Jorhat, the cultural and tea heart of upper Assam and the gateway to the river island of Majuli, is surrounded by sprawling tea estates worked by Adivasi tea-tribe families. The welfare of those communities — and their children's education and health — sits at the centre of its voluntary sector, alongside flood relief along the Brahmaputra. If you live here and want to give, volunteer or run a corporate social-responsibility programme, this guide is a useful starting point. It lists ten respected NGOs in and around Jorhat, what each does, and the checks every donor and CSR team should run first.
How we chose these NGOs
We looked for organisations with a real presence in Jorhat and Assam, programmes on the ground and public information about their work. Preference went to NGOs that are clear about their compliance — 12A, 80G, CSR-1 and FCRA — and that put services to people first. Treat this as a shortlist to research, and confirm an NGO's current status before you give.
Janmabhumi Jankalyan
Janmabhumi Jankalyan, founded in 2004 and headquartered in Jorhat, works across education, health, disaster management, employment, gender and child and youth development. Its broad, long-running work reaches many communities in upper Assam. For donors and CSR teams interested in integrated development, it is a grounded local partner. Ask about its programmes and the communities it serves, and confirm its registrations before funding.
Karunar Kheti Trust
Karunar Kheti Trust, established in 2019, supports the rural communities that supply the tea estates around Selenghat, and founded the Selenghat Valley School to give the children of tea-estate workers access to quality education. Bringing good schooling to tea-garden children who often miss out is high-impact work. For donors and CSR teams interested in education for tea communities, it offers a clear, focused mission. Ask about the school and children it supports, and confirm its registrations before funding.
Hopeline
Hopeline, founded in 2006 and based in Jorhat, works on education, health, employment, water, gender, child and youth development and livelihoods. Its wide remit lets it respond to many local needs. For donors and CSR teams interested in education, health and livelihoods, it is a local organisation worth researching. Ask about its programmes and the people they reach, and confirm its registrations before funding.
Bal Raksha Bharat (Save the Children)
Bal Raksha Bharat runs documented child-rights work in Assam's tea gardens on education, health and nutrition and child protection, working with children, families and estate management. Its focus on children living in the tea gardens fits the district's biggest social challenge. For donors and CSR teams focused on children, it is a dependable, well-governed partner. Ask about its tea-garden projects and the children reached, and confirm its registrations before funding.
Pratham (Assam)
Pratham, one of India's largest education NGOs, works in Assam to help children master reading and basic arithmetic, including children from disadvantaged communities. Its widely cited learning assessments keep its work measurable. For CSR teams that want learning outcomes at scale, Pratham is reliable. Ask for its coverage in the region and learning data, and confirm its compliance before funding.
Akshaya Patra Foundation (Assam)
Akshaya Patra runs one of the world's largest school lunch programmes, cooking and delivering mid-day meals to children in government and aided schools, with kitchens serving Assam. A hot, nutritious meal raises school enrolment, attendance and concentration. For donors who want a measurable, child-focused outcome, the programme is clear and proven, and its scale makes it a frequent CSR partner. Ask about meals served in the region and review its accounts, and confirm its registrations before funding.
Goonj (Assam)
Goonj is a national organisation known for turning urban material into a resource for rural development and for major disaster relief, including significant work during Assam's floods. It links everyday giving to dignity-based development rather than charity. For donors and CSR teams interested in rural development and disaster response, Goonj has a strong record — highly relevant along the flood-prone Brahmaputra. Ask about its current work in the region and how contributions are used, and confirm its registrations before giving.
HelpAge India (Jorhat)
HelpAge India works for the care, health and dignity of older people, running mobile healthcare, helplines and support programmes in Jorhat and across Assam. As families change and younger members migrate for work, support for the elderly is increasingly needed. For donors and CSR teams focused on older people, HelpAge is an experienced national partner. Ask about its local programmes and the elders it serves, and confirm its compliance before funding.
SOS Children's Villages (Assam)
SOS Children's Villages provides family-based care, education and a stable home for orphaned and abandoned children, with programmes in Assam. The family-style model gives children long-term security rather than only institutional care. For donors who want to fund a child's whole upbringing, it offers a well-established structure. Ask about the children in care in the state and their education and outcomes, and confirm its registrations before giving.
Smile Foundation (Assam)
Smile Foundation is a national NGO running education, health and livelihood programmes in Assam, including learning centres for underprivileged children and mobile health services. Its programmes are well documented and frequently funded through corporate CSR. For donors who want established systems and reporting, it is a dependable option. Ask for the specific programmes in the region and their results, and verify its registrations before giving.
How to verify any NGO before you donate in Jorhat
Run the same short checklist before you give, whatever the cause:
- 12A — confirms registration for income-tax exemption as a charity.
- 80G — makes your donation eligible for a tax deduction; collect a valid receipt.
- CSR-1 — required before a company can route CSR funds to the NGO.
- FCRA — needed if the NGO accepts foreign contributions; confirm it is active.
- Reporting — read the latest annual report and audited accounts, and ask for concrete results.
You can browse NGOs whose compliance has been checked on NGOLists, and the compliance guide explains each registration in plain language.
Jorhat's NGOs stand with the tea-garden families of upper Assam and the children who grow up among the leaves. Choose the cause that matters to you, run the checks above, and give with confidence — and nearby in the tea country, see our guide to the top NGOs in Dibrugarh.
Find verified NGOs in Jorhat on NGOLists
Every NGO listed on NGOLists is checked for 12A, 80G, CSR-1 and FCRA before it appears, so donors and CSR teams can give with confidence. List your NGO or fund a cause today.