Major Gifts

Large wrapped gift box with glowing bow on planning table
0:00
Major gifts are significant philanthropic contributions that provide transformative funding and strategic support for nonprofits, enabling sustainable growth and innovation in social impact and international development.

Importance of Major Gifts

Major gifts represent one of the most significant sources of philanthropic support for nonprofits. They are typically large, one-time or multi-year contributions from individuals, families, or institutions. For nonprofits in social innovation and international development, major gifts matter because they can provide transformative funding for programs, infrastructure, or innovation that smaller gifts or grants cannot cover. These contributions often carry symbolic weight as well, signaling trust in the organization’s leadership and mission. Boards and donors see major gifts as critical to long-term sustainability and growth, often forming the backbone of capital campaigns and strategic initiatives.

Definition and Features

A major gift is defined by its size relative to the nonprofit’s fundraising capacity and donor base, rather than a fixed dollar threshold. For a small community nonprofit, $10,000 may be a major gift; for a large international NGO, the benchmark may be $1 million or more. Major gifts can be:

  • Restricted: tied to specific projects or purposes.
  • Unrestricted: allowing leadership discretion in use.
  • Multi-Year Pledges: commitments distributed over several years.

These gifts differ from annual donations or grassroots giving in both size and strategic impact. They are often cultivated through long-term relationships with donors and require personalized stewardship.

How This Works in Practice

In practice, nonprofits cultivate major gifts through dedicated relationship-building with high-net-worth individuals, families, or institutional funders. This may involve personalized engagement, leadership involvement, site visits, or co-designing initiatives with donors. For example, a philanthropist may pledge $5 million to launch a new education program, paid out over five years. Finance teams record major gifts as contributions when pledged, with donor restrictions noted as applicable. Development staff carefully track stewardship, ensuring regular reporting on impact and recognition aligned with donor expectations. Boards often play an active role in cultivating and securing major gifts, leveraging their networks and credibility.

Implications for Social Innovation

For nonprofits in social innovation and international development, major gifts provide the flexible, large-scale funding required to address systemic challenges. They enable organizations to take risks, pilot innovations, and scale impact in ways that restricted grants may not allow. At the same time, reliance on a few major donors can create concentration risk if diversification is lacking. Transparent reporting reduces information asymmetry by showing stakeholders how major gifts are used, whether for core operations, endowments, or transformative projects. By cultivating and stewarding major gifts responsibly, nonprofits can unlock catalytic capital, strengthen credibility, and build the foundation for sustainable, mission-driven growth.

Categories

Subcategories

Share

Subscribe to Newsletter.

Featured Terms

Annual Giving Programs

Learn More >
Three suitcases with cash on conveyor belt labeled for future years

Deferred Revenue

Learn More >
Future event tickets locked in transparent box labeled deferred revenue

Operating Reserves Ratio

Learn More >
Formula Unrestricted Net Assets divided by Annual Expenses on blackboard

Chart of Accounts (Grant-Specific Codes)

Learn More >
Color-coded glowing ledger representing chart of accounts

Related Articles

Roadmap with multiple glowing branching paths symbolizing scenario planning inputs

Scenario Planning Inputs

Scenario planning inputs help nonprofits anticipate multiple financial and operational futures, enabling resilience, strategic agility, and proactive financial management in uncertain environments.
Learn More >
Illustration of glowing sheet with hand-drawn estimates and sticky notes

Estimation Assumptions

Estimation assumptions help nonprofits manage financial uncertainty by guiding budgeting, risk management, and transparent reporting, especially in complex social innovation and international development contexts.
Learn More >
Illustration of three staff icons around glowing payroll slip

Development Staff Costs

Development staff costs are strategic investments in nonprofit fundraising, essential for building donor relationships, securing funding, and supporting sustainable growth in social innovation and international development.
Learn More >
Filter by Categories