Best international charities: how to choose
There is no single best international charity: the right one depends on what you want your money to do. Below: how to decide, and the international organizations with the strongest verified disclosure records.
International 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. Center for Global Impact Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 2. Junior Achievement of Arizona 🇺🇸 90/100
- 3. American Society of the University of Haifa 🇺🇸 90/100
- 4. World Affairs Council of Philadelphia 🇺🇸 90/100
- 5. Empower-Emerging Markets Foundation 🇺🇸 90/100
- 6. Mercy Beyond Borders 🇺🇸 90/100
- 7. Cooperative for Assistance and Relief Everywhere Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 8. American Jewish World Service Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 9. American Leprosy Missions Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 10. International Field Studies Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 11. Kenya Connect Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 12. Junior Achievement USA 🇺🇸 90/100
- 13. International Justice Mission 🇺🇸 90/100
- 14. Mercy Corps 🇺🇸 90/100
- 15. Central American Medical Outreach Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 16. Ciee Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 17. Development Gateway Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 18. Global Exchange 🇺🇸 90/100
- 19. Junior Achievement of Greater South Carolina 🇺🇸 90/100
- 20. Foundation for International Understanding Through Students 🇺🇸 90/100
- 21. English Language Institute in China 🇺🇸 90/100
- 22. Greater Metro Parks Foundation 🇺🇸 90/100
- 23. Concern America 🇺🇸 90/100
- 24. Mennonite Economic Development Associates 🇺🇸 90/100
How to choose a international charity
- Emergency-relief organizations that mobilize within days have a different cost structure from long-term development organizations running multi-year infrastructure or livelihoods programs.
- Direct-implementation charities that run their own field staff differ from charities that grant funds to local partner organizations; check which model a charity uses before comparing costs across two of them.
- Child-sponsorship programs work differently from general relief funds: some pool money for community-wide programs, others tie a specific gift to a specific child, and the charity's own materials should say which.
- Verify that both the charity's country of registration and the countries where it actually operates are stated, since an international charity files where it is registered, not necessarily where the work happens.
- Refugee-focused organizations differ by stage: emergency response at first arrival, formal resettlement support, and long-term integration are different services with different costs.
- Microfinance and economic-development organizations often recycle capital as loans rather than spending it once, so check whether a charity describes its funds as grants or as loans before assuming how they are used.
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 international 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 international charity to donate to?
There is no objectively best international 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 international charities disclose the most.
Does an international charity need to be registered in the country where it works?
Not necessarily. Most international charities are registered and file their accounts in one home country while running programs in others, often through an in-country partner organization. GiveRadar's profile shows the charity's home registration; if the work happens through a local partner, that partner's own registration in its own country is a separate thing worth checking.