NGO websites that communicate impact clearly.
NGO website design in Uganda that passes donor due diligence: programme and impact pages with evidence, transparency and governance sections, and a CMS your comms team runs.
Before a donor, grant officer, or partner signs anything, they visit your website — and they're doing due diligence, not browsing. Can they find your programmes, evidence of impact, governance, and recent activity in five minutes? Or does the site show a 2022 annual report and a broken news page? For NGOs, the website is a compliance document, a fundraising tool, and a credibility check rolled into one.
We build NGO websites in Uganda that pass that check and make the communications team's job easier, not harder.
Donors do due diligence on your website before any meeting
Programme pages need evidence and numbers, not just mission language
Published governance is a competitive advantage — most NGOs hide theirs
A comms-team CMS keeps the site alive between grant cycles
Programme pages built for grant officers
Funders skim for specifics: what the programme does, where, for whom, with what results, and with which partners. We structure a page per programme with exactly that — objectives, geography, beneficiaries reached, outcomes with numbers, photos from the field, and partner recognition. When a programme officer can copy your impact evidence straight into their internal memo, you've made funding you easier.
The transparency layer that unlocks funding
Institutional donors and serious individual givers check governance before they give. Make it effortless: board and leadership with real names and photos, registration and legal status, annual reports and financials downloadable, safeguarding and accountability policies published. NGOs are often nervous about publishing this; in practice, findable governance is a competitive advantage — most peer organisations hide theirs.
- Board, leadership, and registration details visible
- Annual reports and financial summaries as clean downloads
- Safeguarding, accountability, and complaint policies published
- Contact details that work — including a physical address
Stories and updates your comms team can actually publish
Impact stories, field updates, and news prove the organisation is alive — and they're the content donors share. The bottleneck is never willingness; it's a website only a developer can update. We build a CMS matched to NGO publishing: stories, news, reports, events, and galleries managed by the communications team, with photo handling that works on field-trip bandwidth.
Donations and calls-to-action that work from Uganda
If you take individual donations, the path must work for your actual donor base: international cards (Stripe alternatives that serve Uganda-registered orgs, or platforms like GlobalGiving), mobile money for local givers, and clear bank details for institutional transfers. Beyond money, every page should have a next step — partner with us, volunteer, subscribe — because visitors who aren't ready to give today can still join the list you'll fundraise from next year.
Frequently asked questions
How much does an NGO website cost in Uganda?
Typically UGX 4–12 million for a full NGO site with programme pages, a publishing CMS, reports library, and donation paths — scope depending on size and languages. Many funders accept website costs within communications or organisational development budget lines, and some grants specifically fund them.
What should an NGO website include for donors?
The due-diligence set: clear programme pages with outcomes and evidence, governance (board, registration, policies), downloadable annual reports and financials, recent activity showing the organisation is active, and working contact details. Add an email signup so interested visitors become a fundraising audience.
Can we accept donations through the website in Uganda?
Yes — the right mix depends on your donors. Mobile money (MTN MoMo, Airtel Money) for local givers, card payments via providers serving Uganda-registered organisations (Pesapal, Flutterwave, DPO), and clear bank transfer details for institutional gifts. We build the combination that fits your donor base and registration status.
Our NGO website is always out of date — how do you prevent that?
By removing the developer from the publishing loop. Your communications team gets an admin panel for stories, news, reports, and galleries, plus training. We also structure the site so 'evergreen' credibility content (programmes, governance) stays accurate with an annual review, while the news layer absorbs the frequent changes.