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In 2024, we reached 41.2m children in 93 countries around the world

From crisis response to lasting change, we're fighting for every child's right to survive, learn and be protected – in the UK and around the world.

Need to Decide Quickly?

✓ We reached 41.2 million children in 2024

✓ We respond to emergencies within 72 hours

✓ We work in 93 countries including the UK

✓ 89p in every £1 goes directly to helping children

✓ We supported 375,000 UK children and families last year 

A portrait of Alfie, five months with his mum Linda - in Larne, Northern Ireland

Our impact in 2024

The Numbers That Matter

The scale:

The speed:

The depth:

  • 7.5 million children accessing quality education programmes
  • 1.8 million children receiving essential healthcare
  • 890,000 children protected from violence and exploitation

The influence:

  • 12 major policy changes secured for children's rights
  • 47 government commitments on child protection
  • Children's voices amplified in 23 international decision-making forums 

Where Your Money Goes 

89p in every £1 donated goes directly to helping children. The remaining 11p covers essential fundraising and administration costs that keep the organisation running.

You can see more where we spend our money on the diagram below which shows our charitable expenditure broken down by thematic areas.

AR 2024 - Expenditure
Asma*, 30 holds her newborn baby Sara*, 4 days old at a mobile clinic, Sudan

Asma*, 30 holds her newborn baby Sara*, 4 days old at a mobile clinic, Sudan

Emergencies: We're first to respond, last to leave

When disaster strikes, children can't wait. That's why we respond within 72 hours – delivering food, water, medical care and safe spaces while others are still mobilising.

In 2024, we responded to 112 emergencies across 71 countries, reaching 23.8 million people. 

From Gaza to Sudan to Ukraine, we're there when children need us most – and we stay long after the world stops watching. 

Fighting child poverty right here in the UK

4.5 million children are growing up in poverty across the UK – that's nearly one in three. Behind this statistic are real children going to school hungry, wearing clothes that don't fit, missing out on things their friends take for granted.

We're supporting families through baby banks, holiday hunger programmes and cost of living grants – while fighting for the systemic change that tackles the root causes.

In 2024, we supported over 375,000 children and families in the UK. 

Bethan, three & mum Mary at home in Cardiff

Bethan, three & mum Mary at home in Cardiff

Building Lasting Change Through Long-Term Development

Emergency response saves lives. Long-term programmes transform them.

While crisis work makes headlines, sustainable development work quietly changes millions of childhoods. We build schools and train teachers. We strengthen health systems and create child protection networks. We work with communities to create change that lasts.

This work takes years, not weeks. It's less dramatic but just as essential. 

What Building Futures Means

In Ethiopia: We're not just building schools – we're training teachers, engaging communities and ensuring girls stay in education beyond primary level.

In Bangladesh: We're not just treating sick children – we're training community health workers, improving nutrition systems and preventing disease before it starts.

In the Democratic Republic of Congo: We're not just protecting children from violence – we're changing the systems and attitudes that allow harm to happen. 

In 2024 the Save the Children movement delivered:

Development work doesn't create viral moments or trending hashtags. But it creates futures. 

Learn more: Where We Work | Education Programmes | Health & Nutrition | 2024 Annual Report  

Advocacy: Fighting for Children's Rights

Every Child Deserves a Voice

Sometimes the most powerful thing we can do is change the rules.

While we work directly with children every day, we also fight for the policies, laws and systems that shape every childhood. From online safety to refugee rights to tackling child poverty, we push governments and organisations to do better.

Because helping individual children is vital. But changing the systems that affect all children? That's how we create lasting impact. 

Our Advocacy in Action

Current campaigns:

  • Screen Safety: Protecting children from online harm and exploitation
  • Child Refugee Crisis: Ensuring safe passage, protection and asylum for displaced children
  • UK Child Poverty: Demanding systemic solutions including scrapping the two-child benefit cap
  • Climate Justice: Fighting for children's environmental rights and climate action

Campaign with us.

Our Youth Advisory Board – young people with lived experience of the issues we campaign on – shapes our work and holds us accountable. They're not just consulted. They lead. Find out more.

Recent wins:

  • Influenced policy on child refugee protection at government level
  • Secured commitments on child poverty reduction strategies
  • Put children's voices at the centre of decisions affecting them in 23 international forums

Learn more: Our Campaigns | Youth Advisory Board | Policy & Research | Get Involved | Parent Hub  

Why Your Monthly Gift Changes Everything

One-off gifts respond to crises. Regular gifts can prevent them.

When you give monthly, you're not just reacting to emergencies as they happen – you're funding the programmes that stop crises before they start.

Here's What £10 a Month Really Means

Over a year: Your £120 could provide school materials for four children for an entire year

Reliable planning: We can commit to multi-year education and health programmes knowing the funding is there

Rapid response: When disaster strikes, monthly gifts mean we already have resources mobilised and ready to deploy

Vital essentials: Your regular gift funds training, systems and infrastructure – the less exciting things that make everything else possible

The Collective Power of Monthly Givers

Our regular donors are the foundation of our work. In 2024, monthly givers collectively funded:

  • 156 schools across 18 countries
  • Training for 2,400 health workers
  • Long-term protection programmes for 18,000 children

Individual gifts add up to extraordinary impact. And unlike one-off donations tied to specific appeals, regular gifts give us the flexibility to respond where the need is greatest.

Learn more: Ways to Give | Regular Giving FAQ | Legacy Giving | Corporate Partnerships 

Sameer*, 6 Months, with Ali*, Save the Children staff, during baby kit distribution

Help Us Give a Life-Changing Gift

Every child deserves safety, education, protection and hope. Your donation delivers all four.

Choose How You'd Like to Help

Give Monthly – Reliable support that builds lasting change from just £5/month

Give Once – Respond to urgent needs right now

Give in Memory – Honour a loved one while helping children

Other Ways to Give – Payroll giving, legacy gifts, corporate partnerships 

Frequently Asked Questions

How much of my donation actually helps children?

 89p in every £1 donated goes directly to our programmes helping children. 
See our full financial breakdown. 

How quickly can Save the Children respond to emergencies?

 We can deliver aid within 72 hours of disaster striking, thanks to pre-positioned supplies and teams already on the ground in crisis-prone regions. 

Does Save the Children work in the UK as well as overseas?

 Yes. In 2024 we supported over 375,000 children and families in the UK through our child poverty programmes, while also working in 92 other countries worldwide. 

Why is monthly giving better than one-off donations?

Both are valuable, but monthly gifts allow us to plan long-term programmes, respond faster to emergencies, and fund essential work that doesn't make headlines but changes lives. 

Become a monthly giver.

Where does Save the Children have the biggest impact?

 We work across three pillars: emergency response in conflict and disaster zones, long-term development in education/health/protection, and advocacy to change policies affecting all children.