Nonprofit Remarketing Strategies: Re-Engage Supporters and Maximize Conversions

Did you know that 97% of first-time website visitors leave without taking any action? For nonprofits, this means nearly all your carefully cultivated traffic—whether from Google Ad Grants, social media, or organic search—disappears without converting into donors, volunteers, or email subscribers. That’s where nonprofit remarketing becomes your secret weapon.

Remarketing (also called retargeting) allows you to reconnect with people who have already shown interest in your cause by visiting your website. Instead of letting those valuable visitors slip away forever, you can strategically bring them back with targeted messages that speak directly to their interests and move them closer to taking action.

In this comprehensive guide, we’ll explore proven nonprofit remarketing strategies that help organizations like yours recover lost opportunities, increase conversion rates, and build lasting relationships with supporters. Whether you’re new to remarketing or looking to optimize existing campaigns, you’ll find actionable tactics you can implement immediately.

Table of Contents

What Is Remarketing and Why Do Nonprofits Need It?

Remarketing is a digital advertising strategy that allows you to show targeted ads to people who have previously visited your website or interacted with your content. When someone visits your site, a small piece of code (called a pixel or tag) places an anonymous cookie in their browser, enabling you to “follow” them across the web with relevant ads.

For nonprofits, remarketing is particularly powerful because:

  • Higher conversion rates: People who have already visited your site are significantly more likely to convert than cold audiences. Remarketing conversion rates are typically 2-3x higher than standard display advertising.
  • Lower cost per acquisition: Because you’re targeting a warm audience, your cost per click and cost per conversion are usually much lower than prospecting campaigns.
  • Brand reinforcement: Multiple touchpoints help build trust and keep your cause top-of-mind as supporters consider their giving decisions.
  • Donation recovery: You can specifically target people who started but didn’t complete donations—a high-intent audience that’s incredibly valuable.
  • Volunteer recruitment: Re-engage visitors who viewed volunteer opportunity pages but didn’t sign up.

Consider this: A potential donor visits your website, reads about your programs, and even starts filling out a donation form. But then they get distracted—maybe their phone rings, they need to attend a meeting, or they simply want to “think about it.” Without remarketing, that person might never return. With remarketing, you can gently remind them about your mission and invite them back to complete their gift.

How Remarketing Works: The Technical Basics

Understanding the mechanics of remarketing helps you implement it effectively. Here’s how the process works:

Step 1: Install the Tracking Pixel

Every remarketing platform requires you to install a small piece of JavaScript code (called a pixel or tag) on your website. This code:

  • Loads invisibly when someone visits your site
  • Places an anonymous cookie in the visitor’s browser
  • Tracks which pages they view and actions they take
  • Adds them to your remarketing audience lists

Common remarketing pixels include:

  • Google Ads Remarketing Tag: For Google Display Network, YouTube, and Search remarketing
  • Meta Pixel (Facebook): For Facebook and Instagram remarketing
  • LinkedIn Insight Tag: For LinkedIn remarketing (useful for B2B nonprofit fundraising)
  • Twitter Pixel: For Twitter/X remarketing campaigns

Step 2: Build Audience Lists

Once your pixel is installed, you can create audience lists based on specific behaviors:

  • All website visitors: Anyone who visited any page on your site
  • Specific page visitors: People who visited particular pages (e.g., donation page, volunteer page)
  • Converters: People who completed a desired action (donated, signed up, etc.)
  • Non-converters: People who visited but didn’t complete an action
  • Cart abandoners: People who started but didn’t finish a donation
  • Engaged visitors: People who spent significant time on your site or visited multiple pages

Step 3: Create Targeted Campaigns

With your audiences defined, you create ad campaigns specifically targeting these groups. The messaging, creative, and call-to-action should be tailored to where they are in their relationship with your organization.

Google Ads offers several remarketing options that work exceptionally well for nonprofits, especially those using Google Ad Grants.

Standard Display Remarketing

This is the most common form of remarketing. Your ads appear on websites across the Google Display Network—which includes millions of websites, news pages, blogs, and Google sites like Gmail and YouTube. Display remarketing ads can include:

  • Static image ads in various sizes (300×250, 728×90, 160×600, etc.)
  • Responsive display ads that automatically adjust size and format
  • HTML5 animated ads for more engaging creative

Dynamic Remarketing

Dynamic remarketing takes personalization further by showing ads featuring the specific content the visitor viewed on your site. For nonprofits, this might include:

  • Specific programs or campaigns they viewed
  • Events they looked at but didn’t register for
  • Products from your nonprofit store

Dynamic remarketing requires setting up a data feed and more advanced implementation, but it can significantly improve relevance and performance.

