Best youth development charities: how to choose

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

Youth Development 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 Henk Arts - Help Sierra Leone 🇳🇱 96/100
  2. 2. Boys & Girls Clubs of Monterey County 🇺🇸 90/100
  3. 3. Dave Thomas Foundation for Adoption 🇺🇸 90/100
  4. 4. Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Mississippi Valley 🇺🇸 90/100
  5. 5. Danbury Police Athletic League Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  6. 6. Autism Inspired Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  7. 7. Chautauqua Striders Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  8. 8. Methow Conservancy 🇺🇸 90/100
  9. 9. Alliance for a Healthier Generation Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  10. 10. Found Village 🇺🇸 90/100
  11. 11. Stand for Children Leadership Center 🇺🇸 90/100
  12. 12. Boys and Girls Clubs of Chaffee County 🇺🇸 90/100
  13. 13. Gateway Woods Family Services Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  14. 14. Youth for Christ USA Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  15. 15. Iowa Jag Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  16. 16. Keshet Dance Company 🇺🇸 90/100
  17. 17. Boys and Girls Clubs of Dorchester Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  18. 18. Fully Liberated Youth 🇺🇸 90/100
  19. 19. Girls on the Run Utah Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  20. 20. Youth for Christ USA Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  21. 21. Free Spirit Media Nfp 🇺🇸 90/100
  22. 22. Collaborative for Academic Socialand Emotional Learning - Casel 🇺🇸 90/100
  23. 23. Baton Rouge Youth Coalition Inc 🇺🇸 90/100
  24. 24. Compass for Kids 🇺🇸 90/100

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How to choose a youth development charity

  • One-to-one mentoring programs carry different staffing ratios and background-check costs than large group programs like scouting or after-school clubs.
  • Residential and camp-based youth programs carry facility and supervision costs that drop-in youth centers, open for a few hours after school, do not.
  • A local youth club is a different thing from a national or international youth-development federation; check whether the local chapter is separately registered before assuming its filings match the parent organization.
  • Verify that any claim about outcomes, such as school attendance or avoided risk behavior, is tied to a specific named program and a stated measurement period, not quoted as a general truth about youth work.
  • Leadership and civic-engagement programs differ from at-risk-youth outreach; check whether a charity works with a general youth population or a specifically vulnerable group.
  • Programs built on one-to-one adult contact with minors warrant a closer look at supervision arrangements than drop-in group activities do.

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 youth development 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 youth development charity to donate to?

There is no objectively best youth development 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 youth development charities disclose the most.

What background checks or safeguards do youth charities typically have for staff and volunteers?

Reputable youth-serving organizations publish a child-safeguarding or background-check policy, usually on their own site rather than in registry filings. GiveRadar's registration and filing data confirms an organization is a registered charity; it does not verify internal safeguarding practices, so if a policy is not stated, contact the organization directly and ask before enrolling a child in its program.