Best social services charities: how to choose

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

Social Services 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. Association of the Bar of the City of New York Fund Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  2. 2. Asian Americans Advancing Justice - Chicago 🇺🇸 90/100
  3. 3. American Civil Liberties Union of Alabama Foundation 🇺🇸 90/100
  4. 4. First Liberty Institute 🇺🇸 90/100
  5. 5. American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio Foundation Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  6. 6. American Civil Liberties Union of Wisconsin Foundation Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  7. 7. American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Kansas 🇺🇸 90/100
  8. 8. Court Appointed Special Advocates of Santa Cruz County 🇺🇸 90/100
  9. 9. American Society of Overseas Research 🇺🇸 90/100
  10. 10. American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana Foundation 🇺🇸 90/100
  11. 11. The Arc-Jefferson Clear Creek & Gilpin Counties 🇺🇸 90/100
  12. 12. Southwest Crisis Center 🇺🇸 90/100
  13. 13. Center for Individual Rights 🇺🇸 90/100
  14. 14. Marys Pence 🇺🇸 90/100
  15. 15. Americans United for Life 🇺🇸 90/100
  16. 16. Elizabeth Freeman Center Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  17. 17. American Civil Liberties Union of Oklahoma Foundation 🇺🇸 90/100
  18. 18. Unidos Bridging Communituy 🇺🇸 90/100
  19. 19. Arkansas Civil Liberties Union Foundation Incorporated 🇺🇸 90/100
  20. 20. American Civil Liberties Union of Alaska Foundation 🇺🇸 90/100
  21. 21. Aclu Foundation of Arizona 🇺🇸 90/100
  22. 22. American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Connecticut Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  23. 23. Collective Heritage Institute 🇺🇸 90/100
  24. 24. American Civil Liberties Union of Washington Foundation 🇺🇸 90/100

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How to choose a social services charity

  • Counseling and casework services are staffed and billed per client contact, which is a different cost structure from crisis shelters, which carry facility and security costs on top of staffing.
  • Domestic-violence and other crisis-support charities often keep shelter locations confidential for client safety; evaluate them on their published services, hotline, and filings rather than expecting a street address.
  • Child and family welfare organizations play different roles: some do direct casework with children, others support foster or kinship caregivers instead of working with children directly.
  • Verify that "families served" or "clients supported" figures come from a recent annual filing; a lifetime total dating back to the founding says little about the organization's current work.
  • Elder-care and caregiver-support charities differ from residential care providers; check whether services are delivered in someone's home, in a facility, or to the caregiver rather than the person being cared for.
  • National social-services networks usually operate through local branches holding their own registrations and their own accounts, so look up the branch you would actually give to rather than the national brand.

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 social services 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 social services charity to donate to?

There is no objectively best social services 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 social services charities disclose the most.

Why do some social services charities not list a physical address?

Domestic-violence shelters and other crisis-support services commonly withhold their address for the safety of the people they house, which is standard practice rather than a sign of poor disclosure. Look instead at what the profile does show: registration number, filings where required, and contact details for general inquiries. A missing address on this specific type of charity is expected and should not be read as a red flag on its own.