Giving to charity is a great thing to be able to do, but if you have a lot of problem debt or you are trying hard to save up a house deposit, you may think you just can’t spare any money.
It’s fine to put your own family first – but that doesn’t mean you stop caring about and wanting to help other people.
And many parents want their children to grow up thinking giving to charity and volunteering is important.
But money isn’t the only thing that charities need. Time and skills are important commodities you could donate. You may be surprised by what exactly you could give that would be really valued.
Here are 7 ways you can help a charity without emptying your own pocket.
1) Give blood
Giving blood saves lives. Many people wouldn’t be alive today if it wasn’t for blood donors.
According to the NHS, more than 200,000 new donors are needed each year to keep up with demand. Most people between 17- 65 are able to donate blood.
If you want to do your bit, find out who can give blood and then book an appointment near you. You have to be 17 or older to give blood, so your children can’t help with this one.
2) Be an organ donor
Along the same vein, being an organ donor is something quick and easy you can do that could make an enormous difference. At the start of 2018, there were more than 6,500 people in Britain waiting for a transplant.
Join the NHS Organ Donor Register – filling out the form only takes 2 minutes. Make sure you tell your family your wishes so they are aware of your desire to donate. And ask your kids if they would like to be donors too! There is no age limit for this.
3) Befriend an older person
200,000 older people say they haven’t had a conversation with friends or family in the past month. Loneliness can also be as harmful to a person’s health as smoking 15 cigarettes a day.
Here are three ways you can help an older person that might be feeling lonely through Age UK:
- sign up with your local branch for face-to-face meetings, see Age UK’s befriending services for details;
- become a Telephone Friend for the Silver Liners, who call an older person once a week just to have a chat
- if you are a runner, have a look at GoodGym, a community of runners that gets that extra motivation to run regularly from visiting an older person once a week.
4) Dog walk or pet sit for an animal charity
Cinnamon Trust organises help for elderly and terminally ill people with their pets:
A network of 18,000 volunteers “hold hands” with owners to provide vital loving care for their pets. We keep them together – for example, we’ll walk a dog every day for a housebound owner, we’ll foster pets when owners need hospital care, we’ll fetch the cat food, or even clean out the bird cage, etc.
If your children would love a dog but you don’t have the space or can’t afford the expense, dog walking someone else’s dog could be a real treat for your kids as well as a blessing to the dog owner.
The RSPCA website has dozens of options for those willing to help out. Use their handy geographical finder to see what is available in your area.
5) Volunteer at a charity shop or donate unwanted items
Volunteering in a shop can be a good way to support a number of your favourite charities, with names such as Oxfam, Scope and Cancer UK lining the high street with their charity shops. For example, British Heart Foundation has more than 560 stores around the country, and Barnardo’s has more than 700. Just a quick Google could help you find a charity shop local to you.
If you don’t want to volunteer in a shop, then just donating your unwanted items could help. Charity shops take a lot more than just clothes.
Or look for other places to volunteer. Here is the story of the 100 year old man who help out at his local foodbank!
6) Become an Olio Food Waste Hero
These are the 65,000 amazing Olio volunteers who collect surplus food from local business and shops and list it on the Olio app to be picked up by your neighbors. You can keep some of it for yourself, too! Find out more here and download the app.
7) Get your hair cut!
If you’re getting long hair cut, consider the Little Princess Trust, which provides wigs to girls and boys throughout the UK and Ireland who have lost their own hair through illness or medical treatment.
Find out more about how you can donate your hair.
Francesca - From Pennies to Pounds says
These are amazing ideas Sara! I really need to go and give blood, as I have a rare blood type. I am an organ donor already though!
Sara (Debt Camel) says
It’s not just rare blood types, they always need type O because that can be given to anyone, whatever their type!
LYNN says
All blood types needed but especially O negative. Also I have recently given my Nectar points to the African famine appeal.
Andy says
Two more thoughts:
Regardless of if you qualify for help at a food bank or not they may have voluntary places to help sort items etc. This is something I am waiting to hear back about from a local church.
Donations do not have to be money or time either as mentioned. If you occasionally buy a “3 for 2” type item and it is suitable and you can spare it, considering donating the “third” one to a local food bank if there is a collection bin in your local shop.
Most will gave a list of suitable/unsuitable items, summary bring nothing perishable. Also consider toiletries and pet foods as these can be in short supply in some banks.