JustGiving
JustGiving is a for-profit online fundraising platform founded in 2000 by Zarine Kharas and Anne-Marie Huby in London, United Kingdom, that enables individuals and organizations to create personal pages for soliciting donations directed to registered charities worldwide.[1][2] The company, acquired by U.S.-based software firm Blackbaud in 2017, operates primarily in the UK but supports fundraisers in over 160 countries, facilitating peer-to-peer giving through integrations with events, social media, and payment systems.[3][4] Over its 25-year history, JustGiving has processed billions in donations, achieving milestones such as surpassing £1 billion raised by 2012 and contributing more than £500 million to UK charities in 2024 alone, while powering campaigns for 25,700 charities and serving 22 million users as of 2025.[5][6] Despite these accomplishments, the platform has encountered significant criticism for its revenue model, including a now-discontinued 5% platform fee that generated tens of millions in the 2010s, reliance on donor "tips" averaging 15-17% that have fueled £30 million in annual profits and multimillion-pound dividends to Blackbaud, and accusations of misleading users about how funds reach charities.[7][8][9]
History
Founding and Early Development (2000–2010)
JustGiving was co-founded in 2000 by Zarine Kharas and Anne-Marie Huby in London, United Kingdom, initially operating under the name clickforaction.com before rebranding to JustGiving.com.[1] The platform's inception aimed to provide online tools and payment processing services to charities, enabling global donations and addressing the limitations of traditional fundraising methods at the dawn of widespread internet adoption.[10] The first donation processed supported Save the Rhino, underscoring the site's early focus on facilitating direct, digital contributions to specific causes.[5] In its formative years, JustGiving emphasized user-friendly fundraising pages for individuals, allowing personal campaigns tied to events like marathons or challenges, while integrating Gift Aid processing for UK donors to maximize charity receipts.[11] By 2003, the platform had facilitated £1 million in total donations, reflecting rapid uptake amid growing e-commerce confidence.[5] Cumulative fundraising reached £10 million by 2004, driven by partnerships with major UK charities and the platform's role in pioneering peer-to-peer online giving before social media amplification became standard.[5] Through the mid-2000s, JustGiving expanded its technological infrastructure to handle increasing transaction volumes, securing its position as the UK's leading online donation processor by the end of the decade.[12] Early innovations included automated tax reclaim features and basic analytics for fundraisers, which boosted efficiency and donor trust. By 2010, the platform demonstrated its scalability when a seven-year-old's campaign for Haiti earthquake relief raised over £210,000 within days, highlighting the power of viral personal appeals in the pre-social media dominant era.[13]Expansion and Technological Advancements (2011–2016)
JustGiving marked substantial growth during this period, achieving a cumulative £1 billion raised by 2012, reflecting increased adoption among fundraisers and donors.[5] The platform's international reach expanded, culminating in the 2016 acquisition of JustGive Inc., which bolstered its operations in the United States and contributed to handling over $4 billion in total donations worldwide by June 2016, including $2 billion in the prior two years.[14][15] Technological enhancements focused on mobile accessibility to capitalize on smartphone proliferation. In March 2013, JustGiving partnered with Vodafone to introduce JustTextGiving, allowing donations via SMS with a dedicated charity code, which drove a 26% rise in contributions shortly after launch.[16] Complementing this, the platform rolled out one-touch donations in May 2013 across mobile devices, tablets, and desktops, simplifying the process by reducing steps and eliminating repeated form entries, thereby boosting conversion rates.[17] The inaugural JustGiving Awards in 2011 celebrated top fundraisers, attracting around 500 nominations in its debut year and fostering community engagement that persisted through the period.[5] Viral campaigns exemplified the platform's efficacy; in 2014, the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge generated over £5.9 million for motor neurone disease research via JustGiving pages, highlighting how social media integration amplified fundraising potential.[2] These developments collectively enhanced user experience and scalability, positioning JustGiving as a leader in online charitable giving.Acquisition and Integration with Blackbaud (2017–2020)
