| Sat, 29 Mar 2025 06:42:43 GMTwww.bbc.com
Millions give less to charity as bills rise and interest wanes
Millions give less to charity as bills rise
8 hours ago Share Save Kevin Peachey Cost of living correspondent Share Save
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An estimated four million fewer people are donating money to charity compared to before Covid, owing to squeezed household budgets and a lack of interest from younger individuals. A survey by the Charities Aid Foundation (CAF) found that just half of the people it asked made donations last year. Only a third of 16 to 24-year-olds donated or sponsored someone during the year, down from about a half in 2019. Charities said they are increasingly reliant on a smaller group of people to give while at same time, seeing their own running costs rise.
"This research starkly demonstrates that we need to do much more to build our culture of giving," said Neil Heslop, chief executive of CAF, itself a charity and an advisory group for the charitable sector. Pressure from the rising cost of living has hit the number of people donating, according to the survey, based on 13,000 responses. It found: Half of those asked, or 50%, gave money to charity last year, down from 58% in 2019 - the equivalent of four million people
A fifth of people, some 21%, said they sponsored someone for charity last year, compared with 32% in 2019
Among 16 to 24-year-olds, 36% donated or sponsored someone over the year, down from 52% in 2019 Donor numbers fell in every area of the UK, but it was most significant in London, as well as the north west and north east of England. Wales saw the most modest decline. The biggest reason for failing to donate was a lack of money, but more than a third said it was due to a lack of interest in charity.
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