Tell a room of small business owners that Google gives nonprofits $10,000 of free search advertising every month, and watch their faces move through disbelief, envy, and finally the question every fundraiser should be asking: "So why isn't every nonprofit using it properly?"
It is a fair question. The Google Ad Grant is one of the largest in-kind philanthropy programs on the planet, available to eligible nonprofits in over 50 countries, with hundreds of thousands of organizations enrolled. Yet a large share of grant accounts sit half-configured, quietly serving ads for the nonprofit's own name and not much else, like a Ferrari used exclusively for school pickup.
This guide covers what the grant is, who qualifies, how to apply, how to avoid the compliance traps that get accounts suspended, and, most importantly, how professional development teams turn free clicks into supporters, volunteers, and donors. The free money is real. The fine print is also real. Both deserve your attention.
What the Google Ad Grant actually is
The Ad Grant provides eligible nonprofits with up to $10,000 per month (roughly $329 per day) in Google Search advertising. Your ads appear in Google search results when people search for terms you target, and Google covers the cost of the clicks.
The essential caveats, before anyone gets carried away:
Search only. Grant ads appear on Google Search results. No YouTube ads, no Display banners, no Gmail placements, no Shopping. (Google runs a separate YouTube Nonprofit Program with its own features.)
Text ads only. No image or video formats.
Auction position. Grant ads historically served below paid advertisers, though Google's shift to value-based Smart Bidding strategies has substantially improved what grant accounts can achieve. On low-competition informational searches, grant ads can dominate. On "donate to charity" in late December, you are bidding against paid accounts with open wallets.
It does not roll over. Unspent budget vanishes at the end of each month. Most accounts spend only a fraction of the full $10,000, which is not automatically a failure (see below), but chronic underspend usually signals an under-built account.
For context on scale: a mid-sized nonprofit fully utilizing the grant receives the equivalent of $120,000 a year in media. For small organizations, it is frequently the largest advertising budget they will ever control. For large organizations, it is a permanently free layer beneath their paid search program.
Who qualifies
Eligibility runs through the Google for Nonprofits program, which in the United States verifies 501(c)(3) status through Google's validation partner (a process most nonprofits will recognize from TechSoup registration). Broad strokes:
- You must hold current 501(c)(3) status recognized by the IRS (equivalent charitable status applies in other countries)
- Governmental organizations, hospitals and healthcare organizations, and schools and universities are generally excluded (though the philanthropic foundations attached to hospitals and schools can often qualify, and Google runs a separate program for education)
- You need a functioning, secure (HTTPS) website with substantive content that Google approves
The application path: register for Google for Nonprofits, complete verification, then activate the Ad Grant, which includes a website review. Approval commonly takes from a few days to a few weeks. It costs nothing at any stage, which is worth stating plainly because an entire cottage industry exists to charge nonprofits for things Google provides free. (Paying an agency to manage the grant well is legitimate; paying anyone simply to apply is unnecessary.)
The compliance rules, or: how accounts get suspended
Google introduced stricter grant policies in 2018 after years of, let us say, variable account quality across the program. The rules that matter:
Maintain a 5 percent click-through rate (CTR), account-wide, every month. Two consecutive months below 5 percent risks deactivation. This single rule shapes everything about good grant management, because the way you achieve a healthy CTR is by targeting specific, relevant searches with tightly matched ads, which happens to be exactly how you run a good account anyway. Google's rule is essentially a mandate against laziness.
No single-word keywords (with limited exceptions such as your own brand name and certain approved medical terms).
No overly generic keywords. "Free videos," "news today," and their cousins are banned. If a keyword could bring in anyone searching for anything, it does not belong in a grant account.
No keywords with a Quality Score of 1 or 2. Google's relevance rating must be at least 3, which in practice means your ad and landing page must genuinely relate to the search.
Structural minimums. At least two ad groups per campaign, at least two ads per ad group, at least two sitelink extensions, and geo-targeting relevant to your service area.
Conversion tracking with at least one meaningful conversion per month is required when using certain bidding strategies, and is in practice the foundation of any account worth having.
Respond to the annual program survey. Yes, accounts have been suspended for ignoring a survey. Put it on the calendar.
None of these rules is onerous for a properly managed account. Collectively, though, they explain most suspensions, and they are why "we set it up in 2021 and it just runs" is a sentence that should worry any development director who hears it. The good news: suspended accounts can usually be reinstated once the policy issues are fixed and a reinstatement request is submitted.
