India is home to more than 265,000 active NGOs, according to NGO Darpan. The top five focus areas of NGOs are education and early childhood care; arts, culture, and heritage; rural development; health and nutrition; and livelihoods and skilling.
However, finding sustainable funding has become one of their biggest challenges.
Running an NGO in a vast country like India is about much more than delivering impactful projects. Behind every successful initiative is a constant effort to secure funding, manage resources, and keep programs running.
Competition for grants is increasing, donor expectations are changing, and requirements continue to grow. While these challenges can seem overwhelming, understanding them can help organizations build stronger fundraising strategies and improve their chances of long-term success.
In this blog, we’ll explore the biggest funding challenges NGOs in India face and practical ways to address them.
Why 70% of Indian NGOs Are Running on Empty
India’s nonprofit sector is facing a quiet crisis, with over 70% of organizations operating at a deficit. A massive regulatory crackdown under the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA) has cancelled over 21,000 registrations, choking off international funding. Combined with delayed government grants and highly restrictive domestic CSR rules that refuse to cover operational overhead, Indian NGOs are being squeezed out of existence just when they are needed most.
1. Competition for Grants Is Higher Than Ever
Every year, more NGOs apply for grants from government agencies, CSR programs, foundations, and international donors. Unfortunately, funding opportunities have not grown at the same pace.
This means organizations must compete harder to stand out.
Today’s donors want proposals that clearly explain the problem, present a realistic solution, include a well-planned budget, and show measurable results. A generic proposal is rarely enough.
How to overcome it: Invest time in researching donors, customize every proposal, and clearly demonstrate the impact your project will create.
2. Depending on One Funding Source Is Risky
Many NGOs rely heavily on a single donor, CSR funding, or a government grant. While this may work in the short term, it can become a serious problem if that funding ends.
A sudden loss of funding can delay projects, affect staff salaries, and reduce services for beneficiaries.
How to overcome it: Build a diverse funding strategy by combining grants, CSR partnerships, individual donations, crowdfunding campaigns, fundraising events, and recurring supporters.
3. Most Grants Don’t Cover Everyday Expenses
One of the biggest frustrations for NGOs is that many grants only pay for project activities. Essential costs like office rent, staff salaries, software, internet, monitoring, and training are often excluded or limited.
Without support for these operational expenses, even successful projects can become difficult to manage.
How to overcome it: Look for donors that provide unrestricted funding and include realistic administrative costs whenever donor guidelines allow.
4. Grant Applications Take Time and Expertise
Writing a winning grant proposal isn’t easy. It involves research, planning, budgeting, collecting supporting documents, and aligning the project with donor priorities.
For small NGOs with limited staff, preparing a strong application while managing day-to-day work can be a major challenge.
How to overcome it: Develop proposal writing skills, create reusable templates, and use AI tools to speed up research, budgeting, and first drafts without replacing human review.
5. Compliance Requirements Continue to Increase
NGOs in India must comply with various legal and financial requirements, maintain accurate records, submit reports on time, and ensure transparency in the use of funds.
Organizations receiving foreign funding also need to meet additional regulatory requirements.
While compliance builds donor confidence, it also requires time, expertise, and proper systems.
How to overcome it: Maintain organized financial records, conduct regular audits, and stay updated on regulatory changes to avoid delays or funding risks.
6. Donor Priorities Are Changing
Funding priorities are constantly evolving. Today, many donors are focusing on areas such as climate action, digital inclusion, gender equality, disaster response, and sustainable development.
Projects that don’t align with current priorities may find it harder to secure funding.
How to overcome it: Regularly research donor interests and, where appropriate, adapt your project ideas to address emerging social and environmental challenges.
7. Donors Want Proof of Impact
It’s no longer enough to simply describe the activities your NGO plans to carry out. Donors want evidence that their funding creates meaningful change.
They expect clear outcomes, measurable indicators, beneficiary stories, and regular progress reports.
How to overcome it: Build strong monitoring and evaluation systems, collect data consistently, and share both numbers and real-life success stories.
8. Rising Costs Make Projects More Expensive
Inflation has increased the cost of transportation, project materials, salaries, technology, and field operations. However, grant budgets often remain fixed.
As a result, NGOs must deliver more with the same amount of funding.
How to overcome it: Prepare realistic budgets, review project costs regularly, and include contingency expenses whenever donors allow.
9. Small NGOs Often Lack Fundraising Capacity
Many grassroots organizations don’t have dedicated fundraising teams. Program managers or founders often write proposals, manage projects, prepare reports, and communicate with donors—all at the same time.
This limits the amount of time available to search for new funding opportunities.
How to overcome it: Invest in fundraising training, build donor relationships throughout the year, and use digital tools to make fundraising more efficient.
10. Building Donor Trust Takes Time
Receiving funding is only the beginning. Long-term support depends on maintaining strong relationships with donors through transparency, regular updates, and honest communication.
Organizations that consistently demonstrate accountability are more likely to receive repeat funding.
How to overcome it: Share project progress regularly, celebrate milestones, acknowledge donor contributions, and communicate openly—even when challenges arise.
How NGOs Can Build a Stronger Funding Strategy
Although fundraising has become more competitive, NGOs can improve their financial sustainability by following a few practical steps:
- Diversify funding sources instead of depending on one donor.
- Invest in high-quality proposal writing and realistic budgeting.
- Maintain strong financial records and regulatory compliance.
- Measure and communicate project impact consistently.
- Build long-term relationships with donors and partners.
- Explore digital fundraising, crowdfunding, and online campaigns.
- Use AI tools to save time on research, proposal drafting, and budgeting.
Final Thoughts
Funding, unfortunately, is a concern for pretty much every Indian NGO. But that does not mean that good work can’t get done. It means the NGO needs to ensure that its fundraising is up to par, that it’s transparent, that it has an impact that can be measured, and that it is responsive to what donors care about.
And it’s not just about fundraising money.
It’s about creating a sustainable NGO that can keep delivering.

