
Fire Department Fundraising Ideas That Actually Raise Money
Captain Brian Williams
25-year career firefighter • KCKFD
Most fire department fundraisers barely break even. A veteran firefighter shares the events and strategies that consistently generate real revenue for volunteer departments.
Let me save you some time and heartache. I have seen volunteer fire departments spend more money putting on a fundraiser than they actually raised from it. I have watched well-meaning members pour weeks of effort into events that generate a few hundred dollars and leave everyone exhausted and demoralized. And I have also seen departments run fundraising programs that bring in tens of thousands of dollars consistently, year after year, with efficient use of volunteer time and energy.
The difference between the departments that struggle with fundraising and the ones that thrive is not luck. It is strategy. They focus on the right events, they plan properly, they market effectively, and they leverage community relationships. Let me share what actually works.
Before we get into specific ideas, let us talk about the single most important fundraising principle: do fewer things and do them well. Too many departments try to run a different fundraiser every month. A pancake breakfast in January, a car wash in March, a chicken dinner in May, a carnival in July, a golf tournament in September, a spaghetti dinner in November. By the time you add up all the planning, shopping, cooking, setup, cleanup, and volunteer hours for each event, your members are burned out and your net revenue per event is tiny.
Pick two or three signature events per year. Put your energy into making those events excellent. Build community anticipation for them. Make them traditions that people look forward to. That approach will generate more revenue with less burnout than the constant cycle of small events.
The Annual Fund Drive
The most reliable and efficient fundraising method for volunteer fire departments is the direct mail fund drive. This is where you send a letter to every household in your response district explaining who you are, what you do, and asking for a tax-deductible donation.
A well-executed fund drive can generate substantial revenue with relatively low overhead. Your costs are printing, postage, and envelopes. Your return on investment is typically far higher than any event-based fundraiser.
The key to a successful fund drive is the letter itself. It needs to be personal, specific, and compelling. Do not send a generic form letter. Write a letter from your chief that tells a real story from the past year. Talk about the calls you responded to, the lives you impacted, the equipment you need, and the training your members have completed. Include specific numbers. "Last year, your volunteer firefighters responded to 347 emergency calls, including 12 structure fires and 215 medical emergencies."
Include a return envelope. Make it easy. Offer multiple giving levels but do not pressure. A suggested range like 25, 50, 100, and 250 dollars gives people a framework without being pushy. Include your department's tax ID number so donors know their contribution is tax-deductible.
Some departments have started supplementing their mail campaign with an online giving option. A simple landing page on your department website with a PayPal or Stripe donation button captures donations from people who prefer to give digitally.
The National Volunteer Fire Council at nvfc.org maintains a grant and fundraising resource section that is invaluable for volunteer departments. They compile information on available grants, fundraising best practices, and funding opportunities from federal, state, and private sources.
The Community Dinner
If your department is going to do an event-based fundraiser, a community dinner is one of the most proven formats. Whether it is a crab feast, a chicken barbecue, a fish fry, a steak dinner, or whatever your community responds to, a well-run dinner can generate significant revenue while also building community goodwill.
The keys to a successful dinner fundraiser are controlling costs and maximizing ticket sales. On the cost side, approach local businesses for food donations or at-cost pricing. Many grocery stores, restaurants, and food distributors will donate or discount food for fire department events. You can also buy in bulk from wholesale suppliers. Every dollar you save on costs is a dollar more in your net revenue.
On the revenue side, presell tickets rather than counting on walk-in traffic. Set a ticket price that covers your costs and provides a healthy margin. Most successful department dinners charge between 25 and 50 dollars per plate, depending on the menu and what the community will bear. Sell tickets through your members, at the station, through local businesses, and online.
Add revenue layers to the dinner. A silent auction, a basket raffle, a 50/50 drawing, or a live auction can add thousands of dollars to your event revenue. Approach local businesses for donated auction items. Many businesses are happy to donate a gift card, product, or service to a fire department event because it is good community relations and it is tax-deductible for them.
Open House Events
An annual open house serves double duty. It is a recruitment tool and a fundraising opportunity, plus it builds community awareness of your department. Invite the public to your station, show them your apparatus, let the kids spray the hose, demonstrate your equipment, and give tours of the station.
Pair the open house with a food sale. Burgers, hot dogs, and drinks are easy to prepare and sell. Add a bake sale, a raffle, or a donation jar. Some departments charge admission, though I think free admission with food sales and donations generates more goodwill and higher overall revenue.
