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Mentoring Volunteer Opportunities in New York and New Jersey

Mentoring Volunteer Opportunities in New York and New Jersey

June 5, 2025Samaritan Scout
Good Orgs
New York
New Jersey
Local Volunteering

Volunteer as a Mentor:

Opportunities in New York and New Jersey

Using the Scout search engine, with just a location and the word ‘mentor,’ we’ve uncovered dozens of opportunities for potential volunteers who are willing to mentor in New Jersey or New York. Whether you want to mentor children, teens, first generation college students, young professionals, or seniors – there is an organization that can pair you with a person who can benefit from your support.

Most programs require a 12-month commitment, but there are also short-term relationship programs. Here are a few examples:

Connections Mentor must be at least 25 years old and able to meet with young people twice a month in NYC or Westchester CountyConnections Mentor supports “young people with past, current, or peripheral contact with the child welfare or juvenile justice systems in New York City or Westchester County”

Mentors in the Student/Partner Alliance meet with urban Catholic high school students in New Jersey's Essex, Hudson, and Union counties“Through a combination of private high school tuition assistance and mentoring support, the Student / Partner Alliance empowers high school students from Northern New Jersey’s urban areas to achieve success by attending strong academic and nurturing college preparatory high-schools.”

Bergen Volunteers Mentor Program website screenshotBergen Volunteers coordinates Short-Term Mentoring, which asks volunteers to commit on a month-to-month basis to reach out to seniors on weekly phone conversations. They also seek Long-Term Mentors, who make a 12-month commitment to “empower youth and caregivers to achieve personal success.”

L.O.V.E. mentorship of Latina young womenFemale college students can mentor teens with Latinas On the Verge of Excellence (L.O.V.E.), helping young women throughout New York City “fulfill their personal and professional goals.“

pictures of youth involved in Good Shepherd Services mentorship programGood Shepherd supports youth in foster care services throughout Brooklyn, Manhattan and the Bronx, offering a strengths-based mentoring program to “actively support, engage with, and champion their individual needs, goals, and interests.”

photo of mentor-mentee in the programMentor first-generation college students with ANY (America Needs You) in New York City, northern New Jersey, and Chicago. “As a Mentor Coach, you will cultivate your Fellow’s strengths, help them secure internships, and overcome obstacles. You will also build your leadership skills, grow your network, and find mentorship and community amongst hundreds of other Mentor Coaches.”

photo of graduates of the mentorship programOBT (Opportunities for a Better Tomorrow) helps youth and adults break the cycle of poverty. Mentors advise participants “in an emerging professional context. Mentors advise about a specific sector and the educational, networking, and skills requirements of breaking into that sector.”

photo of performance from the Shining Stars Network buddy programHigh school students can become a Buddy with the Shining Stars Network, a charity providing performing arts opportunities for the special needs community across seven New Jersey counties. As a Buddy, volunteers “mentor our stars through rehearsals and help them perform on stage.”

photo of two young people holding signs that say Some people are frightened by mental illness if you are afraid to talk, i will listenIf you are a family member of someone with a mental health illness, “use your valuable lived experience to support another family member” through NAMI (National Alliance on Mental Illness) in New York City. A “Family Match Mentor provides one-to-one support over the phone for 3 months [to] someone in the same relationship, loving someone with similar symptoms or diagnoses.”

screenshot of the Grand Settlement website describing ways to get involvedGrand Street Settlement, with locations across New York, Brooklyn and Queens, offers young professionals an opportunity through Juniors Undertaking Manhattan’s Possibilities (JUMP!) “to make lifelong connections with youth via monthly engagement opportunities. Relationships are cultivated through day-long trips and service projects.”

These are just a few of the many impactful programs in the tri-state, greater New York/New Jersey area where you can volunteer as a mentor. Search through the Scout platform to find additional options from Big Brothers Big Sisters, Read Ahead, Oliver Scholars Program, Take Your Sister 2 Lunch, Fresh Air Fund, Bigs & Littles, JerseyStem, Apex for Youth, and so much more!

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