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How to Set Your Grants Goal for Next Year (Without Guessing or Overwhelming Yourself)

Every Executive Director eventually faces this moment:

You’re updating your fund development plan…
You get to the Grants section…
And then you stop.

“How do I actually decide what my grants goal should be for next year?”

Do you just add 10%?
Do you try to double it?
Do you copy last year’s number?

None of these work.

A strong grants goal must be based on renewal likelihood, realistic growth, new funder potential, and your actual capacity.

Here’s the exact method I teach nonprofit leaders to set achievable—and strategic—grant revenue goals.

Start With What’s Predictable: Your Renewal Base

Your renewal base is the total amount you can reasonably expect to renew next year.

Look at each funder and ask:

  • Did your outcomes align with their priorities?
  • Did they express satisfaction or interest in continuing?
  • Was the reporting manageable and submitted on time?
  • Is this a multi-year relationship?

Example:

This year’s grants:

  • ABC Foundation – $25,000
  • Greenwell Trust – $10,000
  • Erickson Family Foundation – $50,000

Based on alignment and relationship strength, you may determine:

  • ABC → likely renewal
  • Greenwell → very likely renewal
  • Erickson → strong relationship, high renewal likelihood

Your renewal base is therefore:
$85,000

 

This is your starting point.

Identify Realistic Growth From Existing Funders

Growth comes from:

  • stronger relationships
  • cleaner reporting
  • better communication
  • funder hints about increasing support
  • multi-year conversations

Example:

  • Erickson Family Foundation mentioned interest in multi-year support → potential +$10,000
  • ABC Foundation struggled with incomplete data → no increase unless systems improve
  • Greenwell Trust typically gives flat gifts → keep flat

Realistic growth: +$10,000–$15,000. This is grounded in evidence, not optimism.

Add 1–2 New Aligned Prospects (No More)

This is where most of us overstretch.
We like to add 10+ new funders and expect huge growth.

But best practice is:

Add only one or two new prospects that deeply align with your mission.

Look for funders who:

  • support organizations like yours
  • have a clear geographic or issue alignment
  • typically give amounts in your range
  • you can get a warm introduction to

Example:

You identify a new funder whose average grant size is $10,000–$15,000.

Use the conservative amount: $10,000

Now your working goal projection becomes:

  • Renewal base: $85,000
  • Growth from current funders: $10,000–$15,000
  • New funder: $10,000

Projected grants goal: $105,000–$110,000

Factor In Your Actual Capacity (The Most Overlooked Step)

Ask yourself honestly:

  • How many grants can you realistically manage next year?
  • How much time did reporting take this year?
  • Were any grants unusually stressful?
  • Are you hiring additional support?
  • Are you improving your tracking and reporting systems?

Your capacity determines your grant ceiling.

Example:

In your grants table, ABC Foundation had a stress level of 4 because data tracking wasn’t consistent.

If you:

  • implement a simple system
  • start tracking monthly
  • set up calendar reminders

You not only decrease stress, you also increase your competitiveness.
This strengthens your renewal and growth potential.

Set a Goal That Balances Aspiration + Achievability

Healthy nonprofits grow their grants revenue by 5%–20% per year, depending on size and stage.

Using our example:

  • This year: $85,000
  • Next-year reasonable goal: $100,000–$115,000

Not $200,000.
Not doubling your grants overnight.

Sustainable growth comes from:

  • strong renewals
  • small but meaningful increases
  • one or two new funders
  • improved systems

This creates predictable funding and reduces stress.

Sample Grants Goal Statement

Here’s what you can write in your fund development plan:

“Our grants goal for FY2025 is $110,000.
This includes expected renewals ($85,000), a potential increase from Erickson Family Foundation ($10,000), and one new highly aligned funder ($10,000).
This goal is based on relationship strength, reporting improvements, and realistic fundraising capacity.”

Ready to create your own plan?
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Fund Development Planning Template
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