Best sports & recreation charities: how to choose
There is no single best sports & recreation charity: the right one depends on what you want your money to do. Below: how to decide, and the sports & recreation organizations with the strongest verified disclosure records.
Sports & Recreation 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. Traverse Area Recreation & Transportation Trails Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 2. Ignite Volleyball Club and Foundation Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 3. Adaptive Sports Center of Crested Butte Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 4. Rochester Juvenile Hockey Association 🇺🇸 90/100
- 5. Adirondack-1000 Islands Sports & Events Commission Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 6. USA Swimming Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 7. United Way of Huntingdon County Fund 🇺🇸 90/100
- 8. Fishers Area Swimming Tigers Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 9. Arvada Hockey Association 🇺🇸 90/100
- 10. Winnetka Hockey Club 🇺🇸 90/100
- 11. North Texas State Soccer 🇺🇸 90/100
- 12. Seattle Adaptive Sports 🇺🇸 90/100
- 13. Richmond Olympiad Gymnastics Club Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 14. National Junior Basketball 🇺🇸 90/100
- 15. USA Swimming Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 16. Ray County Transportation Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 17. Saint Patrick Athletic Assoication Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 18. Junior Golf Association of Broward County Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 19. The Ashe County Transportation Authority 🇺🇸 90/100
- 20. Webster Soccer Association Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 21. Cottage Grove Athletic Association 🇺🇸 90/100
- 22. Junior United Soccer Association Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
- 23. Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association Inc 🇺🇸 87/100
- 24. USA Swimming Inc 🇺🇸 87/100
How to choose a sports & recreation charity
- Community sports clubs running on membership fees and volunteer coaching have a very different cost structure than organizations building or maintaining shared facilities like fields, pools, or halls.
- Adaptive and inclusive sports organizations for people with disabilities often carry equipment and specialized-coaching costs that mainstream youth leagues do not.
- National sports federations and their member clubs usually file separately; a donation to the club is governed by the club's own registration, not the federation's.
- Verify that "community benefit" claims describe specific programs, such as free coaching or subsidized memberships, rather than describing the sport itself.
- Elite-performance or national-team-adjacent organizations differ from grassroots participation charities; check whether a charity's mission is competitive achievement or broad access to play.
- Facility-based organizations carry ongoing maintenance and insurance costs that program-only organizations without a fixed venue do not.
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 sports & recreation 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 sports & recreation charity to donate to?
There is no objectively best sports & recreation 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 sports & recreation charities disclose the most.
Are membership fees to a sports club the same as a charitable donation?
No. A fee paying for your own or your child's use of a club's facilities is generally not the same as a charitable gift, even where the club itself is a registered charity, since you are receiving something in return. Money given specifically to fund subsidized memberships, equipment for people who could not otherwise afford to play, or facility improvements for wider community use is closer to a donation. Check the specific club's own materials for how it treats each, and confirm local tax rules before assuming either is deductible.