The State of Volunteering 2025: Trends & What to Expect in 2026
A data-backed breakdown of 2025 volunteering trends, participation rates, and insights to help organizations plan for 2026.

Explore key volunteering trends and statistics from 2025, plus data-backed insights to help schools, nonprofits, and community organizers plan for stronger engagement in 2026.
Quick Summary
• Volunteering saw a strong rebound in 2025, with formal participation rising to 28.3% and informal helping surpassing pre-pandemic levels¹.
• Short, flexible, and hybrid roles became the norm, driven by time scarcity and demand for convenience.
• Corporate and skills-based volunteering increased, with 77% of companies reporting higher employee engagement³.
• The value of volunteer time reached $34.79/hour, contributing an estimated $167.2 billion to the U.S. economy⁴.
• Clear roles, item limits, and automated reminders consistently improved volunteer turnout and reliability (SignUpGenius insights).
• 2026 will emphasize measurement, accessibility, and hybrid participation, especially during the International Year of Volunteers.
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Executive Summary
Volunteering in 2025 reflected both a remarkable rebound and a fundamental reset. After several years of disruption, Americans returned to service at scale: 75.7 million adults participated in formal volunteering, while 54.2% engaged in informal helping¹. These trends bring the country within reach of pre-pandemic levels, with some demographic groups exceeding earlier engagement rates.
Yet the rebound wasn’t uniform. While corporate volunteering surged and younger generations embraced flexible, skills-based roles, rural communities and lower-income regions continued to experience structural barriers. Meanwhile, the economic value of volunteer time rose to $34.79 per hour, contributing an estimated $167.2 billion in impact⁴. Globally, volunteerism played an even more expansive role, with 2.1 billion working-age adults volunteering monthly¹.
At the same time, volunteering evolved. Shorter commitments, hybrid opportunities, and task-based roles became the norm. Organizations that embraced clarity, flexibility, and streamlined coordination saw stronger participation and less volunteer fatigue. Tools that enabled simple, structured roles — with clear instructions and automated reminders — proved especially effective.
This report blends broad sector research with SignUpGenius platform insights, offering a hybrid view of how volunteering actually happened in 2025 and what organizers can expect heading into 2026. With the coming International Year of Volunteers, global measurement frameworks like GIVE, and rising demand for transparent impact storytelling, 2026 presents a rare opportunity to strengthen volunteer engagement and widen participation.
Key Data Points
• Formal U.S. volunteering reached 28.3% participation, rebounding sharply from 23.2% in 2021¹.
• Informal volunteering surpassed pre-pandemic levels at **54.2%**¹.
• Corporate volunteerism expanded, with 77% of companies reporting increased employee participation³.
• Virtual and hybrid volunteering stabilized at 57%, particularly among younger adults².
• The economic value of volunteer time climbed to $34.79 per hour, with significant state variation⁴.
• Demographic gains were strongest among Millennials, lower-income households, and ethnic groups historically underrepresented in formal volunteer statistics¹.
• The most effective volunteer programs offered clear roles, item limits, simple instructions, and automated reminders (SignUpGenius insights).
• Volunteers gave less time overall — an average of 70 hours per year, down from 96.5 hours in 2017⁶ — signaling a desire for efficiency and flexibility.
• Global measurement efforts, including the GIVE Index⁸, are reshaping how organizations capture and communicate impact.
Introduction: A Rebound, a Reset, and a Redefinition
The story of volunteering in 2025 is one of renewed energy tempered by evolving expectations. Organizations across sectors — schools, nonprofits, faith communities, sports leagues, and civic groups — reopened doors to volunteers, and people showed up. But not always in the same ways they once did.
The pandemic permanently changed how Americans think about time, flexibility, digital tools, and community involvement. As a result, volunteering today is more fluid, more distributed, and more hybrid than ever before.
This report examines the landscape through two lenses:
- Industry and global data from AmeriCorps, Independent Sector, UN Volunteers, corporate trend analyses, and international surveys.
- Behavioral insights from SignUpGenius, where millions of organizers and participants coordinate roles, responsibilities, donations, and events.
Together, these perspectives tell a story not only of recovery, but of transformation — one that organizations must understand to thrive in 2026.
Participation Rates: A Nuanced Recovery
Volunteering participation surged between 2021 and 2023, marking one of the most significant two-year increases since national tracking began.
Formal Volunteering Reaches 75.7 Million People
From September 2022 to September 2023:
• 28.3% of adults volunteered formally, up from 23.2% in 2021¹.
• This represents a 22.1% growth rate — an exceptional rebound.
• The recovery brought the U.S. within 1.7 percentage points of 2019 levels¹.
This dramatic uptick illustrates a renewed appetite for community connection, even as volunteer behavior shifts toward shorter, more flexible commitments.
