Bharat NGO Report 2025

Bharat NGO Report 2025: Key Insights on NGOs, CSR Challenges & Opportunities in India

Introduction: Strengthening the CSR–NGO Ecosystem in India

India’s development journey is deeply supported by Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) working at the grassroots level. The Bharat NGO Report 2025 presents a comprehensive analysis of the NGO ecosystem in India, highlighting their engagement with Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), key challenges, and opportunities for collaboration.

Based on inputs from 325 NGOs across 20+ states, this report provides valuable insights for corporates, policymakers, and development practitioners aiming to build a stronger and more impactful CSR ecosystem.

About the Bharat NGO Report 2025

The report is built on a nationwide survey capturing real experiences of NGOs working in diverse sectors such as education, healthcare, livelihood, women empowerment, and environment.

Key Coverage:

  • NGO profiles and operational scale
  • CSR engagement and funding patterns
  • Challenges in securing CSR funds
  • Operational and MIS-related constraints
  • Actionable recommendations for corporates

This makes the report a practical guide for improving NGO–corporate partnerships in India.

Overview of India’s NGO Landscape

India has an estimated 1–3 million NGOs, but only a small percentage are fully compliant and actively operational.

Key Insights:

  • 53% NGOs are registered as Societies (most common structure)
  • 84% NGOs are small organizations with annual budgets below ₹3 crore
  • 62% NGOs operate in a single state, indicating localized impact
  • 80% NGOs work in rural areas, showing strong grassroots presence

This highlights that India’s NGO ecosystem is highly fragmented but deeply rooted in local communities.

CSR Funding Landscape in India

CSR has become a major funding source for NGOs, but access remains uneven.

  • In FY 2023–24, 27,188 companies spent ₹34,909 crore on CSR
  • However, only 5% NGOs depend solely on CSR funding

Thematic Focus of CSR:

  • Education (highest priority and funding share)
  • Health & Hygiene
  • Livelihood & Skill Development

Despite alignment in focus areas, access to CSR funding remains a key challenge for many NGOs.

CSR Engagement: Opportunities & Gaps

Corporate Partnerships:

  • 68% NGOs have at least one corporate partner
  • 32% NGOs have no CSR partnerships, indicating a significant gap

Size vs CSR Access:

  • 100% of medium NGOs and 96% of large NGOs have CSR partners
  • Only 63% of small NGOs have CSR partnerships

This shows that smaller NGOs struggle more due to limited visibility, networks, and resources.

Major Challenges Faced by NGOs

  1. Funding & Networking Challenges
  • ~80% NGOs lack corporate connections
  • 48% struggle with CSR proposal writing
  • 40% lack awareness of CSR opportunities
  1. Operational Challenges
  • 49% face issues in project documentation
  • 38% struggle with vendor identification
  • 23% face shortage of skilled staff
  1. MIS & Data Management Challenges
  • 61% lack technical expertise for MIS
  • Only 17% NGOs use licensed MIS systems

These challenges limit NGOs’ ability to scale, measure impact, and attract funding.

CSR Funding Challenges: A Critical Insight

One of the most important findings:

Certifications do not guarantee funding

  • 89% NGOs are CSR-1 registered
  • But only 71% actually receive CSR funds

This gap highlights the importance of:

  • Visibility
  • Proposal quality
  • Networking
  • Track record

Impact of Delayed CSR Funding

  • 60% NGOs face delays in CSR fund disbursement
  • 40% report serious disruption in multi-year projects

This affects:

  • Project continuity
  • Staff salaries
  • Long-term planning

What NGOs Need: Key Support Areas

Top Support Requirements:

  • 82% need fundraising support
  • 73% need networking opportunities
  • 55% need branding and visibility support
  • 59% need project management training
  • 55% need MIS training

Capacity building is as important as funding.

Key Recommendations for Corporates

The report provides actionable recommendations to strengthen CSR–NGO partnerships:

  1. Facilitate Networking Platforms

Enable CSR–NGO connects and partnerships.

  1. Co-create CSR Programs

Design projects jointly with NGOs instead of top-down approaches.

  1. Ensure Timely Fund Disbursement

Avoid delays in multi-year project funding.

  1. Invest in Capacity Building

Support NGOs in:

  • Project management
  • Proposal writing
  • MIS systems
  1. Provide Flexibility in Budgets

Allow realistic manpower and administrative costs.

  1. Strengthen MIS & Digital Systems

Enable NGOs to adopt technology for better monitoring and reporting.

Conclusion: Building a Stronger CSR–NGO Partnership

The Bharat NGO Report 2025 highlights a crucial truth:

NGOs and corporates must move from a “funder–recipient” model to equal partnerships

By addressing challenges related to:

  • Funding access
  • Capacity building
  • MIS systems
  • Communication gaps

India can build a more effective, transparent, and impactful CSR ecosystem.

This collaboration is essential for achieving sustainable development and driving India towards a Viksit Bharat.

 

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