NGO websites in the Philippines support a particular flow: donors and volunteers learn about the organization’s mission, evaluate impact and transparency, then commit time or money. The website’s job is to facilitate that progression.
Essential pages
Home. Mission statement, primary impact statistic, primary CTAs (Donate / Volunteer / Learn more).
About. Founding story, mission, vision, values, leadership, history.
Programs. Each program with description, target beneficiaries, impact metrics, current status.
Impact. Quantified outcomes — beneficiaries served, programs completed, funds raised, geographic reach.
Donate. Multi-tier donation amounts (suggested), donation purpose selection, payment methods.
Volunteer. Volunteer opportunities, application form.
Get Involved. Other engagement options — corporate partnerships, in-kind donations, advocacy.
News and Updates. Recent activities, program updates.
Financials and Transparency. Annual reports, audited financials, governance documents.
Contact. Multiple paths.
Donation flow specifics
Payment methods: GCash, Maya, PayMongo card, PayPal for international.
Donation amounts: Suggested amounts (₱500, ₱1,000, ₱2,500, ₱5,000, custom) plus suggested impact framing (“₱1,000 feeds 5 children for a week”).
Recurring donations: Monthly recurring builds sustainable revenue. PayMongo and HitPay support.
Donor receipt: Automated thank-you email with receipt for BIR purposes.
Donor account: Optional account for repeat donors tracking their giving.
Trust and transparency
For NGOs, transparency drives donations more than emotional appeals:
- SEC registration number visible
- BIR donee certification status (where applicable for tax-deductible donations)
- NPC registration if applicable
- Annual audited financial reports downloadable
- Board of directors with credentials
- Founder and key staff with bios
Budget
Business (₱120K–₱180K): Independent NGO with active programs.
Premium (₱220K–₱320K): Larger NGO with multiple programs, advanced donation infrastructure, donor portal.
NGO ready to build or rebuild your website? Send your details through the contact page for a specific recommendation within one Philippine business day.
Frequently asked questions
- How much does an NGO website cost in the Philippines?
- Most Philippine NGOs fit Business tier (₱120K–₱180K) — mission content, programs, donation flow, transparency reporting, volunteer signup. Larger NGOs with multi-program complexity and recurring donation infrastructure need Premium (₱220K–₱320K).
- How do Philippine NGOs accept donations on their website?
- GCash and Maya QR codes are most common — Filipino donors prefer these. PayMongo or HitPay for card payments. PayPal for international donors and OFWs. Bank transfer for larger gifts.
- Should NGOs publish financial reports on their website?
- Yes. Donor confidence requires transparency. Annual audited financial statements, program impact reports, and clear use-of-funds breakdown converts cautious donors into recurring donors.
Working with webdesigner.ph
- Service tiers — Start, Scale, Sell. What each tier includes and what it doesn't.
- Published pricing — Fixed price ranges per tier, named exclusions, and the payment schedule.
- How the process works — Discovery, design, build, and launch, with milestone-gated payment.
- Maintenance plans — Hosting, security, and content updates from ₱4,000/month.
- Get a specific quote — Reply within one Philippine business day.