Blackbaud, Inc., a U.S.-based provider of cloud software for nonprofits, announced on June 26, 2017, its agreement to acquire JustGiving for an aggregate purchase price of £95 million (approximately $123 million at the time).[18] The transaction involved Blackbaud's UK subsidiary purchasing all outstanding equity interests in Giving Limited, the entity operating as JustGiving.[19] This move was intended to bolster Blackbaud's peer-to-peer fundraising capabilities, integrating JustGiving's established crowdfunding platform—which had facilitated over £5 billion in donations since inception—with Blackbaud's existing tools like TeamRaiser and everydayhero.[20] The acquisition received regulatory approval and closed on October 2, 2017.[19] JustGiving's leadership and staff, numbering around 100 employees, transitioned into Blackbaud's London office, marking the initial phase of operational alignment while preserving JustGiving's brand and UK-focused operations.[18] Blackbaud emphasized that the deal would expand personal crowdfunding options (individuals fundraising for other individuals or causes) within its portfolio, positioning the combined entity to serve a broader global nonprofit market.[20] From late 2017 through 2020, integration efforts centered on cultural and administrative synergies rather than immediate technical overhauls, with JustGiving maintaining its core platform functionality.[21] Blackbaud reported enhanced cross-selling opportunities to its nonprofit clients, leveraging JustGiving's user base of millions for peer-to-peer campaigns.[19] By 2020, amid the COVID-19 pandemic, JustGiving processed record volumes, including supporting Captain Tom Moore's viral campaign that raised £38.9 million for the UK's National Health Service in early 2020, demonstrating the platform's resilience and scalability under Blackbaud's ownership.[22] Financially, JustGiving's profits reportedly more than doubled in subsequent years, attributed partly to operational efficiencies post-acquisition, though detailed breakdowns tied directly to integration were not publicly itemized during this timeframe.[23]Recent Milestones and Adaptations (2021–Present)
In 2021, JustGiving achieved a cumulative fundraising milestone of £5 billion donated to charities and causes worldwide, reflecting sustained growth amid the COVID-19 pandemic's shift toward virtual and individual challenges.[24] The platform adapted by launching the Virtual Fundraising Monitor 2021 report in December, which analyzed trends in online events and highlighted a surge in digital participation, with virtual races and streams enabling continued supporter engagement despite restrictions.[25] Subsequent years saw iterative feature enhancements to improve user experience and donation efficiency. Early 2021 updates included 21 personalized email variants for donors and streamlined streaming tools for live fundraisers.[26] [27] In August 2021, the Giving Checkout tool was expanded to offer three customizable donation button options for charity websites, facilitating direct integrations.[28] These adaptations emphasized accessibility, with ongoing security commitments like enhanced online protections.[28] From 2022 onward, JustGiving integrated with Blackbaud's ecosystem for broader capabilities, culminating in 2025 expansions such as cryptocurrency donations for U.S. nonprofits announced on February 12, enabling donors to contribute digital assets like Bitcoin.[29] In April 2025, features added contactless donation options via partnerships like Toucan Collect, allowing smartphones to serve as terminals, alongside refreshed page layouts and "fundraising heroes" boards to gamify supporter recognition.[30] [31] By October 2025, milestone badges for progress updates and Android mobile wallet integration were rolled out to boost real-time engagement.[32] The platform marked its 25th anniversary in 2025 with the "25 Years of Giving" report, documenting over £7 billion raised historically and emphasizing youth-driven donation growth, while event-specific data showed £200 million from fitness fundraisers in 2024 alone.[5] [33] [34] Annual JustGiving Awards continued, with the 2025 edition recognizing top fundraisers for campaigns involving ultramarathons and community drives, nominations closing in June.[35] These developments underscore adaptations to digital payments, event recovery, and data-informed personalization amid evolving donor behaviors.Platform Operations and Features
Core Fundraising Mechanisms
JustGiving enables fundraising primarily through the establishment of individualized or team-based online pages dedicated to specific charities, where participants detail their motivations, set fundraising targets, and incorporate personal narratives, images, and videos to solicit contributions.[36] [37] These pages support diverse activities, including participation in organized events such as marathons, personal challenges like skydives or hikes, and in-memory tributes, allowing users to align efforts with over thousands of registered charities on the platform.[37] Donors contribute via secure digital payment options, encompassing major credit and debit cards, digital wallets including Apple Pay and Google Pay, PayPal, direct debit for recurring gifts, and instant bank transfers powered by open banking protocols.[38] [39] [40] For donations from UK taxpayers, the platform facilitates the automatic reclamation of Gift Aid, effectively boosting eligible contributions by 25% through HM Revenue and Customs refunds processed on behalf of charities.[41] Funds are aggregated on the page in real-time, with progress tracked against targets, and donors receive receipts for tax purposes where applicable.[36] Promotion constitutes a foundational element, as fundraisers disseminate page links through social media platforms, personalized emails, text messages, and offline channels, often leveraging embedded sharing tools for streamlined outreach.[36] Team pages extend this by enabling groups to pool individual efforts under a collective goal, with centralized tracking of contributions and updates to foster collaborative momentum.[42] Upon collection, net proceeds—after platform and transaction fees—are disbursed directly to charities on a weekly schedule for UK-based entities, ensuring timely support without requiring manual intervention from fundraisers.[43] This automated transfer model underpins the platform's efficiency, having facilitated billions in donations since inception by minimizing administrative burdens.[44]Tools and User Experience Enhancements
