Zeffy Grant Finder

Find Grants for Jewish Organizations

Find grants for Jewish nonprofits to support cultural programs, education, community services, and facility improvements. Use the filters below to refine your search.

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The Complete Guide to Finding and Winning Grants for Jewish Organizations

Finding grants for Jewish organizations can feel like searching for a needle in a haystack — especially when you're competing with hundreds of other nonprofits for limited funding. Whether you're running a synagogue, a Jewish community center, a Holocaust education program, or a social justice initiative rooted in Jewish values, you're likely facing a familiar challenge: most grant databases aren't built with your mission in mind. You'll sift through thousands of irrelevant listings, struggle to determine eligibility, and waste precious hours chasing opportunities that were never a good fit. If you're doing this work as a volunteer board member or wearing multiple hats as a small-org director, the process can feel overwhelming. This guide is here to help you find the right grants faster — and win more of them.

Quick Stats About Grants for Jewish Organizations

Jewish nonprofits represent a significant portion of the U.S. charitable sector, with thousands of organizations serving diverse missions — from education and social services to cultural preservation and advocacy. However, funding is highly competitive. Many Jewish organizations rely on a mix of private foundations (including Jewish federations and family foundations), corporate sponsors, and government grants. According to sector trends, smaller Jewish nonprofits often compete for the same pool of local and regional grants, while larger institutions may access national funders like the Jewish Federations of North America or denominational grant programs. Success rates vary widely, but many grant-seekers report applying to 10+ opportunities to secure just one or two awards — making strategic targeting essential.

How to Find Grants for Jewish Organizations

Here's a practical, step-by-step approach to discovering grants that actually match your mission:

Start with Zeffy's Grant Finder Tool. It's free, easy to use, and designed specifically for nonprofits like yours. You can filter by cause, location, deadline, and eligibility criteria — saving you hours of manual searching. Unlike generic databases, Zeffy shows you upfront whether a grant is a good fit, so you're not wasting time on opportunities you'll never qualify for.

Explore Jewish-specific funding networks. Many grants for Jewish organizations come from Jewish federations, denominational foundations, and family philanthropies. Check your local Jewish federation's website, explore the Jewish Funders Network directory, and look into national programs like the Covenant Foundation (for Jewish education) or the Righteous Persons Foundation (for social justice).

Use free government databases. Grants.gov is a must for federal opportunities, especially if your work touches education, social services, or community development. Many Jewish organizations successfully secure government grants for programs like after-school tutoring, senior services, or Holocaust education.

Consider paid databases — but only if you have capacity. Tools like Candid (formerly Foundation Directory Online) and Instrumentl can surface additional opportunities, but they require time to learn and filter effectively. If you're a one-person team or volunteer-led board, start with free tools first.

Filter strategically. When searching any database, use filters for:

  • Mission alignment: Does the funder support Jewish causes, education, social services, or cultural preservation?
  • Geographic fit: Many grants are restricted to specific cities, states, or regions
  • Eligibility requirements: Org size, budget, IRS status, required policies
  • Deadlines: Focus on grants with realistic timelines you can actually meet
  • Funding amount: Apply to grants that match your project budget and capacity

Look at past grantees. One of the best ways to assess fit is to see who's won the grant before. If the funder has supported organizations similar to yours in mission, size, and location, you're likely a good match.

Tips to Win More Grants as a Jewish Organizations Nonprofit

Here are seven concrete strategies to improve your success rate:

1. Lead with measurable impact. Funders want to know how their dollars will make a difference. Instead of saying "we serve the Jewish community," say "we provided 150 seniors with weekly Shabbat meals and reduced social isolation by 40% based on participant surveys." Use data, stories, and outcomes.

2. Emphasize community partnerships. Jewish organizations often thrive through collaboration — with synagogues, JCCs, schools, and social service agencies. Highlight partnerships in your applications to show you're embedded in the community and can amplify impact.

3. Align with the funder's values. If a foundation prioritizes Jewish education, emphasize your educational programming. If they focus on social justice or tikkun olam, frame your work through that lens. Tailor your language to match their mission statement.

