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How Nonprofits Can Get In-Kind Donations Delivered Directly

A practical guide for nonprofit operations teams ready to modernize their product donation process

Panos Kokmotos |

How Nonprofits Can Get In-Kind Donations Delivered Directly

For most nonprofits, accepting in-kind donations still looks like this: a donor calls, asks what's needed, gets an address, ships the wrong item to the wrong location, and never follows up again. Meanwhile, the nonprofit staff spends hours coordinating logistics they weren't hired to manage.

There's a better way. Here's exactly how forward-thinking nonprofits are receiving in-kind donations in 2025 — efficiently, consistently, and at scale.


Why Direct Delivery Matters

The difference between "in-kind donation accepted" and "in-kind donation received" is logistics. Most nonprofits focus on the first — building wishlists, posting needs, sending thank you notes. Few have solved the second.

Direct delivery means:

  • Items arrive without staff coordination
  • No wrong-item donations to manage
  • Donors get confirmation their gift arrived
  • Nonprofits spend time on programs, not receiving logistics

The goal is a zero-friction donation path from donor intent to item arrival.

Delivery person handing box to nonprofit staff


Step 1: Build a Verified Needs Wishlist

The first step to getting items delivered directly is telling donors exactly what you need. Not a general list on your website — a verified, shoppable wishlist linked to real products.

Best practices:

  • List specific items (brand, size, quantity) not general categories
  • Update the list weekly based on actual inventory
  • Prioritize by urgency (high need = top of list)
  • Include quantity limits so donors don't over-donate one item

Tools: Amazon Wishlist (basic), Givelink (full wishlist + delivery management)


Step 2: Set Up a Verified Receiving Address

Donors need a reliable shipping address. This sounds simple — it's not.

Problems nonprofits face:

  • Multiple locations with different receiving hours
  • Staff turnover changing who handles packages
  • No notification system when large shipments arrive

Solutions:

  • Designate one primary receiving address for product donations
  • Set receiving hours and communicate them clearly
  • Use a platform like Givelink that manages address verification and delivery routing automatically

Step 3: Automate Donor Communication

The most common reason donors stop giving in-kind is silence. They donated, nothing happened, they forgot about you.

Automate:

  • Confirmation email when order is placed (instant)
  • Shipping notification when item ships (same day)
  • Delivery confirmation when item arrives (within 48 hours)
  • Impact update showing item in use (within 2 weeks)

This four-touch sequence alone increases repeat donation rates by 40%+.

Nonprofit staff sending thank you email on laptop


Step 4: Provide Tax Receipts Automatically

For donations over $250, the IRS requires written acknowledgment from the nonprofit. Most organizations send these manually — days or weeks after the donation.

Donors notice. And some stop donating because the receipt never came.

Fix this with:

  • Automatic receipt generation tied to delivery confirmation
  • A template that includes: nonprofit name, 501(c)(3) status, item description, fair market value, date received
  • A PDF attachment in the confirmation email

Givelink handles this automatically for all donations processed through the platform.


Step 5: Show Impact Visually

The final step — and the one most nonprofits skip — is closing the loop visually.

Take a photo of:

  • Items being unpacked
  • Items in use by beneficiaries (with permission)
  • Staff with the donation

Send it to the donor. Post it on social. Tag the donor if they opt in.

This single action has the highest correlation with repeat donation behavior of any post-donation communication.


How Givelink Automates the Entire Process

Givelink was built to solve exactly these operational challenges for nonprofits. Here's what the platform handles automatically:

StepManual ProcessGivelink
Wishlist managementSpreadsheet + website updateLive, shoppable catalog
Donation routingDonor finds address manuallyAutomatic routing
Delivery confirmationStaff emails donorAutomatic notification
Tax receiptsManual PDF + emailAuto-generated on delivery
Impact reportingManual photo + emailIRIS AI tracking

List your nonprofit on Givelink for free →


Frequently Asked Questions

How do nonprofits handle large in-kind donations? For bulk donations, Givelink coordinates delivery scheduling with the nonprofit's receiving team directly.

What if our nonprofit has multiple locations? Givelink supports multiple receiving addresses and can route specific product types to the right location.

How do we handle in-kind donations we can't use? Givelink's wishlist system prevents this by only showing donors items the nonprofit currently needs.

Do donors need an account to donate in-kind through Givelink? No. Donors can give as guests, with optional account creation for impact tracking.

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