JustGiving offers a suite of digital tools designed to streamline fundraising and improve usability for both fundraisers and donors. These enhancements focus on simplifying page creation, optimizing content for engagement, and integrating modern payment options to reduce friction in the donation process.[45] A key feature is the AI-powered Story Enhancer, launched in late 2023, which analyzes the tone of fundraising narratives—such as casual or formal—and suggests rewrites to make them more compelling. This tool has been reported to increase donation likelihood by 25% by helping users craft stronger stories without requiring advanced writing skills.[46][47][48] In April 2024, the platform introduced a redesigned fundraising page interface with a refreshed visual layout, improved administrative controls for page management, and accelerated loading times to enhance overall navigation and accessibility.[45] Mobile fundraising capabilities were also bolstered around July 2023, enabling easier on-the-go page updates and sharing via integrated social tools.[49] Further updates in January 2025 added support for cryptocurrency donations, expanded search functionalities for discovering campaigns, donor edit options for transaction details, and review systems for fundraising and team pages to foster trust and feedback loops.[50] Integrations with third-party platforms, such as GivePanel for social fundraising, were rolled out in the same period, allowing seamless data syncing and expanded reach without disrupting user workflows.[45] These tools collectively aim to minimize technical barriers, with empirical adjustments based on platform testing showing gains in donor conversion and user retention, though independent verification of long-term impacts remains limited to JustGiving's internal metrics.[51]Security and Compliance Measures
JustGiving maintains PCI DSS compliance through implementation of secure data storage standards and robust access controls, ensuring protection of payment information processed on the platform.[52] Payment card data is encrypted upon entry to the platform and stored in dedicated, secure hosting facilities.[53] This compliance framework proactively safeguards donor account details against unauthorized access.[53] The platform employs additional security protocols, including user-managed password confidentiality for account protection and cookies designed to prevent cross-site request forgery attacks.[54] [55] Charities accessing JustGiving accounts are required to uphold the security of provided passwords and PINs.[52] Donations are ring-fenced in segregated safeguarding accounts to isolate funds from operational risks, with transfers to beneficiaries occurring only after verification.[56] [57] In terms of regulatory compliance, JustGiving adheres to the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), enforced since May 25, 2018, for handling personal data of EU and UK users.[58] The company has self-certified under the EU-U.S. Data Privacy Framework, its UK extension, and the Swiss-U.S. Data Privacy Framework to facilitate compliant data transfers involving U.S. entities.[59] Privacy policies outline formal data governance programs and robust measures to protect user information, including explicit consent bases for processing where required.[60] No publicly reported major data breaches have affected the platform as of October 2025.Revenue Model and Fees
Current Fee Structure
JustGiving's fee structure distinguishes between personal fundraisers, direct charity campaigns, and regional variations, with no setup or platform fees for most UK-based personal fundraising activities. For donations via personal fundraising pages in the UK, card payment processing incurs a fee of 1.9% plus £0.30 per transaction, deducted before funds reach the charity; non-GBP transactions may attract 2.9% plus £0.30.[61] JustGiving also retains 5% of any reclaimed Gift Aid on eligible UK donations processed through the platform, though charities can opt out of this service.[61] Donors are prompted to make voluntary contributions to cover platform operating costs, which averaged around 1% of donations as of recent disclosures, ensuring that approximately 97% of the gross donation reaches the cause after mandatory fees.[61] Direct charity accounts on JustGiving offer tiered pricing plans without platform fees. The free "Start" plan includes online campaign tools and Gift Aid reclaim but charges the standard 1.9% plus £0.30 processing fee per donation, plus the optional 5% Gift Aid fee.[62] The "Grow" plan adds monthly subscriptions of £15 plus VAT for charities raising up to £15,000 annually or £39 plus VAT for higher volumes, providing enhanced reporting, customizations, and integrations while maintaining the same transaction fees.[62] There are no sign-up fees or long-term commitments for either plan.[62] Regional differences apply, particularly for non-UK operations. In the US, platform fees are 5% per donation unless processed via Donor-Advised Funds (DAF), which waive this; payment processing adds 2.9%, with donors optionally covering the platform portion.[61] Canada imposes a flat 5% platform fee alongside 2.598% plus $0.26 processing, while Australia, New Zealand, and Ireland generally feature 0% platform fees with varying processing rates (e.g., 0% in Australia/New Zealand).[61] These structures support JustGiving's revenue primarily through processing and Gift Aid shares rather than mandatory platform cuts on core UK activities.| Region | Platform Fee | Processing Fee | Gift Aid/Other Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| UK | 0% | 1.9% + £0.30 (card) | 5% on reclaimed Gift Aid (optional) |
| US | 0-5% | 2.9% | 0% via DAF; donor cover option |
| Canada | 5% | 2.598% + $0.26 | N/A |
| Australia/NZ | 0% | 0% | N/A |
| Ireland | 0% | 2.9% (or 1.9% + £0.30) | N/A |
Historical Changes and Justifications
JustGiving initially imposed a fixed 5% platform fee on all donations processed through its site, in addition to payment processing fees and a 5% fee on reclaimed Gift Aid, to cover operational costs including technology infrastructure, customer support, and marketing.[63] This model, transparent on fundraising pages, sustained the for-profit business since its early years but drew scrutiny for reducing net funds to charities, particularly during crises like the 2017 Grenfell Tower fire where fees applied to relief donations.[64][65] In April 2018, following two months of trials, JustGiving introduced Donation Boost, enabling donors to voluntarily cover the 5% platform fee at checkout, thereby passing the full donation amount to charities if opted in; this adjustment increased average charity receipts by approximately £1 per £20 donated under the new option.[66] The change aimed to balance business viability with donor preferences, as trial data indicated willingness among users to absorb fees to maximize charitable impact without mandating it.[66] By October 2018, JustGiving waived platform fees entirely for crowdfunding pages, disaster responses, and major incidents such as terrorism or natural catastrophes, responding to public and political pressure over deductions from urgent appeals.[67] This targeted exemption justified as prioritizing immediate aid delivery over revenue, amid criticisms that fixed fees hindered rapid response fundraising.[63] The most significant shift occurred in March 2019, when JustGiving eliminated the 5% platform fee for all UK charity donations, replacing it with optional donor contributions (suggested at 15-20% of donation value) to support platform maintenance; processing fees of 1.9% + £0.30 per transaction remained, but overall, charities received 100% of designated gifts absent voluntary tips.[68][69] Officials cited extensive donor testing showing high opt-in rates for contributions—ensuring more public money reached causes directly—alongside backlash from media investigations highlighting £190 million in prior fee-generated revenue as misaligned with charitable missions.[70][7] Post-Blackbaud acquisition in 2017, these reforms addressed compounded criticisms of profit extraction during tragedies, though the parent company's oversight emphasized sustainable voluntary funding to avoid donor deterrence.[65][68]Economic Impact on Users and Charities
JustGiving's fee structure for UK-based charitable donations deducts payment processing fees of 1.9% plus 30p per transaction, with platform fees eliminated for registered charities since 2019, resulting in approximately 97% of the gross donation amount transferred to charities after core deductions.[61][70] Gift Aid reclaims incur an additional 5% fee on the boosted amount, funded separately from donations, while charities face monthly subscriptions of £15 to £39 plus VAT for platform access.[61] These costs reduce net receipts for charities, though donors may voluntarily cover processing via suggested tips of 10-15%, which have supported the platform's shift from mandatory fees.[70] For individual fundraisers on personal pages, similar processing applies, with potential platform fees in non-UK contexts or crowdfunding at 2.9% plus 35p, marginally lowering personal net proceeds after payouts.[61] The platform's model has enabled substantial aggregate fundraising, with £550 million raised for nearly 20,000 charities in 2023 alone, suggesting that fee-induced efficiencies in donor reach and tools outweigh direct deductions for many users and organizations.[71] Event-based fundraising through JustGiving generated over £200 million in 2024, reflecting growth in participation despite economic pressures, as digital tools lower traditional administrative barriers compared to offline methods.[34] Historical analyses indicate charities using the platform achieved fundraising costs of 15-25p per £1 raised, implying high net efficiency relative to broader sector averages, though this predates recent fee adjustments.[72] Critics argue the structure extracts significant value from philanthropy, with JustGiving reporting £59 million in fee income and £31 million pre-tax profit in the 2023 financial year, alongside £25.8 million in dividends to parent company Blackbaud amid charity sector closures.[9][73] This profitability, derived primarily from donation-linked fees, has prompted scrutiny over whether it diminishes incentives for direct giving or subsidizes for-profit operations at charities' expense, particularly as tips became a revenue pivot post-2019.[8] For fundraisers, enhanced features like storytelling prompts—which boost donations by up to 65%—provide economic upside by amplifying totals before fees, though crowding-out effects from online campaigns may indirectly reduce giving elsewhere.[74][75] Overall, while fees impose a 2-5% leakage, the platform's scale has facilitated billions in cumulative transfers since inception, with net positive impacts inferred from sustained growth in user-driven giving volumes.[76]Corporate Structure
Ownership and Governance
JustGiving functions as a wholly owned subsidiary of Blackbaud, Inc., a publicly traded U.S. company (Nasdaq: BLKB) specializing in cloud software solutions for nonprofits, following Blackbaud's acquisition of all outstanding equity interests in Giving Limited (doing business as JustGiving) on October 3, 2017, for an aggregate purchase price of approximately $130 million.[19] The transaction was executed through Blackbaud's UK subsidiary, establishing full ownership control and integrating JustGiving's operations into Blackbaud's broader portfolio of fundraising and donor management technologies.[19] Prior to the acquisition, JustGiving was an independent UK-based entity founded in 2000 by Zarine Kharas and Anne-Marie Huby, with venture backing from investors including Downing Ventures and Saints Capital.[65][4] Governance of JustGiving aligns with Blackbaud's corporate framework as a subsidiary, where strategic oversight resides with Blackbaud's board of directors and executive leadership, subject to U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission reporting requirements and Nasdaq governance standards. Day-to-day management is handled by JustGiving's UK-based leadership team, which includes key executives such as Stacey Buckingham (chief executive officer), Camilla Church (chief financial officer), and Vidas Katinas (chief technology officer), reporting ultimately to Blackbaud's senior management.[77] This structure emphasizes operational autonomy in the UK market while ensuring alignment with Blackbaud's global compliance, risk management, and financial policies. In fiscal year 2024, JustGiving distributed a £25.8 million dividend to Blackbaud, reflecting profitability under this ownership model amid 9.7% revenue growth.[65] The JustGiving Foundation, a separate UK-registered charity (number 1098313) established to facilitate tax-efficient donations via the platform, operates under its own board of trustees, including Anthony Boor and Jon Olson, who also serve as directors for Companies Act purposes; this entity supports but does not control the commercial operations of Giving Limited.[78] Blackbaud's ownership has not altered JustGiving's core mission but has enabled expanded technological integrations, such as enhanced data analytics for nonprofits, under centralized governance.[79]Financial Performance
JustGiving, a subsidiary of Blackbaud since its £95 million acquisition in October 2017, has demonstrated steady revenue expansion driven by platform fees on donations.[80] For the year ended December 2017, annual revenue stood at £27 million, reflecting a 10% increase from the prior year.[81] By the year ended December 2021, revenue had grown to £47.4 million.[1] Revenue continued to rise, reaching approximately £53 million in 2022, with an operational profit of nearly £19 million.[82] In 2023, revenue increased 11% to £58.8 million, generating reported profits of around £30 million after £14.4 million in staff costs for 129 employees.[83] [9] This performance enabled a £24.5 million dividend payout to its U.S. parent company.[83] For the year ended December 2024, revenue grew 9.7% to £64.5 million from the prior year's £58.8 million, underscoring sustained demand for its fundraising services amid economic pressures on charitable giving.[65] The company distributed a £25.8 million dividend to Blackbaud, signaling robust cash generation and financial stability despite criticisms of high profit margins relative to its nonprofit mission.[65] [9]International Operations and Subsidiaries
JustGiving maintains its core operations in the United Kingdom, with headquarters located in London, England. Acquired by Blackbaud in October 2017 through the latter's UK subsidiary, the platform supports fundraising for charities in targeted international markets such as Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the United States, while accepting donations in multiple currencies including GBP, USD, CAD, AUD, and EUR from users worldwide.[19][84][85] Within the European Economic Area, particularly the Republic of Ireland, JustGiving operates via MyCharity Limited, a Blackbaud-affiliated entity registered in Dublin with its office at 70 Sir John Rogerson's Quay. This local entity handles service provision, compliance with regional regulations, and data processing for donors and charities in Ireland and Eurozone countries.[54][86] No additional subsidiaries or physical offices outside the UK and Ireland are documented in corporate disclosures or operational terms. The platform's international reach extends to over 22 million users across more than 160 countries, enabling aggregate fundraising exceeding $10 billion USD globally, though crowdfunding page creation remains limited to UK residents to align with local verification and regulatory requirements.[87][88] This structure leverages Blackbaud's broader multinational infrastructure for backend support without establishing further JustGiving-specific subsidiaries.[89]Notable Campaigns and Achievements
High-Profile Fundraisers
One of the most notable fundraisers on JustGiving was initiated by Captain Sir Tom Moore, a 99-year-old World War II veteran, who in April 2020 walked 100 laps of his garden—equivalent to 100 meters daily—to support NHS Charities Together amid the COVID-19 pandemic.[90] Starting with a modest goal of £1,000, the campaign rapidly escalated, surpassing £15 million by April 16, 2020, and closing on April 30, 2020, at £32,794,701 from over 1.5 million donors, setting a record for individual fundraising on the platform.[91] [90] This effort garnered widespread media attention and royal recognition, with Moore knighted by Queen Elizabeth II, highlighting JustGiving's role in amplifying personal challenges into national charitable movements.[92] Another high-profile campaign was launched by Stephen Sutton, a 15-year-old diagnosed with terminal colorectal cancer in 2010, who in 2013 began fundraising for the Teenage Cancer Trust to fulfill his "bucket list" of goals, including raising £10,000.[93] By the time of his death on May 14, 2014, the JustGiving page had exceeded £4 million, ultimately surpassing £5 million shortly thereafter through continued public support, and reaching £6,007,144.82 by May 2024 via over 180,000 donations.[94] [95] Sutton's positive outlook and viral social media presence inspired global participation, demonstrating how personal stories of resilience can drive sustained philanthropy on the platform.[96] JustGiving has also hosted appeals for major disasters, such as the 2017 Grenfell Tower fire, where a dedicated page raised over £1.6 million within days for victim support and recovery efforts coordinated with organizations like the Evening Standard Dispossessed Fund.[97] Similarly, in response to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, multiple JustGiving campaigns collectively amassed £55 million by mid-2023, underscoring the platform's capacity for rapid mobilization in geopolitical crises.[98] These examples illustrate JustGiving's facilitation of both individual heroism and collective crisis response, often amplified by media coverage and celebrity endorsements.Aggregate Impact Metrics
JustGiving has facilitated the raising of over £7 billion for charities and good causes worldwide since its inception in 2000, encompassing more than 227 million individual donations and supporting over 13 million fundraising efforts.[5] This cumulative total reflects contributions from diverse activities, including £1.9 billion from running-related campaigns, £725 million from walking, and £540 million from cycling.[5] The platform's impact is concentrated in the UK, where it has enabled donations to nearly every registered charity, though it operates internationally with varying scale.[5] Annual fundraising volumes have shown steady growth, with record highs in recent years despite economic pressures. In 2023, users raised £550 million for almost 20,000 UK charities through the platform.[99] This increased to £584 million in 2024, supported by over 1 million individual fundraising pages and 19,000 charity campaign pages, including £200 million from fitness events alone.[6] Key drivers included the London Marathon, which generated £44 million in 2024, and broader participation in virtual and in-person challenges.[6]| Metric | Value | Time Period | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total Funds Raised | £7 billion+ | 2000–2025 | JustGiving 25 Years Report[5] |
| Total Donations | 227 million+ | 2000–2025 | JustGiving 25 Years Report[5] |
| Fundraising Efforts | 13 million+ | 2000–2025 | JustGiving 25 Years Report[5] |
| 2024 UK Funds Raised | £584 million | 2024 | JustGiving Moments 2024[6] |
| 2023 UK Funds Raised | £550 million | 2023 | JustGiving Announcement[99] |
| Fitness Events (2024) | £200 million | 2024 | JustGiving Moments 2024[6] |
Controversies and Criticisms
Fee-Related Disputes
JustGiving has faced recurring criticism over its fee structures, particularly regarding the proportion of donations retained by the platform rather than reaching charities. Prior to 2019, the company imposed a mandatory 5% platform fee on all donations, which drew accusations of siphoning significant sums from charitable causes; for instance, in 2017, it was reported that JustGiving had collected over £20 million in such fees while paying senior staff salaries up to £200,000.[100] This model was abandoned in August 2019 following public backlash, including over high-profile campaigns like that of terminally ill teenager Stephen Sutton in 2014, where JustGiving refused to waive approximately £9,000 in fees from £180,000 raised despite media pressure.[101][102] Post-2019, JustGiving shifted to a voluntary "tip" system, prompting fresh disputes over its design and transparency. Donors are prompted to contribute 10-15% of their donation as an optional fee to support the platform, but critics argued this was misleading, as the prompts often implied the amount would aid the charity or Gift Aid processing rather than JustGiving's operations, leading to an estimated £20 million in fees extracted since the change.[103][104] In December 2019, The Times reported that the default opt-in structure effectively functioned as a "hidden" fee, with many users unaware they could adjust or decline it, exacerbating perceptions of exploitation during emotional fundraising moments.[103] High-profile cases amplified these concerns, such as the 2020 Captain Tom Moore fundraiser, which raised £38.9 million for the NHS; although the platform fee had been eliminated, scrutiny focused on whether JustGiving profited from processing or tips, prompting calls for disclosure that the company addressed by clarifying no direct cut from donations.[105] Similarly, in 2017, JustGiving faced media criticism for applying fees to pages for Westminster attack victims, refusing waivers amid fraud prevention concerns.[106] Recent financial disclosures have intensified debates over profit margins derived from these mechanisms. For the 2023 financial year, JustGiving reported £59 million in income primarily from donor tips and charity fees, yielding a pre-tax profit of over £31 million—a margin described by critics as "astonishing" given the charitable context—despite the absence of mandatory donation cuts.[107][108] In August 2023, The Telegraph highlighted record profits tied to the "misleading" tip scheme, noting that while users could opt out, the pre-selected high percentages often went unnoticed, raising questions about ethical design in a sector reliant on donor trust.[8] JustGiving has defended the model as sustainable for platform maintenance, but detractors, including in outlets like The Independent, contend it undermines the altruistic intent of crowdfunding by prioritizing corporate revenue.[107] No formal lawsuits over fees were identified in public records, with disputes manifesting primarily as media exposés and public campaigns rather than legal actions.[8]Fraud and Misuse Incidents
JustGiving has faced repeated attempts by fraudsters to exploit its platform for scams, including fake charity appeals and money laundering schemes. From early 2016 to September 2017, the company shut down nearly 100 fundraising pages deemed fraudulent after detecting patterns such as suspicious donation sources and rapid large transfers indicative of laundering illicit funds.[109][110] Criminals reportedly created bogus campaigns to receive "donations" from accomplices, then withdrew the money minus fees, effectively cleaning proceeds through the site's verification processes.[111] High-profile tragedies have amplified misuse risks, drawing opportunistic scammers. Following the Manchester Arena bombing on May 22, 2017, which killed 22 people, JustGiving suspended payouts from over 200 pages amid fears of fraud, as the Charity Commission alerted donors to con artists posing as legitimate fundraisers for victims.[112] Donations to verified pages exceeded £15 million, but unverified ones raised suspicions of fabricated stories exploiting public grief.[113] Similarly, after the March 2017 Westminster Bridge attack, fake pages appeared for purported victims, prompting fraud advisors to highlight red flags like poor grammar, stock images, and unverifiable beneficiary details.[114] Broader concerns over lax oversight surfaced in 2017, with reports of pages using plagiarized narratives or falsely claiming ties to organizations like the UK Firefighters Trust, leading to their removal after donor complaints.[113] These incidents fueled demands for regulation of crowdfunding sites, as platforms like JustGiving relied on self-reporting and basic checks rather than mandatory verification. In response, JustGiving enhanced monitoring, including manual reviews for high-risk campaigns, though critics noted persistent vulnerabilities in peer-to-peer fundraising models.[115] No large-scale fraud outbreaks have been publicly reported since 2017 in major outlets, but the platform maintains dedicated fraud detection teams to flag anomalies like mismatched donor IP addresses or unusual withdrawal patterns.[116] Isolated user reports of suspicious pages persist on forums, underscoring ongoing challenges despite improved safeguards.[117]Broader Ethical and Operational Concerns
JustGiving's for-profit model has drawn ethical scrutiny for potentially prioritizing revenue generation over the altruistic intent of donations, with critics arguing that platforms profiting substantially from charitable giving undermine public trust in philanthropy. In fiscal year 2023, the company reported £31 million in pre-tax profits on £59 million in revenue, largely derived from optional donor tips averaging 15-17%, prompting accusations of exploiting donor goodwill through psychologically manipulative prompts.[8][118] This structure has been likened to a "perverse incentive" in partnerships with charities, where revenue-sharing agreements may encourage perpetual fundraising campaigns regardless of organizational needs, potentially diverting focus from efficient aid delivery.[119] Operationally, JustGiving has faced persistent complaints regarding platform reliability and user support. User reviews on Trustpilot, aggregating over 7,000 submissions as of 2025, highlight frequent delays in fund withdrawals, inadequate communication from support teams, and unresolved technical glitches, contributing to an average rating of 3.0 out of 5.[120] Historical incidents include a 2009 website relaunch that led to performance failures severe enough for the company to deem it "unacceptable" and issue refunds to affected charities.[121] More recently, users report clunky interfaces and login difficulties compared to competitors, which can hinder fundraising efforts during critical periods.[122] Concerns over transparency extend to the platform's data practices and regulatory oversight. While JustGiving maintains detailed privacy policies compliant with GDPR, allowing users control over data usage, broader calls for regulating crowdfunding sites have arisen due to vulnerabilities in verifying fundraiser legitimacy beyond basic fraud checks, as evidenced by post-terror attack scrutiny in 2017.[59][113] Critics, including sector analysts, contend that insufficient independent auditing of aggregate impact metrics—such as the true net transfer to causes after all deductions—exacerbates donor skepticism, particularly given the platform's reliance on self-reported charity outcomes without mandatory third-party verification.[123] These issues underscore operational risks in scaling a high-volume donation processor handling billions annually, where lapses could amplify misuse or erode efficacy.[7]Reception and Broader Influence
Positive Assessments and Innovations
JustGiving has received positive feedback for its intuitive interface and straightforward setup process for fundraising pages, with users highlighting the platform's reliability in ensuring donations reach intended causes.[120] The service's mobile-optimized design facilitates on-the-go fundraising, contributing to its adoption for personal, creative, and charitable campaigns.[124] In 2023, social sharing integrations on the platform enabled charities to raise an additional £151 million through enhanced supporter engagement.[125] A key innovation is the August 2023 integration of generative AI, which automates the creation of persuasive fundraising stories in seconds, aiming to increase donation efficiency for users supporting diverse causes.[74] Complementing this, the Story Enhancer tool leverages advanced features to refine narratives, making campaigns more compelling and effective in capturing donor attention.[126] These developments build on JustGiving's foundational role in online charity crowdfunding, where it pioneered fee-free options for personal fundraisers while processing donations for over 46,000 UK charities across 25 years, cumulatively raising billions.[2][124] The annual JustGiving Awards further underscore positive impacts by honoring exceptional fundraisers; in 2024, winners collectively raised £16 million, with the event drawing over 18,000 nominations and 50,000 public votes to celebrate community-driven giving.[6][35] Such initiatives highlight the platform's role in fostering innovation and measurable charitable outcomes, including £584 million raised for UK causes in a recent year amid increased campaign activity.[6]Comparative Analysis with Competitors
JustGiving primarily competes with global platforms like GoFundMe, which dominates personal and cause-based crowdfunding, and nonprofit-focused alternatives such as Givebutter and Donorbox, which emphasize lower fees and integrated donor management tools.[127][128] In the UK charity sector, rivals include Enthuse and Raisely, which target event-based and peer-to-peer fundraising with varying fee structures.[129][130] JustGiving's ownership by Blackbaud since 2020 provides advantages in CRM integration for larger organizations, but it faces challenges from platforms offering more flexible, fee-minimal models that appeal to smaller nonprofits and individual fundraisers.[128] A key differentiator is fee structure, where JustGiving relies on voluntary donor tips alongside mandatory processing fees, potentially leading to higher effective costs compared to zero-platform-fee competitors. For UK donations, JustGiving charges 1.9% plus £0.20-£0.30 per transaction for card processing, with no mandatory platform fee but suggested tips averaging around 17% of donations in practice.[61][118] GoFundMe, by contrast, imposes no platform fee on charity campaigns, deducting only a 2.2% transaction fee plus $0.30 per donation for verified nonprofits, funding operations via optional tips.[131][132] Platforms like Givebutter and Donorbox add platform fees of 2-3.95% on top of processing, but offer free tiers or unlimited campaigns without JustGiving's event-specific integrations.[133]| Platform | Platform Fee | Transaction/Processing Fee | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| JustGiving | 0% (voluntary donor tip) | 1.9% + £0.20-£0.30 (UK cards) | Automatic Gift Aid for UK charities; tips fund operations.[61] |
| GoFundMe | 0% | 2.2% + $0.30 (nonprofits) | Global focus; tips optional; higher for international.[131] |
| Givebutter | 0% (free plan) to 2% | 2.9% + $0.30 (included in some plans) | All-in-one CRM; unlimited free events.[128] |
| Donorbox | 1.5-3.95% | Included in platform fee | Recurring donations emphasis; no setup costs.[133] |