The Complete Guide to Finding and Winning Grants for Synagogues
Finding grants for synagogues can feel like searching for a needle in a haystack. Unlike larger nonprofits with dedicated development staff, most synagogues rely on volunteers or part-time administrators who are already juggling membership management, event planning, and daily operations. The grant landscape for faith-based organizations adds another layer of complexity: some funders explicitly welcome religious institutions, while others exclude them entirely—and it's not always clear which is which until you're deep into an application. You're competing for a limited pool of funding that supports Jewish community programming, building renovations, educational initiatives, and social services, often without knowing if you even qualify until you've invested hours of research.
Quick Stats About Grants for Synagogues
Faith-based organizations, including synagogues, represent approximately 30% of all registered nonprofits in the United States, yet they receive less than 10% of foundation grant dollars. Jewish communal organizations and synagogues typically access funding through a mix of Jewish federations, family foundations with Jewish giving priorities, and general community foundations that support religious institutions. The landscape has shifted in recent years, with more funders opening to faith-based applicants—particularly for programs with clear community impact like food security, senior services, early childhood education, and interfaith dialogue initiatives.
How to Find Grants for Synagogues
Start with Zeffy's Grant Finder Tool Before paying for expensive databases, use Zeffy's free Grant Finder. It's specifically designed for small nonprofits and includes filters for faith-based organizations. You can search by your synagogue's focus areas (education, community services, building projects) and see which grants actually match your mission—without wading through thousands of irrelevant results.
Understand Free vs. Paid Grant Databases
- Free options: Grants.gov (federal grants), your local Jewish federation's resource center, and community foundation websites
- Paid options: Candid/Foundation Directory ($50–$150/month), GrantStation ($89/month), GrantWatch ($40–$90/month)
The reality? Paid databases can overwhelm you with 9,000+ results when only 10 might actually fit. If you're a volunteer board member or part-time administrator, start free and only upgrade if you have dedicated grant-writing capacity.
Filter Strategically When searching any database, filter by:
- Eligibility: Does the funder accept faith-based applicants? Some explicitly welcome synagogues; others exclude religious organizations entirely
- Mission alignment: Match your programs (early childhood education, Holocaust education, senior programming, social justice work) to funder priorities
- Geographic fit: Many Jewish family foundations give locally or to specific regions
- Funding type: Are you seeking program support, capital/building funds, or general operating support?
- Deadlines: Only pursue grants you can realistically complete given your team's capacity
Check Who Actually Got Funded This is critical. A grant might say "we support Jewish organizations nationwide," but if you look at their past grantees and they're all large institutions in New York, you'll know your small suburban synagogue isn't a realistic fit. Look for lists of previous awardees before investing time in an application.
Tips to Win More Grants as a Synagogue
1. Emphasize Community Impact Beyond Your Congregation Funders want to see how your programs serve the broader community. If your food pantry serves anyone in need (not just members), your preschool accepts children from all backgrounds, or your senior programming partners with other faith communities—lead with that.
2. Frame Religious Programming in Secular Impact Terms Instead of "Torah study classes," describe "intergenerational literacy and cultural heritage education." Instead of "High Holiday services," highlight "community gathering spaces that reduce social isolation for 500+ families annually." You're not hiding your Jewish identity—you're translating your impact into language funders understand.
3. Partner with Your Local Jewish Federation Most Jewish federations offer grant-writing workshops, maintain lists of Jewish family foundations, and can make warm introductions. They may also have their own grant programs for member synagogues. This is your insider advantage—use it.
4. Start Small and Build a Track Record If you've never received a grant before, don't start with a $50,000 ask. Apply to smaller local grants ($1,000–$5,000) first. Success breeds success: once you can list previous funders, larger foundations take you more seriously.
5. Save and Reuse Your Best Answers Keep a master document with your mission statement, program descriptions, impact metrics, and budget narratives. Most grant applications ask similar questions. Having polished, ready-to-adapt answers saves hours and ensures consistency across applications.
6. Be Honest About Your Capacity If a grant requires quarterly reports, site visits, and complex evaluation metrics, but you're a volunteer-run organization, it's not a good fit—even if you technically qualify. Winning a grant you can't properly manage damages your reputation and wastes everyone's time.
7. Highlight What Makes Your Synagogue Unique Are you the only synagogue in a rural area? Do you run the only Jewish preschool in your county? Have you pioneered an innovative interfaith program? Funders are drawn to organizations filling gaps or trying new approaches—not just doing what everyone else does.
How to Tell If a Grant Is a Good Fit
Before you invest time in an application, ask yourself:
✅ Do we meet the basic eligibility requirements? (faith-based organizations welcome, correct geographic area, appropriate organization size)
✅ Does this funder's mission align with our specific programs? (Don't force-fit your work into their priorities)
✅ Have organizations like ours received this grant before? (Check past grantee lists—are they all large institutions or do small synagogues appear?)
✅ Can we realistically complete the application by the deadline? (Be honest about your team's bandwidth)
✅ Are the reporting requirements manageable? (Some grants require extensive evaluation and documentation)
✅ Can the funding be used for our actual needs? (Some grants only fund programs, not operating costs or building repairs)
✅ Is this a legitimate opportunity? (Avoid grants that charge application fees or seem too good to be true)
If you answer "no" or "I'm not sure" to more than two of these questions, it's probably not worth your time.
Grant-Related Keywords & Search Tags
When searching Zeffy's Grant Finder, Grants.gov, or other databases, try these search terms:
- "Jewish community grants"
- "faith-based organization funding"
- "synagogue building grants" (for capital projects)
- "Jewish education grants"
- "interfaith dialogue funding"
- "religious nonprofit grants"
- "Jewish family foundation" (often more open to synagogue applicants)
- "community service grants" (if you run food pantries, senior services, etc.)
- "early childhood education grants" (for preschool programs)
- "Holocaust education funding"
Pro tip: If your synagogue runs programs that serve the general community (food security, mental health support, youth programming), search for grants in those categories too—not just "Jewish" or "religious" grants. You may find opportunities others miss.
Finding and winning grants takes time, but with the right approach, even small synagogues with limited staff can secure meaningful funding. Start with free tools like Zeffy's Grant Finder, be strategic about where you invest your energy, and remember: a few well-matched grants are worth more than dozens of long-shot applications.
