Peer-to-Peer Fundraising Ideas for Schools, Teams, and Nonprofits

Profile picture of Ally PattersonPosted by Ally Patterson
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What Is Peer-to-Peer Fundraising?

Peer-to-peer fundraising is a format where each participant gets their own personal fundraising page. They share it with friends, family, and colleagues, and donations come in directly to that page. Your organization collects everything from one central campaign, but the reach comes from your whole group, not just your core team.

That's what makes it different from a standard donation page or a fundraising event you organize on your own. Instead of one page going out to one audience, you have 30, 50, or 200 personal pages going out to completely different networks. Each participant brings in donors you would never have reached.

The format works for any group with members who are willing to share: a school class, a sports team, a volunteer corps, or a donor community.

How It Works on SignUpGenius

Set up your campaign, invite participants, and each person gets their own page with a photo, personal message, and fundraising goal. Donations come in through the campaign page or directly on each participant's page. You track everything from one real-time dashboard.

See How Peer-to-Peer Works

Peer-to-Peer Fundraising Ideas for Schools and PTAs

Schools are one of the strongest fits for peer-to-peer fundraising. Students are natural sharers, and family networks are already connected to the cause. These formats work particularly well because every student becomes a participant, and every family becomes part of the campaign.

Read-a-Thon

Students commit to reading a set number of books or minutes over a defined period. Friends and family sponsor them per book or with a flat donation. Each student shares their personal page and tracks progress as donations come in. Read-a-thons work at any grade level, they connect fundraising to a school goal teachers already support, and they give students something to talk about with donors.

Walk-a-Thon or Fun Run

A classic for a reason. Students collect pledges per lap or with one-time gifts, then walk or run on a set day. The energy of the event day keeps participation high, and the personal pages let families donate from a distance even if they can't attend. You can add a leaderboard to keep students motivated in the weeks before the event.

Giving Campaign

Not every school fundraiser needs a physical activity attached. A giving campaign simply asks students and families to support the school directly, with each student sharing their personal page and a message about why they care. These work well for mid-year pushes or when you want to avoid the logistics of a physical event.

Talent or Skill Challenge

Students commit to a challenge related to something they can do: practice piano for 30 minutes a day, complete 50 math problems, or learn a new skill. Donors sponsor them for completing it. These work especially well at the middle and high school level where students want more personal ownership of their pages.

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Genius Tip

Set individual fundraising goals for each student when you set up the campaign. Students with a visible goal and a progress bar raise more than students with open-ended pages. Even a modest goal like $50 gives them something to work toward.

Peer-to-Peer Fundraising Ideas for Sports Teams

Sports teams have a natural advantage: players already compete, parents already cheer, and communities already gather around shared wins. Peer-to-peer fundraising gives every player a role in supporting the team, not just the boosters.

Team Fundraising Challenge

Every player gets a personal page, and the team tracks progress on a live leaderboard. Players compete to raise the most, or teams within a larger program compete against each other. The leaderboard format keeps players engaged across the full campaign window and gives coaches a simple talking point at every practice: check your page, share your link.

Season Kickoff Campaign

Launch a peer-to-peer campaign at the start of the season to cover gear, travel, or registration costs. Parents and players share their pages with family and community supporters before the first game. Because it happens before the season, donations often come in quickly from people who want to see the team succeed right from the start.

End-of-Season Thank You Campaign

Flip the format: instead of asking for support before the season, run a gratitude-framed campaign at the end. Players share what the season meant to them on their personal page and invite supporters to contribute to next year. The emotional content on personal pages tends to be stronger at the end of a season when players have real stories to tell.

Milestone Challenge

Set a team milestone (100 points scored, 10 wins, every player finishing a 5K) and let supporters pledge toward it. Players share their personal pages with the milestone front and center. When the team hits the goal, everyone who donated gets notified.

Teams and Leaderboards

SignUpGenius peer-to-peer campaigns support team fundraising and real-time leaderboards. Create sub-teams within your campaign so players compete by position group, grade, or roster split. Friendly competition raises more.

See the Leaderboard Feature

Peer-to-Peer Fundraising Ideas for Clubs and Nonprofits

For clubs and nonprofits, the biggest advantage of peer-to-peer fundraising is reach. Your donors and volunteers already believe in your mission. Give them a personal page and they become fundraisers, reaching people in their networks who have never heard of your organization.

Giving Day Campaign

Run a time-limited campaign where supporters fundraise on your behalf for 24 or 48 hours. The urgency of a giving day format drives participation and shares, and it creates a clear start and end that supporters can rally around. Each supporter shares their personal page with their network, and your organization collects from all of them through one central campaign.