What to actually do with the grant: a strategy in three layers
Here is where most guides stop and the interesting work begins. $10,000 of search inventory is only valuable if you point it at searches your future supporters are making. Professional grant strategy usually runs in three layers.
Layer one: own your brand and service searches
People searching your organization's name, your events, and your programs should always find you first. This layer includes searches by potential clients ("emergency housing help Denver," "free counseling for veterans"), which for direct-service nonprofits is arguably the grant's noblest use: connecting people in need with help, at zero cost. Food banks, legal aid organizations, and crisis services around the country quietly serve thousands of people a year who found them through granted clicks.
Layer two: capture cause and information intent
This is the grant's sweet spot: the vast ocean of informational searches around your cause. An Alzheimer's organization targeting "early signs of dementia," "how to talk to a parent about memory loss," and "caregiver support groups near me" can reach thousands of people at the exact moment your cause becomes personal to them. These searchers rarely donate on the spot, and that is fine; the goal is to bring them into your world via genuinely helpful content, then convert interest into a relationship: an email signup, a guide download, an event registration.
This is also why content strategy and grant strategy are inseparable. The nonprofits that extract the most value from Ad Grants, across every size bracket, are the ones whose websites contain pages worth landing on. (A playbook of high-traffic article ideas would help here. You are reading one.)
Layer three: harvest action intent
Searches like "volunteer with animals near me," "5k charity run [city]," "donate furniture pickup," and, yes, "donate to [cause] charity" carry direct action intent. Competition from paid advertisers is stiffest here and grant auction position weakest, but the clicks you do win are the most valuable in the account. Point them at conversion-optimized pages, not your homepage, and track everything.
A note on expectations: across the sector, the grant is usually stronger at generating supporters (leads, sign-ups, volunteers, event registrants) than instant donations. Organizations that measure the grant purely on last-click donation revenue often undervalue it; those that track lead generation and assisted conversions usually discover it is quietly one of their most efficient acquisition channels.
Measurement: the part everyone skips
An Ad Grant without conversion tracking is a mystery novel with the last chapter torn out. The minimum viable setup:
- Define conversions that matter: donations (with values passed), email signups, event registrations, volunteer inquiries, key content engagement
- Track them properly via Google Analytics 4 key events imported into Google Ads, or direct Google Ads conversion tags, implemented through Google Tag Manager
- Use value-based Smart Bidding (Maximize Conversions or Maximize Conversion Value) once data flows, which also unlocks better auction performance than the grant's default manual bidding cap of $2 per click
- Report the grant in fundraising language: cost per lead (free!), supporter acquisition volume, and downstream donation value from grant-acquired contacts, not impressions and clicks
That last point deserves underlining for anyone reporting to a board. "The grant generated 214,000 impressions" is meaningless. "The grant added 1,900 new email supporters this year, of whom 240 have since donated" is a strategy.
Grant plus paid: do you need both?
Larger nonprofits often run a paid Google Ads account alongside the grant, and the combination is genuinely complementary rather than redundant. The paid account takes the high-competition, high-value auctions (donation terms in the December rush, remarketing, YouTube, Display) where grant limitations bite; the grant blankets the informational long tail that would be uneconomical to fund with real money. Mid-sized and small organizations without paid budgets lose nothing by maximizing the grant alone; it remains the single best free acquisition asset available to them.
A 30-day starter plan
Week one: Verify eligibility, register for Google for Nonprofits, submit the grant application. Audit your website: HTTPS everywhere, clear mission description, working donation and signup pages.
Week two: Build the account skeleton: three to five campaigns aligned to goals (brand, services, cause content, actions), tightly themed ad groups, two-plus ads each, sitelinks, geo-targeting. Install conversion tracking before launching anything.
Week three: Launch, watch search term reports daily, add negative keywords ruthlessly. Irrelevant clicks are the enemy of both CTR compliance and useful outcomes.
Week four: Review CTR against the 5 percent floor, pause underperforming keywords and ads, check Quality Scores, and produce your first one-page report translating the numbers into supporter outcomes.
Then repeat, monthly, forever. The grant rewards gardeners, not architects: the account that gets 30 minutes of weeding each week will outperform the elaborate structure that was built once and abandoned.
$10,000 a month is sitting on the table. It has your nonprofit's name on it, a few pages of terms attached, and a modest maintenance schedule. Very few opportunities in fundraising are genuinely free. This one, managed with care, comes remarkably close.