Donation Pledge Form Template
Record giving commitments for your campaign — amount, schedule, and recognition preferences — with fulfillment handled through your gift processing.
Make your pledge to the campaign. A pledge is a commitment, not a charge — our team follows up with fulfillment details, and every gift is acknowledged personally.
In dollars — every level genuinely moves the campaign.
A pledge and a payment are different instruments, and every experienced fundraiser knows which one raises more: people commit larger amounts when they can schedule fulfillment than when a card field demands the whole gift today. This form is a pledge book, not a cash register — it records the commitment, the schedule, and the recognition wishes, and leaves the money movement to your gift-processing channel where receipts and donor records already live.
Why these fields. The donor name is labeled "as you'd like it recognized" because that's the version that ends up on the donor wall and in the annual report — asking this way prevents the awkward "Robert or Bob?" call later. The pledge amount is an open number rather than preset tiers; campaigns with giving levels can add them, but open amounts consistently capture the surprising gifts tiers would have anchored down. The fulfillment choice drives the form's logic: choosing installments reveals a schedule dropdown, while single-gift donors never see it. The recognition question is asked at pledge time — the only moment it's guaranteed to be answered — and the note field catches designations and in-honor-of dedications, which are commitments your team must honor, in writing from the start.
What we left out. Card fields, categorically: pledges processed as instant charges stop being pledges, and mixing money collection into commitment collection shrinks both. Also employer-matching lookups and tax-receipt language — both belong in your fulfillment emails, where the details are binding and current.
Who uses this. Capital campaigns at schools and churches, community nonprofits running pledge drives, alumni phonathons logging commitments as callers work, and giving-day organizers who need tonight's total before any check clears.
Make it yours. Add giving levels as a dropdown if your campaign uses named tiers, and put campaign milestones in the intro text. The installment logic is a working pattern in the Logic panel — extend it with a rule that shows a "corporate matching" question for large amounts using the gt operator. Export the CSV weekly: summed pledge amounts by schedule is exactly the cash-flow projection your treasurer keeps asking for. Turn on notifications so major pledges get same-day thank-you calls — speed of gratitude is fundraising's cheapest multiplier.
Fulfillment, gracefully. The ending promises follow-up on the donor's chosen schedule and states plainly that no charge happens here. Donors relax when the mechanics are honest — and relaxed donors pledge again next year.
Frequently asked questions
Does this form collect the donation itself?
No — it records the pledge. Your team follows up with fulfillment details (check, transfer, your giving platform) on the schedule the donor chose. Commitment and collection stay properly separate.
How do we track campaign progress against pledges?
Export the CSV — pledge amounts, schedules, and dates are in columns, so the running total and the cash-flow projection are one spreadsheet away. Notifications flag major gifts instantly.
Why does the schedule question only appear sometimes?
A logic rule shows it only for donors who chose installments. The pattern is visible in the Logic panel and extends easily — say, a matching-gift question above a threshold amount.
Can donors remain anonymous but still be contacted?
Yes — anonymity here is about public recognition only. Their email stays in your responses for receipts and follow-up, but the donor wall lists them as anonymous.