Best donation crowdfunding platforms in country.greece
The platforms Greek causes should use — and why, on the tax side, who receives the money matters far more than which platform you pick.
On €100 via Credit card, 4fund.com delivers €100.00 to the recipient.
“For a Greek cause the strongest pick pairs broad card reach with support for IRIS — the new low-cost bank-to-bank rail — and EEA data residency. And because an individual can face up to 40% gift tax while a registered non-profit pays 0.5%, the platform that helps you raise through a recognised organisation protects far more of what you collect.”
Giving in country.greece
Dominant payment methods, the local currency, regulators, and the tax regime — the context that decides which platform actually serves a campaign here.
Greece runs primarily on cards: more than 70% of e-commerce is paid by Visa or Mastercard, and there is no single bank rail like iDEAL that dominates giving. The fast-rising story is IRIS, the instant bank-to-bank service that reached roughly 40% of credit transfers by late 2025 and became mandatory at checkout for businesses from December 2025. For donations that means a genuinely low-cost local rail now sits alongside cards, PayPal and SEPA.
For donors the picture is straightforward: a gift to a recognised charity earns a 20% income-tax reduction, provided your donations for the year total more than €100, and they are counted up to 5% of your taxable income. The recipient must be a state-recognised charitable body, and larger gifts should move by bank so they can be evidenced.
For fundraisers the picture is sharper, and unusual: in Greece who receives the money decides the tax. A registered non-profit pays a token 0.5% gift tax, while an individual collecting from unrelated donors can in principle face up to 40%. Payments are supervised by the Bank of Greece; donor data sits under the GDPR (law 4624/2019), policed by the Hellenic Data Protection Authority.
Top platforms for country.greece
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 | | €96.85 2.9% + €0.25 | 4.2/5 | 36 ctry | EEA |
| 3 | | €96.80 2.9% + €0.30 | 4.9/5 | 115 ctry | EEA |
| 4 | | €92.80 6.9% + €0.30 | 4.0/5 | 56 ctry | — |
| 5 | | €92.20 7.8% | 4.8/5 | 29 ctry | — |
| 6 | | €87.10 12.9% | 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.
Draft · pending verificationIs my gift tax-deductible?
Gifts to a recognised charity reduce your Greek income tax by 20% of the amount given — provided your donations for the year total more than €100, and counted up to 5% of your taxable income.
- It’s a 20% tax credit. Greece reduces your income tax by 20% of qualifying donations — a credit against tax, not a deduction from income.
- Above €100 a year. Your total donations for the tax year must exceed €100 for the relief to apply.
- Capped at 5% of income. Donations are counted only up to 5% of your taxable income; anything beyond that does not generate further credit.
- Recognised recipients only. The recipient must be a state-recognised charitable body. Keep the receipt, and pay larger gifts by bank so they can be evidenced; gifts to private individuals are not deductible.
| Your donations in a year | Qualifies? | Income-tax relief |
|---|---|---|
| Under €100 total | No | — |
| Over €100, up to 5% of income | Yes | 20% of the amount |
| The part above 5% of income | Excess ignored | No further relief |
- Total exceeds the €100 floor
- Qualifies
- Within the 5%-of-income cap
- Required
- Income-tax reduction (20%)
- €200
Do I owe tax on what I collect?
In Greece, who receives the money decides the tax. A registered non-profit is treated very differently from an individual collecting gifts from the public.
- Cash gifts are taxed by relationship. Greek gift tax sorts donors into categories A, B and C by their relationship to the recipient; unrelated donors — the general public — fall in Category C.
- Category C cash gifts: up to 40%. Money given by unrelated donors is, in principle, taxed at up to 40% with no progressive tax-free band — a key reason to think hard before raising as a private individual.
- A registered non-profit pays 0.5%. Donations of money to a recognised non-profit or public-benefit legal entity are taxed at just 0.5%, after a €1,000-per-donor annual tax-free amount (Law 2961/2001).
- Nationally-organised drives can be exempt. Money raised in proven, nationally-organised charitable collections can be exempt from gift tax altogether. If donors get goods or services in return, it may be income or VAT instead.
| Who receives the money | Likely gift-tax treatment |
|---|---|
| Registered non-profit / public-benefit entity | 0.5% (after €1,000/donor) |
| Individual · unrelated donors (Cat. C) | Up to 40% |
| Individual · close relatives (Cat. A) | 10% (after allowances) |
| Goods or services given in return | May be income / VAT |
- Registered non-profit
- 0.5%
- From a stranger (Cat. C)
- up to 40%
- Per-donor tax-free (non-profits)
- €1,000/yr
This isn’t tax advice. Greek gift tax turns on the recipient’s status and the relationship to each donor — confirm your situation with AADE before you collect or file.
Local payment methods
How donors in country.greece actually pay — and why the method matters as much as the platform.
The default Greek method — Visa and Mastercard cover the large majority of online payments. Percentage-based fees, so larger gifts cost more in absolute terms.
Low-cost instant bank-to-bank transfer, mandatory at business checkouts since December 2025 and growing fast — the cheapest local rail per euro where a platform supports it.
Very popular in Greece for one-off online gifts, especially from the diaspora; fee structure sits above card in most cases.
Standard SEPA credit transfer and direct debit, used for larger gifts and recurring giving.
Growing on mobile checkout — wraps a card, so it inherits card fees.
Cards dominate, so processing is mostly percentage-based and broadly similar across platforms. The real lever is IRIS: where a platform passes through this instant bank-to-bank rail, far more of each euro reaches the cause than on card-only routing.
Frequently asked
Platform and tax questions, together — because most people arrive with one of each.
Which platforms work in Greece?
The platforms in the table above operate in Greece and support cards and EEA data residency. Because cards dominate, processing fees are broadly similar; the differentiators are support for IRIS — the low-cost instant rail — and tooling that lets you raise through a recognised organisation rather than as a private individual.
Are donations tax-deductible in Greece?
Gifts to a recognised charity earn a 20% income-tax reduction, provided your donations for the year total more than €100; they are counted up to 5% of your taxable income. Gifts to private individuals are not deductible.
Will I be taxed on money I raise?
It depends entirely on who receives it. A registered non-profit or public-benefit entity pays only 0.5% gift tax (after a €1,000-per-donor annual allowance). An individual collecting from unrelated donors can in principle face up to 40%, since the public falls in Category C of Greek gift tax. Nationally-organised charitable drives can be exempt.
What’s the cheapest way to receive donations here?
A platform that supports IRIS, the instant bank-to-bank rail now mandatory at Greek checkouts. It is materially cheaper per euro than card routing, so where it is offered more of each gift reaches the cause.
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.