In short — Funding for a nonprofit in Switzerland comes from four places: public bodies (federal, cantonal, municipal), grant-making foundations, the databases that help you find them, and crowdfunding. The principle that ties them together is alignment: ask only funders whose purpose matches, and combine several sources. For organisations reaching the Italian-speaking region, that area has its own funders and rules.
“Where do I find the funding?” is the question that always comes first, even though in the fundraising path it is the last — after you have clarified the project, built the budget and prepared the dossier. But it is also the most concrete. This is the map of where a cultural or social organisation can look for funding in Switzerland, with a section on the Italian-speaking region that national players most often find hardest to navigate. For the whole picture, start with the guide to fundraising for nonprofits in Switzerland.
Public sources
The first channel is public support, on three levels. At federal level, the Federal Office of Culture and Pro Helvetia support cultural creation and projects. At cantonal level, each canton supports culture under its own law, with funds also fed by Swisslos proceeds; in Ticino the reference is the Ufficio del sostegno alla cultura. At local level, many municipalities and cities support initiatives directly. For social projects the public counterparts differ, but the logic is the same: read the criteria, respect the deadlines.
Grant-making foundations
Switzerland has one of the highest foundation densities in the world, and they are one of the most important channels for independent culture and social projects. Nationally, SwissFoundations is the umbrella body. To understand how these bodies think and how to approach them, see the dedicated guide on Swiss grant-making foundations.
Databases to find foundations
Finding the right foundation among thousands is the real work, and the tools help. Databases such as Fundraiso and StiftungSchweiz let you filter foundations by theme and region. They are a valuable starting point, but they remain a list: the real selection is done by reading statutory purposes and the projects each foundation has already supported, to see whether it genuinely fits yours.
Crowdfunding and grassroots fundraising
Alongside the institutional channels, grassroots fundraising has a value beyond the amount raised: it shows the project already has a community around it, and that weighs when you approach foundations. It is a channel worth activating when the project has an audience that can mobilise, not a fallback when the others do not work.
Funding in Italian-speaking Switzerland (the part national players miss)
The Italian-speaking region — Ticino and the Italian valleys of Graubünden — is its own funding landscape. It has its own grant-making foundations (ASFESI is the regional association), its own cantonal rules, and a working language a German- or French-speaking head office often cannot cover. A national or international organisation that wants to fund a project here usually finds the databases only get it halfway: the rest is local knowledge — which foundations actually fund in the region, and how to present a project credibly in Italian. More on expanding into Italian-speaking Switzerland.
How to choose where to ask
The principle that ties it all together is one: alignment. You ask only those whose purpose fits the project, and you combine several sources rather than betting everything on one. In the projects I have worked on — from The Sound of Ticino to Jazz Ignorante, and collaborations with organisations like Unitas Ticino — funds almost always came from a mix: public bodies, private foundations, local contributions. That is not scattering effort: it is how a cultural or social project actually gets financed in Switzerland.
Identifying the right funders for a specific project is one of the first things I do when working with an organisation. If you want help working out who to approach in your case — including how to reach the Italian-speaking region — get in touch: I reply within two working days.