Informal Helping Surpasses Pre-Pandemic Levels
Americans helping neighbors reached 54.2%, up from 51.7% in 2019¹.
Informal volunteering now outpaces formal volunteering by a wide margin.
This is significant because informal helping:
• Often precedes formal volunteering
• Reflects deep community trust
• Is more common among lower-income individuals
• Is a strong indicator of social cohesion
Globally, volunteerism is even more robust: 2.1 billion people volunteer monthly¹.
Demographic Patterns: Who Volunteered in 2025?
Volunteering in 2025 was characterized by demographic shifts that reveal both opportunities and ongoing challenges.
Generational Patterns
• Gen X remains the most active in formal volunteering (27.2%)¹.
• Baby Boomers lead informal helping (58.7%)¹.
• Millennials saw the strongest growth in formal volunteering between 2021 and 2023¹.
• Gen Z increasingly prefers episodic, skills-based, or remote roles².
Generational motivations also diverged:
| Generation | Primary Motivation | Preferred Format |
|---|---|---|
| Gen Z (approx. ages 18-26) | Skills building, flexibility, social impact | Virtual and hybrid roles, short project-based tasks |
| Millennials (approx. ages 27-42) | Community impact plus convenience | Task-based and episodic roles with clear outcomes |
| Gen X (approx. ages 43-58) | Reliability, family and school involvement | In-person roles connected to schools, sports, and community events |
| Baby Boomers (approx. ages 59-77) | Social connection and giving back | Recurring in-person roles and relationship-based volunteering |
Income and Education Trends
The most notable growth occurred among:
• Households earning under $25,000
• Individuals with less than a high school education
This suggests that flexible, low-barrier opportunities successfully expanded access.
Ethnic and Cultural Trends
Participation grew meaningfully among:
• Asian
• Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander
• Hispanic Americans¹
Organizations offering multi-lingual materials, culturally relevant event structures, and remote participation options saw stronger engagement.
Gender Differences
Women consistently volunteered at higher rates across all age groups, with volunteering peaking among women aged 65+¹.
Corporate Volunteerism and Skills-Based Engagement
Corporate volunteerism continued its upward trajectory as companies invested more in programs that improve employee retention, team culture, and community visibility.
Participation Expanded Across Companies
• 77% of companies reported increased volunteer participation in 2024³.
• Individual volunteer options rose from **26% to 37%**³.
• Skills-based volunteering increased, allowing employees to contribute expertise directly.
This shift reflects broader ESG and CSR trends prioritizing measurable outcomes and employee-led involvement.
Why Corporate Volunteerism Is Growing
Companies report:
• Higher employee satisfaction and retention
• Desire for alignment with organizational values
• Increased demand for flexible, asynchronous options
• A shift toward “done-in-a-day” events that require less time commitment
Organizations that make it easy for employees to join — especially through clear, structured roles — saw the strongest participation.
Economic Impact: The Rising Value of Volunteer Time
Volunteering is not just a social good — it’s an economic force. As the cost of labor increases and service organizations face staffing shortages, volunteer contributions carry tremendous financial weight.
$34.79 Per Hour: A New National Benchmark
Independent Sector’s 2025 report placed the average value of volunteer time at $34.79 per hour — a 3.9% increase from the previous year⁴. This continues a decade-long upward trend driven by wage growth and rising costs of employer-sponsored benefits.
Applying this valuation to the 4.99 billion hours volunteered in 2022–2023 yields an estimated $167.2 billion in economic impact⁴.
State-by-State Variation
The value of volunteer time varies significantly:
• Washington, D.C.: $52.06
• Massachusetts: $42.00
• Washington State: $41.70
• Mississippi: $27.01
States with higher wage baselines naturally carry higher volunteer valuations, which often correlate with stronger nonprofit infrastructure — but also with higher service delivery costs.
International Comparisons: A Case Study from Australia
The New South Wales State of Volunteering report offers helpful context:
• 1.3 billion volunteer hours contributed
• $205.3 billion in economic value
• Volunteers faced $4,200 in annual out-of-pocket expenses⁵
This highlights a global challenge:
Volunteers are contributing more value yet bearing rising personal costs.
Nonprofits in 2026 will need to be sensitive to this tension — especially in communities already facing economic constraints.
Trend Analysis: How Volunteering Evolved in 2025
Volunteering didn’t just rebound; it transformed. Five major trends shaped engagement last year.
1. Flexibility Became a Necessity, Not a Perk
The most defining shift was the preference for short, modular, episodic roles.
Volunteers gravitated toward:
• small commitments
• one-off roles
• 30–60 minute shifts
• roles that didn’t require recurring attendance
• projects that could be completed asynchronously
Platforms offering microvolunteering and “bite-sized” tasks saw accelerated engagement².
