HopeBridge Foundation partners with local communities to fund clean water, education and hunger-relief projects. Every dollar you give turns into direct, measurable impact — with full transparency.
Numbers we are proud of, and ones we are still working to grow. Every figure here represents a person, a family, a community.
Founded in Ontario in 2014, HopeBridge is a volunteer-led, donor-funded non-profit. 92¢ of every dollar you give goes directly to the field — and we publish where every penny goes.
Every donation is tracked and published. You always know exactly where your money went, who it helped and when.
We do not parachute in. Local leaders design the solutions — we just help fund and scale them.
Wells drilled, meals served, scholarships awarded — we report on outcomes, not activities.
Back a campaign today. 100% goes to the cause — we cover processing fees.
All donations go directly to our programs. HopeBridge is committed to transparent impact — we publish every dollar spent.
Wells, filtration systems and sanitation projects in water-insecure regions across East Africa.
Explore projectsScholarships, schools and learning resources for children who would otherwise never see a classroom.
Explore projectsCommunity kitchens, food banks and emergency meal programs in Canada and around the world.
Explore projectsMobile clinics, vaccinations and maternal-health programs in underserved rural communities.
Explore projectsReforestation, clean-energy micro-grids and climate-resilience programs led by local leaders.
Explore projectsSafe shelter, legal aid and resettlement services for families fleeing conflict and persecution.
Explore projectsWhether it is $5 or 5 hours, there is a way to help that fits your life. Here is how people get involved with HopeBridge.
Start givingGive once. Make an immediate impact on an active campaign of your choice.
Recurring donations from $10/month fund our steady, long-term programs year-round.
Designers, translators, event organizers — we need more than just dollars.
Match employee donations, sponsor a campaign, or host a workplace fundraiser.
The scholarship didn't just pay my fees — it told me someone, somewhere, believed in my future. I am now the first woman in my village to study engineering.
Before the well came, I walked three hours each day for water. Now my children go to school and I have opened a small vegetable garden. Everything changed.
I've volunteered with many charities, but HopeBridge is the first where I could see the receipts, the photos, the names. That kind of trust is priceless.