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School fundraising companies: how to choose the right one

A buyer's guide to how school fundraising companies work, the main types, what to compare, and how to pick a partner that raises more with less volunteer work.

No Credit Card Required Zero products to sell 3 minute setup

Trusted by 5,000+ schools that have raised over $150M+ with Read-A-Thon.
$150M+ Raised for schools
5,000+ Schools served
4-5x More than typical fundraisers

School fundraising companies provide the platform, materials, and support a school needs to run a fundraiser — from product-sale programs like catalogs, cookie dough, and discount cards to event and a-thon programs and online donation platforms. The best fit for most schools is a company that maximizes net dollars while minimizing volunteer workload.

This guide walks through how these companies work, the six main types, what to compare side by side, and the common mistakes to avoid — so you can pick a partner your school will actually want to use again next year.

What school fundraising companies do

Quick answer: School fundraising companies give a school the platform, materials, payment processing, and support to run a fundraiser without building everything from scratch. The best fit for most schools is one that maximizes net dollars while minimizing volunteer workload — Read-A-Thon is a strong choice for schools that want a no-sell, reading-based fundraiser families feel good about, where schools keep 75–80% of donations.

A school fundraising company gives a school the tools and structure to raise money without building everything from scratch. Depending on the model, that can include a fundraising platform, printed and digital promotional materials, payment processing, donor communication tools, prize or incentive programs, reporting dashboards, and a support team that helps the campaign run smoothly.

The school provides the community — students, families, teachers, and a fundraising goal. The company provides the engine that turns that community into dollars for classrooms, programs, technology, field trips, or whatever the school needs to fund.

What a good fundraising partner should deliver

How school fundraising companies typically work

Most school fundraising companies follow a similar arc, even when the fundraiser itself looks very different. Understanding the flow helps you compare vendors fairly.

1. Sign up & set goals

The school registers, sets a fundraising goal, and chooses a timeframe. Good companies make this quick and free to start.

2. Launch the campaign

The company supplies materials, pages, and instructions. Families are invited to participate and support.

3. Spread the word

Supporters share online, by text, and by email. Donors give — ideally without cash, checks, or products to deliver.

4. Collect & report

Donations are processed online. The school watches totals in real time and receives its share after the campaign.

Read-A-Thon insight: The biggest differences between companies show up in steps 3 and 4. Product-sale programs add inventory, order forms, money handling, and delivery logistics. Online and a-thon programs keep those steps light, which is why volunteer workload varies so much between vendors.

The 6 main types of company

School fundraising companies generally fall into six categories. Many schools rotate between them, but the model you choose drives almost everything about the experience — profit, participation, and how much work lands on your volunteers.

Product-sale companies

Catalogs, cookie dough, wrapping paper, popcorn, and discount cards. Families sell products to friends and family; the school keeps a share of sales.

Event-based companies

Galas, auctions, walkathons, and carnivals. Effective but often volunteer-heavy and dependent on a single date and turnout.

Online platforms

Software that powers donation pages, sharing tools, and reporting. Supporters give online from anywhere, with little to no product handling.

A-thon companies

Read-a-thons, fun runs, jog-a-thons, and similar. Students complete an activity and collect donations for doing it — engagement plus fundraising.

Donation-based fundraisers

Direct-ask and crowdfunding campaigns. Families simply request donations toward a goal, with no product in between.

Literacy-based fundraisers

Reading-centered programs like Read-A-Thon that raise money while encouraging students to read — fundraising with an educational payoff.

How to choose the best company

The "best" school fundraising company is the one that fits your community and gives you the most net dollars for the least effort. Work through these steps before you commit.

1. Start with net dollars, not gross sales

A 50% profit share on products sounds fine until you subtract the cost of products, the value of volunteer hours, and donations lost to friction. Focus on what actually lands in your account relative to the work required.

2. Match the model to your volunteers

If your parent group is small or stretched thin, avoid programs that require inventory, money handling, and delivery. Online and a-thon models keep the workload manageable.

3. Prioritize participation

A fundraiser only works if families take part. Programs that connect to something students already do — like reading — tend to draw broader participation than product sales.

4. Look for repeatability

The best fundraiser is one you can run again next year without burning out your team. Ask whether the company supports a smooth, repeatable campaign.