Community Challenge

Ask supporters to take on a personal challenge (a fitness goal, a skill, a creative project) and collect donations based on completing it. Works well for organizations with active supporter bases, like running clubs, arts groups, or faith communities. Supporters write about why the challenge matters to them on their personal page, which gives donors a personal reason to give.

Volunteer Appreciation Campaign

Turn your most engaged volunteers into fundraisers during a campaign window tied to Volunteer Appreciation Week or your annual event. They share their personal story of involvement and invite donors to support the cause they care about. This format works well for organizations where volunteer identity is strong.

Anniversary or Milestone Campaign

Frame the campaign around an organizational milestone: your 10th year, your 1,000th family served, your program expansion. Supporters fundraise on your behalf as a way of celebrating the milestone together. The personal pages let each fundraiser share what the milestone means to them, which makes the campaign feel individual even at scale.

Birthday Fundraiser Program

Offer supporters a structured way to run birthday fundraisers on your behalf year-round. Each person sets up their personal page before their birthday and invites their network to donate instead of giving gifts. This creates a low-effort, recurring fundraising channel that reaches new donor networks every month.

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Genius Tip

Nonprofits often see their best peer-to-peer results when they send a short "here's what to write on your page" guide to participants before launch. Most people want to help but freeze when facing a blank page. A simple three-sentence example drops friction fast.

How to Choose the Right Format

The best peer-to-peer fundraising idea is the one your participants will actually share. A format that fits your group's culture will always outperform a more elaborate one that participants feel awkward talking about.

Use this table to match your group type and goals to a starting point.

Your Group Best Starting Format Why It Works
Elementary school Read-a-Thon or Fun Run Ties to school activities kids already do. Easy for parents to share.
Middle or high school Skill or Challenge Campaign Gives students more ownership over their page content and story.
Sports team Team Challenge with Leaderboard Competition keeps players engaged across the full campaign.
Club or community group Community Challenge Personal pages give members a voice. Works across dispersed groups.
Nonprofit Giving Day or Birthday Fundraiser Reaches new donor networks through existing supporters.

Once you have a format in mind, think through three things before you launch:

How long should the campaign run? Most peer-to-peer campaigns do best in a 2 to 4 week window. Long enough for participants to share and follow up, short enough to keep urgency high. Campaigns that run too long see participation drop off in the middle weeks.

What goal should participants set? Give participants a suggested goal when you set up the campaign. Even a modest number helps. People with a goal on their page raise more than people with no goal at all.

How will you keep participants engaged? Plan to send at least two check-ins during the campaign: one midway with progress updates and leaderboard results, and one near the end with a push to finish strong. You can manage this through your SignUpGenius dashboard and send updates through the platform.

Ready to Run Your Campaign?

Set up your peer-to-peer fundraiser on SignUpGenius. Invite participants, share one link, and let your community do the rest.

Get Started Free

Frequently Asked Questions

What is peer-to-peer fundraising? Peer-to-peer fundraising is a campaign format where each participant gets their own personal fundraising page. They share it with their own network, and donations come in to your organization through all of those individual pages. It lets your whole community fundraise on your behalf, not just your core team.

How is peer-to-peer fundraising different from a regular donation page? A standard donation page collects from one audience you reach directly. Peer-to-peer fundraising multiplies that by giving every participant their own page to share with their personal contacts. You gain access to donor networks that would never have seen your campaign on their own.

What types of organizations use peer-to-peer fundraising? Schools, PTAs, sports teams, youth leagues, clubs, service organizations, and nonprofits all run peer-to-peer campaigns. Any group with members willing to share a personal page with friends and family can run one.

How many participants do you need for peer-to-peer fundraising to work? There is no minimum, but campaigns with at least 20 to 30 active participants tend to see the strongest results because the network effect starts to compound. A classroom of 25 students sharing their pages with even 10 contacts each reaches 250 potential donors.

What makes a peer-to-peer campaign successful? Three things matter most: choosing a format participants feel good sharing, setting individual goals so participants have something to work toward, and following up mid-campaign to keep momentum. Campaigns that send at least one update to participants during the window consistently raise more than those that go quiet after launch.

How do donors give through a peer-to-peer campaign? Donors can give directly on a participant's personal page or through the main campaign page. They see the fees before they complete their donation, and they can choose a suggested giving level or enter their own amount.

Can you run peer-to-peer fundraising year over year? Yes. On SignUpGenius you can duplicate your campaign and carry over your structure for the following year. Add a new campaign manager during the handoff so the transition is smooth.

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