Why this matters for 2026
Organizations must break volunteer needs into small, clear segments.
Long shifts and open-ended commitments will see lower participation.
2. Hybrid and Virtual Volunteering Stabilized at 57%
Volunteering no longer happens only on-site.
In 2025:
• 57% of volunteer opportunities included a hybrid or virtual option².
• Virtual volunteering skewed younger: 60% of virtual volunteers were under 55².
• Virtual volunteers gave more hours (95 annually vs. 64 for in-person only)².
Why this matters for 2026
Hybrid approaches expand access — especially for younger adults, caregivers, rural populations, and people with disabilities.
3. Hybrid Giving Models Emerged as a Dominant Format
Rather than choosing between time and money, volunteers increasingly had both options.
Organizations blended:
• supply donations
• snack or item drop-offs
• time-based roles
• financial contributions
• meal trains
• ticketed events
• fundraising components
This approach increased inclusivity and filled roles more reliably.
Why this matters for 2026
Coordination platforms must seamlessly support:
roles + items + donations + tickets
…because that’s how real events run now.
4. Volunteer Time Declined, but Participation Increased
People volunteered more frequently… but for shorter periods.
Average volunteer hours dropped from:
• 96.5 hours in 2017
• to 70 hours in 2023⁶
Reasons include:
• time scarcity
• childcare challenges
• fragmented schedules
• increased workplace demands
• cost of living pressures
Why this matters for 2026
Organizations must stop equating “impact” with “long hours.”
Short, well-defined roles are the future.
5. Volunteer Recruitment Shifted to Digital and Mobile-First Channels
Nonprofits saw strong performance from:
• email (80% recruitment success)
• Instagram (53% growth in volunteer engagement)
• in-person community events (73%)⁶
Younger volunteers discovered opportunities via:
• social feeds
• micro-influencers
• mobile apps
• school or sports groups’ digital platforms
Why this matters for 2026
Recruitment isn’t one channel — it’s full funnel.
Organizations must meet volunteers where they already are.
SignUpGenius Insights: What We Observed in 2025
While industry trends tell one story, platform behavior reveals another — one grounded in the real decisions organizers and volunteers make every day.
Across millions of SignUpGenius sign ups in 2025, five consistent patterns emerged.
1. Clear Roles Outperformed Generic “Help Needed” Requests
Sign ups that included:
• role titles
• defined tasks
• specific time frames
• prep or arrival notes
…had significantly higher completion and lower day-of confusion.
“General volunteer” requests increasingly underperformed.
2. Item Limits Reduced Drop-Off and Improved Fair Distribution
Organizers who used item limits saw:
• more consistent participation
• fewer last-minute scrambles
• fewer duplicate sign ups
• better distribution of responsibilities
This matched broader trends in microvolunteering and hybrid giving.
3. Instructions + Reminders Were the Most Predictive of Show-Up Rates
Communication mattered.
Sign ups with:
• simple instructions
• pre-scheduled reminders
• day-before nudges
• “bring this / go here” guidance
…had measurably lower no-show rates.
Automation offset volunteer time scarcity.
4. Templates Became a Core Tool for Organizers
Templates saw major adoption in:
• school events
• sports seasons
• classroom parties
• potlucks
• fundraisers
• concession stands
• church service projects
Templates lowered cognitive load and made recurring events easier to execute.
5. Hybrid Sign Ups Became More Common
More organizers combined:
• volunteer roles
• supply items
• donations
• tickets
This reflects the trend toward blended participation options. It also indicates that volunteers appreciate structure and choice.
What This Means for Organizers: 2026 Guidance
2026 is a year of opportunity for organizations prepared to embrace clarity, flexibility, and measurable impact. Based on 2025 data and platform insights, here are the most actionable steps for coordinators.
1. Break Opportunities Into Smaller, Modular Roles
Shorter roles reduce friction. Examples:
• 20-minute station setup
• One-hour chaperone window
• 30-minute snack drop-off
• Virtual prep task
Clarity transforms participation.
2. Provide Simple, Direct Instructions
Volunteers perform better when they know:
• where to go
• what to bring
• how long it will take
• who to check in with
Don’t bury information — simplify it.
3. Offer Multiple Ways to Participate
Every major event should ideally include:
• time-based roles
• item donation slots
• hybrid and virtual tasks
• financial contribution options
More ways to help = more people helping.
4. Use Automation to Reduce No-Shows
Reminders are essential. Volunteers forget — not because they don’t care, but because modern life is crowded.
Send:
• a reminder several days prior
• a day-before reminder
• a day-of quick check-in note (when appropriate)
This reliably boosts participation.