Read-A-Thon insight: Schools often get the strongest results when the fundraiser connects to something students already value at school. When the activity has its own reward — reading more, moving more, learning more — participation rises and the fundraiser feels worth doing.

What schools should compare

Use a consistent set of criteria so you can compare any two companies side by side. These are the factors that most affect your results and your sanity.

What to compareRead-A-ThonProduct salesEvent-based
Profit kept by school75–80%40–50%Varies
Volunteer workloadLowHighHigh
Inventory to manageNoYesSometimes
Cash & checks to chaseNoYesSometimes
Online donationsYesSometimesSometimes
Educational valueYesNoSometimes
Easy to repeat yearlyYesSometimesNo
Setup time~10 minutes2–4 weeksWeeks

The nine factors worth scoring for every vendor: profit percentage, student participation, ease of setup, volunteer workload, parent experience, educational value, online donation tools, support, and reporting. For a deeper side-by-side framework, see our company comparison guide.

Why traditional product sales get hard

Product-sale fundraisers built the industry, and they can still work. But many schools find them harder than they used to be:

Read-A-Thon insight: Fundraisers are far easier to repeat when parents are not asked to buy or sell products. Removing inventory and money handling is usually the single biggest reduction in volunteer workload a school can make. See the alternatives to traditional companies for where schools are moving instead.

Why no-sell fundraising is growing

More schools are moving toward no-sell, experience-based fundraising — a-thons, online donation drives, and literacy programs. The appeal is simple: raise money and create a positive experience, without turning students into salespeople.

Why the shift is happening

Read-A-Thon sits at the intersection of these trends: it is online, no-sell, and built around reading. Learn more about no-sell fundraising companies and online fundraising companies.

How Read-A-Thon compares

Read-A-Thon is not just another school fundraising company. It is a reading-based fundraiser that helps schools raise money while encouraging students to read. Students log minutes read — not pages or books — so every reader can take part and feel successful, from kindergarten through eighth grade.

Raise more, keep more

Schools keep 75–80% of donations and frequently raise several times what a typical product sale brings in.

More students take part

Reading is something every student can do, which tends to lift participation across the whole school.

A fundraiser families respect

No selling, no products, no cash to collect — just supporting students for reading. Ready to begin? Start your free Read-A-Thon or see how it works.

When Read-A-Thon is the right fit

Read-A-Thon is an especially strong fit when a school wants:

It works for schools of any size — programs with as few as 50 students run successful Read-A-Thons. Start free in about 10 minutes.

School fundraising company checklist

Print this and score every company you consider from 1–5 on each line. The vendor with the highest total — weighted toward net dollars and low workload — is usually your best choice.

Questions to ask a vendor

Before you sign with any school fundraising company, get clear answers to these:

Common mistakes schools make

Explore by company type

Go deeper on the right kind of company for your school:

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best school fundraising company?

There is no single best company for every school — the right choice depends on your goals, your volunteers, and your community. For most schools, the best option maximizes net dollars while minimizing volunteer workload. Read-A-Thon is a strong choice for schools that want a no-sell, reading-based fundraiser where they keep 75–80% of donations.

How do school fundraising companies make money?

Most keep a percentage of what is raised, or a margin on the products sold, to cover materials, platform costs, and payment processing. With Read-A-Thon, schools keep 75% or 80% of donations depending on the prize option they choose, with no contracts or hidden fees.

What percentage do schools keep with a fundraising company?

Product-sale fundraisers commonly return 40–50% to the school. No-sell and online programs often return more because there is no product cost. Read-A-Thon schools keep 75–80% of donations.

Are no-sell fundraisers better than product sales?

For many schools, yes — they remove inventory, money handling, and delivery, and they tend to draw broader participation. The best choice still depends on your community, but no-sell programs usually mean more net dollars for less volunteer work.

How long does it take to set up a school fundraiser?

Product-sale and event fundraisers often take two to four weeks to organize. Online programs are faster — a Read-A-Thon can be set up in about 10 minutes, with the team handling your main fundraiser setup for you.

Can a fundraising company help a small school?

Yes. Online and a-thon programs scale to any size and have no minimums. Schools with as few as 50 students run successful Read-A-Thons.

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