Remarketing Lists for Search Ads (RLSA)

RLSA allows you to customize your search campaigns for people who have previously visited your website. You can:

  • Bid higher on keywords when previous visitors search for them
  • Show different ad copy to people who already know your organization
  • Broaden your keyword targeting for remarketing audiences only

For example, if someone visited your education program page, you might bid more aggressively when they search for “support education nonprofits” because you know they’re already familiar with your work.

YouTube Remarketing

Reconnect with website visitors while they watch YouTube videos. You can show:

  • In-stream ads that play before or during videos
  • Video discovery ads that appear in search results and related videos
  • Bumper ads (6-second non-skippable videos)

YouTube remarketing is particularly effective for storytelling and emotional connection—powerful tools for nonprofits.

Facebook and Instagram Remarketing Strategies

With billions of active users, Facebook and Instagram offer massive remarketing opportunities for nonprofits.

Website Custom Audiences

Similar to Google, you can create audiences of people who visited your website and show them ads on Facebook and Instagram. The Meta Pixel tracks visitor behavior and enables you to:

  • Target all website visitors
  • Create audiences based on specific pages visited
  • Target by time spent on site
  • Create audiences of people who completed specific events (donations, signups)

Engagement Custom Audiences

Beyond website visitors, you can remarket to people who engaged with your content on Facebook and Instagram:

  • People who watched your videos
  • Users who engaged with your posts or ads
  • People who clicked your call-to-action buttons
  • Users who saved your posts
  • People who visited your Facebook or Instagram profile

Lead Ad Remarketing

If you use Facebook Lead Ads, you can remarket to people who opened your lead form but didn’t submit it. This is similar to cart abandonment remarketing and can be highly effective for newsletter signups, event registrations, and volunteer applications.

Audience Segmentation for Maximum Impact

Not all website visitors are equal, and your remarketing should reflect that. Smart audience segmentation allows you to deliver the right message to the right people at the right time.

Segment by Pages Visited

Create separate audiences based on which pages people visited:

  • Donation page visitors: High-intent audience; focus on urgency and impact
  • Program page visitors: Interested in specific causes; highlight relevant outcomes
  • Event page visitors: Show upcoming events and registration deadlines
  • Volunteer page visitors: Emphasize volunteer opportunities and community impact
  • About page visitors: Still learning about you; focus on mission and credibility

Segment by Time Since Visit

Adjust your messaging based on how recently someone visited:

  • 0-7 days: Fresh memory; gentle reminder may be sufficient
  • 8-30 days: Still warm; emphasize urgency and specific actions
  • 31-90 days: Need re-engagement; highlight new developments or success stories
  • 90+ days: Re-introduction; treat more like a new prospect

Segment by Engagement Level

Prioritize your most engaged visitors:

  • High engagement: Multiple page views, long session duration—these are your hottest prospects
  • Medium engagement: Viewed 2-3 pages or spent moderate time—show them more content
  • Low engagement: Single page view, brief visit—focus on education and awareness

Types of Remarketing Campaigns That Work for Nonprofits

Different campaign types serve different purposes in your nonprofit remarketing strategy.

Donation Recovery Campaigns

Target people who started but didn’t complete donations. These campaigns should:

  • Address common objections (security, impact, amount)
  • Emphasize ease of completing the donation
  • Create gentle urgency without being pushy
  • Highlight matching gift opportunities if available

Example ad copy: “You were just moments away from making a difference. Complete your donation in under 60 seconds and help us reach our goal.”

