Whether you’re considering partnering with us or just curious about what we do,
we hope this resource provides clarity and insight into our agency.
We know this program can sound unfamiliar at first — and many nonprofits and churches have never been told it even exists. The Google Ad Grant is a unique opportunity, and it’s normal to have questions about how it works, what it requires, and whether it’s the right fit for your organization.
Below you’ll find clear, straightforward answers to the questions we are asked most often by executive directors, pastors, administrators, and board members. Our goal is to make this simple and transparent so you can confidently determine if the grant can help your organization reach more people in your community.
If you don’t see your question here, we are always happy to talk with you directly.
The Google Ad Grant is a program from Google that provides eligible nonprofits with up to $10,000 per month in free Google Search advertising.
This allows organizations to appear in Google search results when people are looking for services such as food assistance, counseling, tutoring, worship services, volunteer opportunities, or ways to donate.
Important: This is not a reimbursement or matching grant.
Google provides the advertising directly — no payment is required from the nonprofit.
No. The advertising itself is completely free.
Google gives the ad budget.
Our role is to manage, optimize, and maintain the account so your organization can actually use the grant effectively and remain compliant with Google’s rules.
Without proper management, most nonprofits are unable to use more than a small portion of the grant — and many accounts are suspended for compliance issues.
Most registered 501(c)(3) nonprofits qualify, including:
• Churches
• Schools connected to churches
• Food banks & pantries
• Pregnancy resource centers
• Shelters
• Counseling ministries
• Community outreach programs
• Arts & education nonprofits
(Political organizations, hospitals, and government entities are not eligible.)
Yes — and Google actively supports churches through the Ad Grant program.
Churches use the grant to help people who are already searching for a church, online worship, prayer, counseling, grief support, or community connection.
This is not advertising in a commercial sense.
It is best understood as digital outreach and hospitality — helping people find you when they are looking for hope or connection.
Churches commonly use the grant to promote:
• Sunday service times
• Livestream worship
• Vacation Bible School
• Bible studies
• Youth programs
• GriefShare & recovery groups
• Holiday services (Christmas/Easter)
• Community outreach
• Food pantry ministries
• Preschool or academy (if under the same EIN)
Many churches see new visitors attend specifically because they found the church through a Google search.
No — it supports it.
The grant reaches people your congregation will never naturally meet: new residents, people going through crisis, families searching late at night, and individuals hesitant to visit a church without first learning about it online.
Think of it as placing a welcome sign on the digital road people already travel.
The ads connect people searching on Google directly to your website pages. Examples:
• Service times
• Events
• Volunteer opportunities
• Donation pages
• Programs & classes
• Community services
• Support resources (grief, recovery, food help)
This reaches people already searching for help or a place to connect.
They appear at the top of Google search results and are labeled “Sponsored,” but they look nearly identical to normal search results.
Most users simply see them as helpful search results and click when the page matches what they’re looking for.
Social media reaches people who are scrolling.
Google Ad Grants reach people who are actively searching.
That difference is why this program is so powerful — we are connecting your organization to people at the exact moment they are looking for help, community, or a place to belong.
Usually no.
Your website must meet Google’s nonprofit standards:
• Clear mission
• Original content
• Fast loading
• Secure (SSL/https)
• Relevant pages
If small updates are needed, we will guide you step-by-step.
We do not require you to redesign your website.
No. We intentionally keep the burden light.
Typically we only need:
• Access to your website
• A point of contact for occasional questions
• Notification of upcoming events or programs
We handle the technical side.
You can — and many nonprofits try. However, Google Ad Grants have strict rules that are very different from normal Google Ads.
Examples:
• Required 5% click-through rate
• Keyword quality score requirements
• No overly generic keywords
• Ongoing optimization required
• Monthly compliance checks
• Annual verification
Most organizations do not have staff time or technical experience to maintain this consistently. When requirements aren’t met, Google suspends the account.
We specialize specifically in nonprofit Ad Grants and maintain compliance so the grant stays active and effective.
We handle the reactivation process.
Suspensions are common when accounts are unmanaged. Google does not clearly explain the reason, and many organizations give up.
We diagnose the issue, correct compliance problems, and submit the reinstatement request to Google.
We provide full management including:
• Campaign creation
• Keyword research
• Ongoing optimization
• Compliance monitoring
• Suspension prevention
• Performance tracking dashboard
• Monthly review and recommendations
You will always know how the grant is being used and what impact it is making.
Every church and nonprofit is different, but commonly organizations see:
• Increased website visitors
• More event participation
• New volunteer inquiries
• Greater community awareness
• First-time guests who found you online
The grant does not force engagement — it simply ensures that when someone searches, your organization is visible.
Typically:
• 2–4 weeks for a new application
• Faster if TechSoup verification already exists
We manage the entire process for you.