Fundraising is a key contact between charities and the public. Get it right, and your charity secures funding and public goodwill. Get it wrong, and you risk undermining the public’s confidence in your charity and the wider sector.
Many charities rely on money from the public to continue and it’s up to you, as charity trustees, to make sure that your charity – and anyone fundraising for your charity – observe the legal requirements and, importantly, the kind of fundraising practices that will encourage the public’s continued support.
Fundraising is also an important way to raise awareness and promote your charity and its aims.
Whoever does the fundraising in your charity, you as charity trustees are ultimately responsible for any activities carried out in your charity’s name.
Fundraising varies hugely in scale and covers a wide range of activities, including:
There are many aspects of fundraising which OSCR does not regulate and that we cannot provide guidance on.
This guidance covers the areas that we do regulate. The two pieces of legislation OSCR oversees that set out some of the rules for fundraising in Scotland are:
This guidance highlights the duties of all charity trustees under the 2005 Act and how these duties can apply to fundraising. It sets out the rules that charity trustees must follow when their charity carries out fundraising activities, whether small, occasional fundraising or as its main source of income.
This guidance outlines some of the main requirements of the 2009 Regulations. The full detail of the regulations can be found in our Technical Guide to the 2009 Regulations.
Fundraising regulation is a mix of statutory and non-statutory rules and involves different regulators depending on the rules involved and who is carrying out the fundraising in question.
OSCR is responsible for making sure that charities follow the rules under the 2005 Act and this guidance focuses on how those rules apply in a fundraising context.
Scottish charities also registered in another country or subject to other regulators may have to comply with additional fundraising requirements in that other country. The two other UK Charity regulators are:
For cross-border charities the Fundraising Regulator is the non-statutory regulator which deals with any complaints about their fundraising practices.
What this guidance doesn’t cover
This guidance does not tell you about:
But, we do link to other sources of help and advice which cover some of these things.