Best education charities: how to choose

There is no single best education charity: the right one depends on what you want your money to do. Below: how to decide, and the education organizations with the strongest verified disclosure records.

Education charities with the strongest disclosure records

Ranked by GiveRadar's integrity assessment, which measures how much an organization discloses (registration, financials, governance, contact, recency), not how good its work is. A lower position is usually less public data, not a worse charity.

  1. 1. Stichting Network of Sustainable Development and Education 🇳🇱 96/100
  2. 2. Seattle Country Day School 🇺🇸 90/100
  3. 3. Palo Alto Partners in Education 🇺🇸 90/100
  4. 4. Minnesota Brass Incorporated 🇺🇸 90/100
  5. 5. University of Wisconsin Oshkosh Foundation Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  6. 6. Mosaics Public School Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  7. 7. University District Childrens Center 🇺🇸 90/100
  8. 8. Wilson Hall 🇺🇸 90/100
  9. 9. Northside Charter High School 🇺🇸 90/100
  10. 10. Maryland Ensemble Theatre Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  11. 11. Sci-Tech Discovery Center Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  12. 12. Region a Partnership for Children 🇺🇸 90/100
  13. 13. Saint Ambrose Academy 🇺🇸 90/100
  14. 14. Partnership for Children of Johnston County Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  15. 15. 3l Place Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  16. 16. Academy of Charter Schools Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  17. 17. Academy for Science and Design Charter School 🇺🇸 90/100
  18. 18. Academy for the Integrated Arts 🇺🇸 90/100
  19. 19. Signal Mountain Christian School Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  20. 20. Mountain View Educational Foundation 🇺🇸 90/100
  21. 21. Nevada Hands & Voices 🇺🇸 90/100
  22. 22. Yes the Ross Valley Schools Foundation 🇺🇸 90/100
  23. 23. Faulkner University 🇺🇸 90/100
  24. 24. Sisters Graduate Resource Organiazation 🇺🇸 90/100

Browse all education charities →

How to choose a education charity

  • Scholarship and tuition-support funds spend mostly on direct cash grants, while school-building or campus-infrastructure organizations carry large capital costs; a charity's spending pattern should match which of the two it says it does.
  • Literacy and tutoring programs differ from full school operators: check whether the charity delivers instruction itself or supplies the schools that do.
  • Local community schools are simple to verify in person; international education-access organizations add a step, since you also want to see whether the in-country school or partner is itself registered.
  • Verify that any "100% goes to scholarships" claim is itemized somewhere in the charity's filings, not just stated on its homepage.
  • Check whether training programs lead to a recognized credential or certificate, or are informal skills instruction with no accreditation body behind them.
  • Single-school foundations often depend on one dominant donor or a small board; general-fund education charities spread that risk across more programs, and neither structure is inherently better, just different to evaluate.

The five-step walkthrough is in our guide for donors.

What the integrity assessment does and does not tell you

The integrity assessment measures disclosure, not impact. A education charity scoring 90 publishes more verifiable information than one scoring 50; it is not doing better work. Small local organizations often disclose less simply because no one requires them to. Use the score to see what you can verify, then judge the work yourself: the full methodology is public.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best education charity to donate to?

There is no objectively best education charity, and GiveRadar does not rank charities by merit. Decide what outcome you want, shortlist registered organizations working on it, and check each one's registration, filings, and integrity assessment (a disclosure measure, not a quality verdict) before you give. The list above shows which education charities disclose the most.

Should I donate directly to a school or through an education charity?

Both are possible, and each has a different paper trail. Giving directly to a school hands money to an institution that may not itself be a registered charity, so there is no registration record or filing to check. Giving through a registered education charity adds that layer: a registration number, filings where required, and an integrity assessment showing how much of its record is public. Neither route guarantees the money is well used; the charity route just gives you more to verify first.