
Our Story
Changing Lives in the Heart of Honduras
For 15 years, Excel Global Outreach has worked in the most remote villages of Honduras, bringing education, healthcare, and hope to those who need it most.

15
Years of Service
Who We Are
Rooted in Community. Driven by Purpose.
Excel Global Outreach has been working in the remote villages of Honduras for 15 years. In the beginning it was to bring hope to children graduating from school at the sixth grade. These communities have no economy to provide employment for these young people, so they leave home to find work in the larger cities.
Many parents give us testimonies that they have not heard from their children for several years. Human trafficking remains a critical issue. Excel Global has addressed this by bringing higher education into these communities, giving each student the hope that they can be the one to start an economy in their own community.
Distance Education
Bringing the Classroom to the Mountain
Excel Global Outreach, AMHON, IHER, and the Ministry of Education approved and launched distance education in the remote communities of Honduras. Students who once walked an hour or more to school now have access to education in their own communities.
Program Guidelines
- Students must be walking one hour or more to school
- Excel Global Outreach is responsible for student sponsorship
- The Mayor is responsible for paying the teacher
- Parents are responsible for paying local education director fees
- Students, teachers, and parents create the yearly class schedule
Annual Program Costs (2026)
Grades 7–9: books & registration $34.35/year
Grades 10–11: books & registration $75.65/year
Bachelor's in Science & Humanities: $80.00/year
As of January 2026
Home Visitation
Meeting Families Where They Are
At Excel Global Outreach, our goal is simple yet profound: to visit every home where families live in severe poverty. These visits go beyond seeing conditions firsthand. They are about understanding the daily struggles of children and families so we can bring lasting change.
When we step inside these homes, the reality is heartbreaking. We often find children with no food to eat. Their clothes are filthy not because of neglect, but because there is no running water. Roofs leak when it rains. Walls are so fragile a dog can walk through the holes. Families are crammed into a single space, often no larger than ten by eight feet, with one twin bed shared among seven people.
Yet even in these unimaginable conditions, we see resilience. We see children with bright eyes and dreams waiting to be nurtured. In partnership with local Mayors, we build new homes of cinder block, concrete, and metal roofing. Your gift of $1,750 provides a family a solid, safe home.
Help Build a Home
$1,750 provides a family a solid, safe home.

10K+
Patients Per Year
Medical Brigades
Healing First. Then Learning.
We quickly realized that before children could thrive in a classroom, their most basic health needs had to be addressed. Many students were living with untreated dental pain, hearing problems that made learning impossible, and other conditions that robbed them of their ability to focus.
That is why we launched our medical, vision, hearing, and dental brigades. These teams provide immediate care: relieving pain, restoring hearing, ensuring children can sit in a classroom ready to learn. But the brigades are more than clinics. They are community events where parents and neighbors are welcomed, encouraged, and supported.
10,000+ patients served every year
A brigade costs $1,450–$1,800. There is no cost to patients.
"
Let us not grow weary in doing good, for in the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.Galatians 6:9
Leadership
Excel Global Outreach
Jimmy Rhoton
Executive Director
Jimmy has devoted the past 15 years to building sustainable programs in the remote villages of Honduras, from distance education to medical brigades. His vision is a Honduras where no child grows up without access to education, healthcare, and hope.
Ready to Make a Difference?
Every gift transforms lives in the forgotten villages of Honduras.