The open house is also your best opportunity to recruit new volunteers, which is a different kind of return on investment that matters just as much as the financial return.
Grant Funding
Many volunteer departments overlook grants, and that is a significant missed opportunity. There are substantial grant programs available to volunteer fire departments at the federal, state, and private levels.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency administers the Assistance to Firefighters Grant program, commonly called AFG. This program provides funding directly to fire departments for equipment, training, and other needs. There is also the Staffing for Adequate Fire and Emergency Response program, known as SAFER, which provides funding for hiring and retention of firefighters.
AFG grants can fund major equipment purchases that would be impossible through local fundraising alone. We are talking about SCBA, thermal imaging cameras, extraction tools, portable radios, and even vehicles. The application process is competitive, but many volunteer departments have been successful.
State grant programs vary but are worth researching. Many states have volunteer firefighter assistance programs, equipment grants, or training grants. Your state fire marshal's office or state firefighters association can point you toward available programs.
Private foundations and corporate giving programs are another source. Some national organizations offer grants specifically for volunteer fire departments. The Firehouse Subs Public Safety Foundation, for example, has funded equipment purchases for departments across the country.
Writing grants takes time and skill, but it is a learnable skill. Assign one or two members to become your department's grant writers. Send them to grant-writing workshops offered by your state fire training agency or NVFC. A single successful grant application can bring in more money than years of pancake breakfasts.
Vehicle and Equipment Fundraising
When your department needs a major purchase, such as a new apparatus, a separate focused fundraiser can be effective. This is different from your annual fund drive because it targets a specific, tangible goal that the community can see and understand.
Create a capital campaign with a clear goal, a timeline, and a visual tracker. "Help us raise 250,000 dollars for a new pumper truck by December." Put a thermometer-style tracker on your station, your website, and your social media. People like to contribute to something they can see progress on. They want to be part of getting that thermometer to the top.
Approach major donors and local businesses separately from your general public appeal. A local business that might give 100 dollars to your annual fund drive might contribute 5,000 dollars toward a new fire truck, especially if you offer recognition such as naming rights, a plaque, or acknowledgment at your open house.
Some departments have successfully used vehicle sponsorship models where local businesses sponsor individual compartments or equipment items on a new apparatus in exchange for recognition.
Social Media and Online Fundraising
If your department is not leveraging social media for fundraising, you are leaving money on the table. A strong social media presence builds community awareness, tells your story, and creates a direct channel for fundraising appeals.
Post regularly about your department's activities. Training photos, call summaries without patient information, community events, member spotlights, and equipment updates all build engagement. When people feel connected to your department through social media, they are more likely to donate.
Online crowdfunding platforms can supplement traditional fundraising for specific projects. A GoFundMe or similar campaign for a specific equipment need, shared across your social media channels and your members' personal networks, can generate significant contributions.
Platforms like Facebook also offer fundraising tools that allow supporters to create fundraisers on your behalf, which extends your reach through their networks.
Avoiding Fundraiser Burnout
This is critical and something that volunteer fire departments chronically struggle with. Your members joined to fight fires and help people, not to spend every weekend flipping burgers and selling raffle tickets. If fundraising starts to feel like a second job, you will lose members.
Protect your members' time and energy by being strategic about which fundraisers you do, by delegating fundraising tasks to a dedicated committee rather than relying on the whole membership, and by automating what you can. The direct mail fund drive and online giving options require far less volunteer labor per dollar raised than event-based fundraisers.
Consider creating a fundraising auxiliary or support group of community members who are not firefighters but want to help. Many communities have fire department auxiliaries, ladies auxiliaries, or friends of the fire department groups that take on fundraising activities, freeing up your operational members to focus on training and response.
Fundraising is a necessary part of volunteer fire department life. Approach it with the same strategic thinking you apply to emergency operations, and you will raise more money with less effort.
StruckBox exists to support firefighters at every level with training tools that sharpen skills and save lives. Whether you are a small volunteer department or a large combination agency, our platform was built for you. Visit struckbox.com and see how we can help.
About the Author
Captain Brian Williams
Brian Williams is a 25-year career firefighter and Captain with the Kansas City Kansas Fire Department. He holds Firefighter I/II, Technical Rescue, and USAR certifications, and is the founder of StruckBox Every article here is reviewed for accuracy against the standards and tactics used on the job.
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