Chariot Gift Processing is a unified platform that enables nonprofits to streamline the processing of offline donations from multiple sources including Donor-Advised Funds, fundraising platforms, and physical checks.
Instead of managing separate portals, banking connections, and reconciliation processes for each payment source, Chariot provides a single unified API and dashboard to process all your offline gifts.
Chariot Gift Processing is designed for nonprofit organizations that:
Organizations of all sizes can benefit, from small local nonprofits to large national organizations.
DAFpay is a donor-facing checkout solution that enables individual donors to make grants from their Donor-Advised Funds at the point of online donation.
Chariot Gift Processing is a nonprofit-facing backend solution that unifies the processing of all offline donations after they’ve been initiated.
Many nonprofits use both:
The onboarding process for nonprofits is as follows:
Create a Chariot account and provide your organization’s EIN.
Complete nonprofit verification.
Provide banking information for settlements to your external bank account.
Set up Payment Sources for each payment source (DAFs, platforms, lockboxes).
Share your Chariot banking details with your payment sources.
Start receiving donations automatically.
The verification process typically takes 3-10 business days.
Please visit our pricing page for more information.
A Payment Source is a segregated address for receiving donations from a specific source. Payment Sources can be:
Electronic
Physical (Lockbox)
All Payment Sources deposit to your same Financial Account, but they maintain separate tracking for reconciliation.
There’s no hard limit on the number of Payment Sources you can create. Nonprofits can manage their payment sources in their dashboard.
Payment Sources cannot be deleted if they have historical deposits or donations. This preserves your audit trail and reconciliation history.
If you no longer want to use a Payment Source, you can stop directing payment sources to it and it will become inactive over time.
Deposit: A transfer of money that arrives at a Payment Source. One deposit may contain multiple donations.
Donation: An individual charitable gift from a donor. Multiple donations can be included in a single deposit.
Example: A portal sends you a weekly electronic transfer of $10,000 containing 50 individual donations. This would be:
Donor attribution is unified across all payment sources:
Yes. Use the Update Donation endpoint to update:
You cannot update the amounts or fees as these reflect the actual transaction that occurred.
Use the Properties API to assign custom properties to donations:
This enables you to:
Properties are indexed and searchable, making it easy to filter and report on donations with specific property values.
In-Network Donations (from Chariot Disbursements): Instant - donations appear immediately
ACH Transfers: 1-2 business days from when the payment source initiates the transfer
Checks: 1-3 business days from when the check arrives at the lockbox (deposit to your account takes an additional 3-5 business days)
Donation data is available via API as soon as Chariot receives the transfer, even before funds have fully settled.
When you’re ready to move funds to your external bank account, use the Outbound Transfers API:
Outbound Transfer Timeline:
You must configure and verify an external bank account through the Chariot Dashboard before you can create outbound transfers in production.
The typical integration flow:
donation.created eventsMany nonprofits build this integration themselves or work with their CRM consultant to set it up.
Chariot also offers pre-built integrations for popular CRM systems. Contact support@givechariot.com to learn more.
Chariot automatically de-duplicates donations based on unique identifiers provided by the payment source.
If you encounter a suspected duplicate:
artifacts array for source filesIf a deposit is returned (e.g., an ACH transfer is rejected):
faileddeposit.returned webhook is sentYou should:
Contact support@givechariot.com if you need help resolving returned deposits.
Yes. Chariot maintains rigorous security standards:
Read more about our security practices.
Yes. Chariot is a financial technology company, not a bank. Chariot Accounts come with a Demand Deposit Account through our banking services partner, Column N.A., Member FDIC.
Deposits in Chariot Accounts are eligible for FDIC insurance up to $250,000 per depositor, for each insurable capacity in which the account is held.
If you can’t find the answer you’re looking for:
Chariot is a financial technology company, not a bank. Chariot Accounts come with a Demand Deposit Account through our banking services partner, Column N.A., Member FDIC. Deposits in Chariot Accounts are eligible for FDIC insurance up to $250,000 per depositor, for each insurable capacity in which the account is held.