4. Show financial sustainability. Small Jewish nonprofits sometimes struggle to demonstrate long-term viability. Include a clear budget, diversified revenue streams (membership dues, individual donors, events), and a plan for sustaining the program beyond the grant period.

5. Address capacity honestly. If you're a volunteer-led organization or have a small staff, acknowledge it — but also show how you'll manage the grant responsibly. Mention board involvement, partnerships, or plans to bring on contractors if needed.

6. Reuse and refine your materials. Save your answers to common questions (mission statement, program descriptions, impact metrics) in a central document. This lets you apply to more grants without starting from scratch each time. Tools like Zeffy's Grant Finder can help you organize and reuse this content.

7. Apply to smaller, local grants first. If you're new to grant-seeking, start with community foundations, local Jewish federations, or small family foundations. These often have simpler applications, faster timelines, and more personal relationships with grantees.

How to Tell If a Grant Is a Good Fit

Before you invest time in an application, run through this checklist:

  • Do you meet the eligibility requirements? (Location, org type, budget size, IRS status, required policies like nondiscrimination or financial audits)
  • Does the grant align with your mission and programs? (If they fund Jewish education and you run a food pantry, it's probably not a fit — unless your pantry includes educational programming)
  • Can the funding be used for your type of expenses? (Some grants only cover programs, not general operating costs or capital projects)
  • Is the application effort realistic for your team? (A 20-page application with five attachments may not be worth it if you're a volunteer-run org)
  • Is the deadline manageable? (Can you gather documents, write responses, and secure board approval in time?)
  • Have organizations like yours won this grant before? (Check past grantees to assess fit)
  • Are the reporting requirements sustainable? (Quarterly reports and site visits may be too much for a small team)

If you answer "no" to more than two of these, it's probably not worth applying.

When searching Zeffy's Grant Finder, Grants.gov, Candid, or other databases, try these keywords and tags:

  • "Jewish nonprofit grants"
  • "Jewish education funding"
  • "synagogue grants"
  • "Jewish community center funding"
  • "Holocaust education grants"
  • "Jewish social services grants"
  • "tikkun olam grants" (social justice)
  • "Jewish cultural preservation funding"
  • "Jewish youth programs grants"
  • "Jewish family services funding"

You can also search by program type (e.g., "senior services," "after-school programs," "interfaith dialogue") or by funder type (e.g., "Jewish federation grants," "family foundation," "corporate giving"). The more specific your search terms, the more relevant your results will be.


Ready to find your next grant? Start with Zeffy's free Grant Finder Tool and filter by mission, location, and eligibility. You'll spend less time searching and more time writing winning applications.

Frequently Asked Questions

Explain the main categories of grants Jewish nonprofits can access: foundation grants (Jewish federations, family foundations), government grants, and program-specific funding (education, social services, arts, Israel-focused work). Keep it scannable with examples and emphasize that grant types vary by organization focus and location.

Clarify that most require 501(c)(3) status and outline common criteria: nonprofit mission alignment, geographic location, organization size, and specific program focus. Mention that eligibility varies by funder and encourage users to check each grant's requirements upfront to avoid wasted effort.

Walk through practical discovery methods: Jewish federation grant programs (UJA, local federations), foundation databases, grant directories, and specialized platforms. Emphasize the value of filtering by location, cause, and eligibility to save time and increase success rates.

Confirm that Jewish nonprofits can access federal, state, and local government grants if they meet 501(c)(3) and program-specific requirements. Mention platforms like Grants.gov and note that government grants often have longer application timelines and stricter documentation needs.

List common use cases: education and day schools, community services, social justice programs, Israel-focused initiatives, arts and culture, and operating support. Use bullet points and keep examples specific to show the breadth of funding available.

Provide actionable tips: demonstrate clear mission alignment with the funder's values, show past grantee examples to assess fit, prepare strong documentation upfront, meet deadlines early, and focus on grants where your organization has high eligibility match. Emphasize quality over quantity in applications.

Explain that deadlines and amounts vary widely (from $250 to $200K+) depending on the funder and grant type. Encourage users to check individual grant listings for current deadlines and to plan applications well in advance. Mention that smaller grants often have less cumbersome processes.