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New York City Youth Guide

Youth Mentoring Programs in New York City

A complete local guide to finding a mentor in NYC—who qualifies, which programs are active, and how YourVillage connects you with the right support.

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Youth Mentoring in NYC: What to Know

New York City has the largest and most complex youth mentoring ecosystem in the country. More than 200 organizations offer some form of mentoring to young people across the five boroughs—from structured one-to-one matches run by national networks, to borough-specific nonprofits, to city-government-funded programs targeting youth in the child welfare system.

The scale is a double-edged sword. There are more options in NYC than virtually anywhere else, but navigating them without a guide is genuinely overwhelming. Programs vary by borough, by age range, by focus area (academic, career, life skills), and by the specific populations they serve. What works in the Bronx may not be available in Staten Island. What serves a 14-year-old in foster care is different from what an 18-year-old aging out needs.

NYC's Administration for Children's Services (ACS) funds and coordinates many of the city's highest-priority youth programs. If you're currently in foster care, recently aged out, or have any involvement with the child welfare system, ACS-connected resources are typically your strongest starting point and carry the most robust support structures.

Key fact: NYC's Department of Youth and Community Development (DYCD) manages the Beacon and Cornerstone programs, which operate in over 90 NYC public schools and NYCHA community centers. If you're between 10 and 21, there's likely a DYCD-funded program in your neighborhood — and they serve youth regardless of immigration status.

For young adults 18–24 who have aged out of foster care or are experiencing housing instability, the options narrow but the need intensifies. Programs like ACS's Bridges to Health and NYC's FHEPS-adjacent housing programs often include mentoring components. YourVillage's matching tool is specifically designed to surface these adult-focused resources that standard youth program searches miss.

Who Qualifies for Mentoring Programs in New York City

NYC's mentoring programs collectively serve an extremely wide range of young people. Eligibility by program type:

You don't have to be in crisis to qualify. Many NYC programs welcome any motivated young person — the city's density means there are enough programs to serve both high-need youth and those who simply want a consistent adult relationship and a broader professional network.

Key Mentoring Programs in New York City

Here are the most established programs currently serving youth across NYC's boroughs:

Ages 10–21 | All 5 Boroughs

DYCD Beacon & Cornerstone Programs

The city's largest youth program network, operating out of 90+ NYC public schools and NYCHA community centers. Offers structured mentoring, homework help, job readiness, and community service. Free, open to all youth regardless of income or documentation. Find your nearest Beacon at dycd.nyc.gov.

Ages 13–24 | Citywide

iMentor

NYC-based nonprofit that pairs high school students with professional mentors for year-long, structured relationships focused on college access and career exploration. Partners with 70+ NYC high schools. Strong presence in the Bronx, Brooklyn, and Queens. Application opens each fall through school partnerships.

Ages 12–24 | Manhattan & Bronx

The Door — A Center of Alternatives

Comprehensive youth development center in lower Manhattan serving 12–24 year olds. Mentoring, education, health services, legal support, and crisis housing all under one roof. Particularly strong for LGBTQ+ youth, homeless youth, and young people involved with the justice system. Walk-ins welcome on weekdays.

Ages 6–18 | All Boroughs

Big Brothers Big Sisters of NYC

New York City's BBBS chapter offers community-based and school-based one-to-one matches across all five boroughs. Volunteer mentors commit to 6–10 hours per month. Strong presence in high-need neighborhoods. Waitlist often runs 3–6 months — apply early. Available in English and Spanish.

Ages 14–24 | Foster Care Focus

ACS Bridges to Health

NYC's Administration for Children's Services funds Bridges to Health to support youth in foster care with complex medical, developmental, or behavioral health needs. Mentoring is paired with intensive case management. Access through your ACS caseworker or by calling the ACS helpline at 311.

Ages 16–24 | Workforce Focus

NYC Ladders for Leaders

Summer internship and mentoring program placing NYC high school and college students with Fortune 500 companies and nonprofits. Competitive application process with professional development training included. Administered by NYC's DYCD — applications open each January at dycd.nyc.gov.

Ages 12–21 | Bronx Focus

Bronx Community Foundation Youth Programs

The Bronx has among the highest concentrations of youth in poverty in any US city. Multiple Bronx-based nonprofits — including BronxWorks, Mott Haven Community Center, and Cardinal McCloskey Community Services — operate structured mentoring under BCF funding. Eligibility generally requires Bronx residency.

Ages 14–24 | Brooklyn

Brooklyn Workforce Innovations — Young Adult Programs

Offers mentoring integrated with job training and career development for young adults 14–24 in Brooklyn. Focused on sustainable employment pathways in industries like healthcare, culinary, and technology. Programs are free and funded through WIOA youth workforce development grants.

Given NYC's size, borough-specific programs often provide more targeted support than citywide organizations. If you're in a specific borough, searching "[borough name] youth mentoring" or contacting your local DYCD Beacon program is often the fastest path to a real match.

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How to Apply for a Mentoring Program in NYC

NYC's system is large enough that "how to apply" varies meaningfully by program type. Here's a practical framework:

Step 1: Identify the right program type for your situation

Foster care or ACS involvement → start with ACS-connected programs (Bridges to Health, your caseworker's network). College-focused → iMentor or CUNY ASAP. Career/workforce → DYCD Ladders for Leaders or Brooklyn Workforce Innovations. General mentoring → BBBS NYC or your local DYCD Beacon. LGBTQ+ or housing instability → The Door.

Step 2: Apply to 2–3 programs simultaneously

NYC program waitlists are long. BBBS regularly runs 3–6 month waits. iMentor enrollment is academic-year-gated. Applying to multiple programs at once is not just acceptable — it's the pragmatic approach. Most programs understand you're navigating a system, not being disloyal.

Step 3: Be specific about your borough and neighborhood

NYC is five boroughs and 8+ million people. A mentor in Staten Island is not useful to someone who lives in the South Bronx. Being explicit about where you live, where you go to school, and what neighborhoods you can realistically reach for meetings is essential information for every intake form.

Step 4: Prepare for the intake process

Larger NYC programs have structured intake interviews — often 30–60 minutes, sometimes with a parent or guardian for under-18 applicants. BBBS requires background checks for mentors and reference calls. For youth, the intake is typically a conversation about your life, goals, and what you're looking for in a mentor. Be honest. There are no wrong answers.

Step 5: Follow up after applying

NYC nonprofit programs handle high application volumes. A polite follow-up email or call two weeks after submitting is completely appropriate and often moves your application forward. Programs prioritize youth who demonstrate consistent engagement — following up is the first test of that.

What to Expect from a Mentoring Relationship

NYC mentoring relationships look different from those in smaller cities. A few things to know:

How YourVillage Helps NYC Youth

YourVillage is a resource navigation platform built for young adults in New York and Connecticut. We don't run mentoring programs — we make it significantly easier to find the right one for your specific situation.

Here's what we do for NYC youth specifically:

YourVillage membership gives you access to personalized resource plans, priority matching, and direct support navigating NYC's services. See how it works →

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More Resources for Young Adults in New York & Connecticut

Mentoring is one piece of the picture. Here are other areas where YourVillage can help: