Apply for subsidies for your neighborhood association or community center
What subsidies are available for associations?
Local government subsidies
Most subsidy opportunities can be found with your local council. Almost every local authority has budgets for welfare, sport, culture and social cohesion. On your local council's website search for "subsidy for neighbourhood activities", "neighbourhood budget" or "sport subsidy".
Provincial subsidies
Provinces often fund projects that involve multiple municipalities or a region. Think of sustainability projects, social initiatives, or sports infrastructure.
National funds
- VSBfonds: For welfare projects in the Netherlands
- Oranje Fonds: For social connection and inclusion
- Fonds 1818: For societal initiatives in the The Hague region
- NOC*NSF: For promoting sport through the national federation
- Buurtfonds: From Rabobank, for local initiatives
European subsidies
For larger projects (usually >€50.000) there are European funds such as ESF+ (European Social Fund Plus) and ERDF (European Regional Development Fund). These are complex applications for which you typically need professional support.
What makes a good grant application?
Grant providers assess applications based on a number of criteria:
- Social relevance: What problem are you solving and for whom?
- Feasibility: Is the plan realistic? Do you have experience?
- Reach: How many people benefit?
- Sustainability: What lasting impact remains after the project?
- Budget: Is the budget realistic and detailed?
Step-by-step plan for your application
- Orient yourself: First contact the grant provider. Ask whether your project has a good chance before you invest time in an application.
- Read the criteria carefully: Does your project align with the stated goals?
- Write a clear problem description: What is happening, for whom and why?
- Describe your plan concretely: What will you do, who does what, when?
- Prepare a realistic budget: Including own contribution and co-financing
- Request feedback if you are rejected. This will help you next time
Own contribution and co-financing
The majority of subsidies require a contribution from the applicant. This can be money, but also volunteer hours (provided they are substantiated) or materials. The higher your own contribution, the more seriously your application will be regarded.
Grant management and accountability
Once funding has been awarded, the accountability follows: you must demonstrate that the money has been spent as promised. Keep invoices, timesheets, and photos of activities. Many funders require a substantive and financial report. A good bookkeeping system makes this work much easier.