The Giving Directory

Housing & Homelessness

National Alliance to End Homelessness

Leads a movement to prevent and end homelessness in the United States through policy advocacy and research.

Founded 1983 43 years of work
Focus United States
Rating 90/100 Charity Navigator

Charity Navigator rates National Alliance to End Homelessness 90/100 — reflecting strong financial discipline, transparency, and program delivery against industry benchmarks.

What this charity does

Housing-and-homelessness organizations operate across a continuum from emergency shelter to permanent supportive housing, with growing emphasis on the evidence-based "Housing First" model — providing stable housing before treating other issues. Strong nonprofits combine direct service (shelters, transitional housing, rapid rehousing) with case management, policy advocacy, and capital-development of new affordable housing units. Funding supports staff, rental subsidies, mental-health and addiction services, and capital costs for housing development.

Why it matters

Look for outcomes data on housing retention: how many people stayed housed 6, 12, and 24 months after exiting the program. Strong nonprofits track this; weak ones report only "people served." Built for Zero is the gold-standard methodology — organizations using it tend to deliver better results. Avoid charities that emphasize shelter-bed counts over permanent-housing outcomes.

Common programs in this space

National Alliance to End Homelessness works within housing & homelessness. These are the kinds of programs typically run in this space — visit their site for current specifics.

  • Emergency shelter for individuals and families in immediate crisis
  • Rapid-rehousing programs that move people from shelter into stable housing within weeks
  • Permanent supportive housing for chronically homeless individuals with disabilities
  • Tenant advocacy and eviction-prevention legal services
  • Policy advocacy for affordable-housing development and zoning reform

How to support beyond a one-time gift

  • + Donate cash, not goods — most shelters have very specific supply needs and can buy more efficiently than donated goods allow
  • + Recurring monthly gifts are particularly valuable — housing programs require predictable revenue
  • + Volunteer with case management, intake, or maintenance at a local shelter
  • + Advocate for zoning reform in your municipality — restrictive zoning is the single biggest barrier to affordable housing
  • + Use employer matching — homelessness organizations are often eligible

Verify before you give

A few minutes of independent verification pays off — especially for larger gifts. These resources let you confirm the details on National Alliance to End Homelessness:

Frequently asked

Is National Alliance to End Homelessness a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit?
National Alliance to End Homelessness operates as a registered nonprofit organization. You can verify their current 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status using the IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search tool. We recommend confirming directly on the IRS website before making any large donation.
What percentage of donations to National Alliance to End Homelessness goes to programs?
Program-expense ratios change year to year and are published in National Alliance to End Homelessness's annual Form 990 filing. You can read the most recent filings on ProPublica's Nonprofit Explorer or Candid (formerly GuideStar). Charity Navigator has rated National Alliance to End Homelessness at 90/100, reflecting its overall financial health and accountability.
How does National Alliance to End Homelessness measure its impact?
National Alliance to End Homelessness publishes impact reporting through its annual report, program-specific updates on its website, and the rating analysis from Charity Navigator. Look for outcomes data on housing retention: how many people stayed housed 6, 12, and 24 months after exiting the program. Strong nonprofits track this; weak ones report only "people served." Built for Zero is the gold-standard methodology — organizations using it tend to deliver better results. Avoid charities that emphasize shelter-bed counts over permanent-housing outcomes.
What's the most effective way to donate to National Alliance to End Homelessness?
Most charities — including National Alliance to End Homelessness — get the most use out of unrestricted, recurring monthly donations. Recurring gifts let the organization plan staffing and program commitments. You can also donate appreciated stock to avoid capital-gains tax, leave a planned gift in your will, or take advantage of employer-matching programs.
How can I support National Alliance to End Homelessness without donating money?
Donate cash, not goods — most shelters have very specific supply needs and can buy more efficiently than donated goods allow Recurring monthly gifts are particularly valuable — housing programs require predictable revenue Volunteer with case management, intake, or maintenance at a local shelter Visit the official website at endhomelessness.org for current volunteer and advocacy opportunities.