Content Nurture Campaigns

For visitors who aren’t ready to donate, use remarketing to build relationships through valuable content:

  • Promote blog posts related to their interests
  • Share impact stories and beneficiary testimonials
  • Offer free resources (guides, reports, toolkits)
  • Invite them to webinars or virtual events

Event Promotion Campaigns

Re-engage people who showed interest in your events:

  • Early bird registration reminders
  • Countdown to registration deadlines
  • Last-chance messaging
  • Post-event follow-up for future engagement

Volunteer Recruitment Campaigns

Target people who visited volunteer pages but didn’t sign up:

  • Highlight specific volunteer opportunities
  • Share volunteer testimonials and stories
  • Emphasize time commitment flexibility
  • Showcase community and social aspects

Recurring Giving Campaigns

Target one-time donors to upgrade them to monthly giving:

  • Emphasize the compounded impact of monthly gifts
  • Highlight convenience and automatic giving
  • Offer exclusive updates or content for monthly donors
  • Show how monthly support creates sustainable programs

Creative Best Practices for Nonprofit Remarketing Ads

Your ad creative can make or break your remarketing campaigns. Follow these best practices:

Use Eye-Catching Visuals

  • High-quality images: Use professional photos that evoke emotion and showcase your impact
  • Brand consistency: Maintain consistent colors, fonts, and style across all ads
  • People-focused imagery: Photos of beneficiaries, volunteers, or your team typically outperform abstract graphics
  • Clear focal point: Ensure your main subject is immediately visible

Write Compelling Copy

  • Keep it concise: Display ads have limited space; every word must count
  • Lead with impact: Focus on what the supporter’s action will accomplish
  • Create urgency: Use time-sensitive language when appropriate
  • Personalize when possible: Reference their previous interaction with your site
  • Clear CTA: Use action-oriented language (“Donate Now,” “Join Us,” “Learn More”)

Test Multiple Variations

Create several ad variations to test:

  • Different images or videos
  • Various headline approaches
  • Multiple calls-to-action
  • Different color schemes

Let the data guide you toward what resonates best with your audience.

Frequency Capping and Avoiding Ad Fatigue

One of the biggest risks with remarketing is showing your ads too frequently, which can annoy potential supporters and damage your brand.

Set Frequency Caps

Limit how often someone sees your ads:

  • Display ads: 3-5 impressions per day per user
  • Social media ads: 1-3 impressions per day per user
  • High-intent audiences: Can handle slightly higher frequency
  • Cold audiences: Keep frequency lower to avoid annoyance

Rotate Creative Regularly

Even with frequency caps, seeing the same ad repeatedly gets old. Plan to:

  • Refresh creative every 4-6 weeks
  • Have multiple ad variations running simultaneously
  • Use dynamic creative when possible

Set Membership Duration Appropriately

Determine how long someone stays in your remarketing audience:

  • Short-term (7-30 days): For time-sensitive campaigns or donation recovery
  • Medium-term (30-90 days): For general nurture campaigns
  • Long-term (180-540 days): For major donor cultivation or annual giving campaigns

Measuring Remarketing Success and ROI

To optimize your remarketing efforts, you need to track the right metrics.

Key Performance Indicators

  • Click-through rate (CTR): How often people click your ads; higher is better
  • Conversion rate: Percentage of clicks that result in desired actions
  • Cost per click (CPC): Average amount you pay per click
  • Cost per conversion: Total cost divided by number of conversions
  • Return on ad spend (ROAS): Revenue generated per dollar spent
  • View-through conversions: Conversions where someone saw but didn’t click your ad

Attribution Considerations

Remarketing often plays a supporting role in the conversion journey. Someone might:

  • See your display ad (awareness)
  • Later search for your organization on Google
  • Click a search ad
  • Then donate

In this scenario, the search ad gets the “credit,” but the remarketing ad played an important role. Use Google Analytics’ multi-channel funnels and attribution models to understand the full picture.

Common Remarketing Mistakes to Avoid

Learn from these common pitfalls:

  • Targeting everyone the same way: One-size-fits-all messaging doesn’t work. Segment your audiences.
  • Ignoring frequency caps: Bombarding people with ads creates negative associations with your brand.
  • Using the same creative too long: Ad fatigue kills performance. Refresh regularly.
  • Forgetting to exclude converters: Stop showing donation ads to people who just donated (unless it’s for a specific follow-up like monthly giving).
  • Not testing: Always be testing different approaches to improve results.
  • Poor landing page experience: Great ads sending traffic to poor landing pages waste money.
  • Ignoring mobile: Ensure your ads and landing pages work well on mobile devices.

