turns less on payment method and more on platform fees and the tax receipt.
The headline mechanism for French giving is the réduction d’impôt: a donor who gives to a recognised general-interest organisation (organisme d’intérêt général) reduces their income tax by 66% of the gift — or 75% for gifts that help people in difficulty. A platform that issues a compliant reçu fiscal automatically adds far more value than a fraction of a percent on processing, which is why our French ranking weighs receipt automation heavily.
Donation platforms operate under the Intermédiaire en financement participatif (IFP) status, registered with ORIAS and supervised by the ACPR (part of the Banque de France); investment-style crowdfunding sits with the AMF. Donor data is governed by the RGPD — the French GDPR — under the CNIL, so platforms with EEA data residency carry a lighter compliance burden.
Top platforms for France
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 | | €100.00 card rate* | 4.3/5 | 1 ctry | France (Microsoft Azure) |
| 3 | | €100.00 card rate* | 3.0/5 | 1 ctry | France |
| 4 | | €100.00 card rate* | 4.7/5 | 1 ctry | EU |
| 5 | | €98.75 card rate* | 3.9/5 | 1 ctry | — |
| 6 | | €97.80 card rate* | 4.6/5 | 1 ctry | — |
| 7 | | €97.60 card rate* | 4.3/5 | 1 ctry | — |
| 8 | | €96.85 2.9% + €0.25 | 4.2/5 | 36 ctry | EEA |
| 9 | | €96.80 2.9% + €0.30 | 3.3/5 | 20 ctry | US |
| 10 | | €96.80 2.9% + €0.30 | 4.9/5 | 115 ctry | EEA |
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 a recognised general-interest organisation reduce your French income tax — by 66% of the amount as a rule, or 75% for gifts that help people in difficulty.
- 66% as the standard rate. Gifts to an organisme d’intérêt général or recognised public-interest foundation reduce your income tax by 66% of the amount, within an annual cap of 20% of your taxable income.
- 75% for aid to people in difficulty. Gifts funding meals, care or housing for people in difficulty (the “Coluche” regime) give a 75% reduction, up to a ceiling raised from €1,000 to €2,000 for gifts made on or after 14 October 2025.
- Above the 75% ceiling. Amounts beyond the 75% ceiling fall back to the 66% rate, still within the 20%-of-income cap.
- Keep your reçu fiscal. You need the organisation’s tax receipt (reçu fiscal); most platforms issue it automatically. Gifts to private individuals are not deductible.
- Excess carries forward. Gifts above the 20%-of-income cap can be carried forward and deducted over the following 5 years.
| Gift type | Reduction | Cap |
|---|---|---|
| Gift to a general-interest org | 66% | 20% of income |
| Aid to people in difficulty (Coluche) | 75% | €2,000 (from 14 Oct 2025) |
| Gift to a private individual | None | — |
- To a general-interest org (66%)
- €660 off your tax
- To a “Coluche” cause (75%)
- €750 off your tax
- Annual cap (66% rate)
- 20% of income
Do I owe tax on what I collect?
It depends who you are. A recognised association is treated very differently from an individual receiving money through an online cagnotte.
- Recognised charities are exempt. An association reconnue d’intérêt général or d’utilité publique receives donations free of gift duties and can issue reçus fiscaux to its donors.
- Gifts to an individual are a “don manuel”. Money given to a private individual is technically a don manuel and, between unrelated people, can be taxed at up to 60% (droits de donation) once it is declared.
- Genuine solidarity campaigns. In practice, public solidarity or emergency campaigns funded by many small gifts are generally not taxed — but a single large gift from one donor can be reportable.
- If it’s really income. Money given in exchange for goods, services or rewards is income (and may attract VAT), not a gift.
| Your situation | Likely treatment |
|---|---|
| Recognised association (intérêt général) | Exempt, with conditions |
| Individual · many small public gifts | Usually untaxed in practice |
| Individual · one large gift from a stranger | Gift duties (up to 60%) may apply |
| Rewards or goods given in return | May be income / VAT |
- Rate on a declared don manuel
- up to 60%
- Recognised charity
- Exempt
This isn’t tax advice. Crowdfunding situations vary — confirm your case with the impôts (DGFiP) before you file.
Local payment methods
How donors in France actually pay — and why the method matters as much as the platform.
The default French method — the domestic CB network, co-badged with Visa/Mastercard, carries the large majority of online donations. Percentage fees, so larger gifts cost more in absolute terms.
Very widely used in France for one-off online gifts; its fee structure typically sits above card.
Used for recurring giving and larger gifts — low cost and bank-to-bank. Instant SEPA is now free and near-instant in France.
Fast-growing on mobile checkout — wraps a card, so card fees apply.
New European account-to-account wallet launched in France in 2024; emerging for P2P and low-cost transfers.
Because cards dominate French giving, the recipient-gets figure moves less with payment method than in bank-rail markets like the Netherlands or Germany — the bigger levers are the platform’s fee model and whether the cause can issue a reçu fiscal.
Frequently asked
Platform and tax questions, together — because most people arrive with one of each.
Which platforms work in France?
Platforms such as HelloAsso, Leetchi, Ulule and KissKissBankBank, plus international options like GoFundMe and WhyDonate, all operate in France and support Carte Bancaire. The French ranking leans on low card fees and automated reçus fiscaux as much as on headline pricing.
Are donations tax-deductible in France?
Yes, if the recipient is a recognised general-interest organisation. The standard reduction is 66% of the gift, within a cap of 20% of taxable income; gifts that help people in difficulty give 75% up to a ceiling of €2,000 (for gifts made from 14 October 2025). Gifts to private individuals are not deductible.
Will I be taxed on money I raise?
A recognised association receives donations free of gift duties. For an individual, money raised is technically a don manuel, and gifts from a single unrelated donor can in principle be taxed at up to 60% once declared — though genuine public solidarity campaigns funded by many small gifts are generally untaxed in practice. Rewards or services given in return can make it income or VAT instead.
What’s the cheapest way to receive donations here?
Because cards dominate, processing fees are broadly similar across platforms — so the biggest levers are the platform’s own fee model (some French platforms run on optional donor tips rather than a cut) and whether the cause can issue a reçu fiscal, which hands the donor a 66%–75% tax reduction.
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.