Advanced Remarketing Strategies

Once you’ve mastered the basics, consider these advanced tactics:

Sequential Remarketing

Show ads in a specific sequence to tell a story or guide supporters through a journey. For example:

  • Ad 1: Introduce your mission
  • Ad 2: Share an impact story
  • Ad 3: Present the specific ask

Cross-Platform Remarketing

Coordinate remarketing across multiple platforms for consistent messaging:

  • Someone visits your website
  • They see display ads on Google
  • Then see Facebook ads reinforcing the message
  • Finally receive an email with the same theme

Lookalike Audiences

Use your remarketing audiences to create lookalike (similar) audiences. Platforms like Facebook and Google can find people who share characteristics with your website visitors, expanding your reach to new prospects who are likely to be interested in your cause.

Customer Match Remarketing

Upload your email list to create remarketing audiences. This allows you to:

  • Target lapsed donors for reactivation
  • Show specific messaging to major donors
  • Create suppression lists to avoid advertising to current monthly donors

Getting Started with Nonprofit Remarketing

Ready to launch your remarketing efforts? Here’s a simple action plan:

Week 1: Set Up Tracking

  • Install Google Ads remarketing tag on your website
  • Install Meta Pixel for Facebook/Instagram remarketing
  • Verify installation using tag assistant tools

Week 2: Build Audiences

  • Create audience lists based on key pages (donation, volunteer, programs)
  • Set appropriate membership durations
  • Build exclusion lists for converters

Week 3: Create Campaigns

  • Develop ad creative (images, copy, calls-to-action)
  • Set up your first remarketing campaign
  • Configure frequency caps

Week 4: Launch and Optimize

  • Launch campaigns with modest budgets
  • Monitor performance daily
  • Make adjustments based on initial data

Conclusion

Remarketing is one of the most cost-effective ways for nonprofits to maximize their digital advertising investment. By reconnecting with people who have already shown interest in your cause, you can significantly improve conversion rates, recover abandoned donations, and build lasting relationships with supporters.

The key to successful nonprofit remarketing is thoughtful audience segmentation, compelling creative, appropriate frequency management, and continuous optimization. Start with the basics, test different approaches, and scale what works.

Remember: Every visitor who leaves your site without converting isn’t a lost cause—they’re an opportunity waiting to be re-engaged. With strategic remarketing, you can turn those missed opportunities into meaningful support for your mission.

Ready to implement remarketing for your nonprofit? At nonprofitads.org/, we specialize in helping organizations maximize their digital advertising results. Contact us to learn how we can help you set up and optimize remarketing campaigns that drive real results for your cause.

2026 Updates & Best Practices

Since parts of this article were originally written in 2025, it’s important to highlight updates and best practices that have emerged in 2026. Digital trends and compliance requirements evolve constantly, and staying up to date can help your nonprofit maintain high performance and eligibility.

Why 2026 Is Different

Online giving continues to grow, and search engines and social platforms increasingly use artificial intelligence to surface information. Research shows that in 2026, donors often begin their journeys with online searches and expect fast, mobile-friendly experiences. If your nonprofit cannot afford paid advertising or has a weak web presence, the Google Ad Grants program—which offers up to $10,000 in monthly ad credits—helps level the playing field.

New Compliance Guidance

Google updated its Ad Grants policies in 2026 to emphasize account ownership, conversion tracking, and keyword relevance. To stay compliant, ensure:

  • Account ownership & billing: Your nonprofit must maintain administrative access to the Google Ads account, and the billing setup should reflect that it is a grant account.
  • Conversion tracking: Implement meaningful conversions such as donation completions, volunteer sign-ups, and event registrations. Avoid low-quality conversions like time on site.
  • Keyword quality: Review search terms regularly, add negative keywords, and avoid broad or single-word keywords to maintain relevance.
  • Landing page quality: Fast load times, mobile-friendly design, clear calls to action, and a visible privacy policy are essential.
  • Ongoing monitoring: Review conversions, search terms, and account performance at least monthly to catch issues before they trigger warnings.

Social & Creative Trends

Meta’s 2026 advertising best practices recommend concise ad copy—125 characters or less—focusing on benefits and clear calls to action. Personalized messages resonate, with many consumers more likely to engage with brands that personalize their outreach. Creative best practices emphasize using original graphics, consistent branding, and user-generated content. For video ads, capture attention quickly, include captions for sound-off environments, and keep videos under 15–30 seconds.

Integrating these 2026 updates into your strategy will help your nonprofit continue to thrive in a rapidly changing digital landscape. For personalized assistance, consider scheduling a free consultation.