5. Streamline Onboarding and Sign-Up Processes
Use lessons from the GIVE Index and global research to reduce friction:
• shorten forms
• avoid multiple steps
• eliminate unnecessary approvals
• highlight impact clearly
The easier it is to join, the more people will.
6. Plan for Visibility During the International Year of Volunteers (2026)
With increased policy attention and global campaigns planned for 2026, organizations can:
• showcase volunteer stories
• collect and report impact metrics
• build corporate partnerships
• strengthen recruitment pipelines
• leverage community pride
This is a rare year where volunteerism will have elevated cultural visibility.
Global Outlook: Measurement, Technology, and the Future of Volunteerism
As the UN prepares for the 2026 State of the World’s Volunteerism Report, the sector is shifting toward impact measurement and systemic understanding.
The Global Index of Volunteer Engagement (GIVE) introduces a multidimensional framework evaluating:
• individual impact
• community strengthening
• economic contribution
• enabling systems⁸
Meanwhile, digital tools will accelerate:
• role clarity
• skills-based matching
• streamlined onboarding
• automated reminders
• hybrid volunteer models
Organizations embracing technology and measurement will be positioned to thrive.
FAQ
Q: Has volunteering fully recovered from the pandemic?
A: Almost. Formal volunteering is close to 2019 levels, while informal helping has already surpassed pre-pandemic participation¹. Recovery varies by state and community, but nationwide trends show strong momentum.
Q: Why are volunteers giving fewer total hours now?
A: Time scarcity, childcare demands, work schedules, and higher living costs contribute to reduced hours. Volunteers still want to help — they just need shorter, clearer, task-based roles that fit their lives⁶.
Q: Are younger generations volunteering?
A: Yes. Millennials posted some of the strongest gains in 2025, and Gen Z is highly active in virtual, hybrid, and skills-based roles². They volunteer differently, not less.
Q: How is corporate volunteerism changing?
A: More companies are offering flexible and skills-based opportunities. In 2024, 77% of companies reported higher employee volunteer participation, driven by ESG priorities and employee well-being initiatives³.
Q: What motivates volunteers in 2025–2026?
A: Clear expectations, flexible commitments, social connection, and opportunities to contribute skills. Confusion or long-term commitments are major barriers to participation.
Q: Should organizations continue offering virtual opportunities?
A: Yes. Hybrid and virtual options attract younger volunteers, remote workers, and people with limited availability² — significantly widening your potential volunteer base.
Q: How do reminders impact attendance?
A: Reminders are one of the strongest predictors of volunteer follow-through. SignUpGenius insights show that day-before and week-before reminders dramatically reduce no-shows.
Q: How can organizations engage more diverse audiences?
A: Simplify onboarding, offer multilingual content, minimize required steps, and provide hybrid participation options that don’t require transportation or childcare.
Q: What is the biggest opportunity for nonprofits in 2026?
A: The International Year of Volunteers, which will boost public awareness, support storytelling, and strengthen corporate and community partnerships.
Q: What is the most impactful change organizers can make right now?
A: Break roles into smaller tasks and give clear instructions. All 2025 data — from national reports to platform insights — shows that shorter, clearly defined roles lead to higher volunteer participation and reliability.
Conclusion: A Year of Renewal and a Blueprint for 2026
Volunteering in 2025 was defined by resurgence, flexibility, and a reimagining of how people give their time. Participation rebounded sharply, especially among Millennials, lower-income households, and communities historically underrepresented in formal volunteering. The economic value of volunteer time continued to climb, reflecting both rising wages and the substantial contributions volunteers make to organizations nationwide.
At the same time, volunteer behavior fundamentally shifted. People want to help — but in ways that fit modern life. Shorter commitments, hybrid roles, and clear expectations enabled more people to participate without overwhelming their schedules. Organizations that embraced clarity, modular tasks, and automated communication saw stronger engagement and lower friction.
SignUpGenius insights reinforce this transformation:
• Defined roles outperform generic requests.
• Item limits improve reliability.
• Instructions + reminders drive attendance.
• Templates and hybrid sign ups make coordination easier and more inclusive.
Looking ahead, 2026 presents a unique opportunity. With the International Year of Volunteers elevating global attention, and the GIVE Index reframing how volunteerism is measured, organizations have a moment to showcase impact, strengthen systems, and expand engagement.
The path forward is clear:
make volunteering easier, clearer, more flexible, and more visible.
Communities are ready — they just need modern systems and simple ways to show up.
Make 2026 Your Best Year Ever
As you plan for 2026, now is the perfect time to refine how you coordinate volunteers.
¹ AmeriCorps & U.S. Census Bureau — “Civic Engagement and Volunteerism”
² Volunteer Engagement Trends 2025
³ Corporate Volunteer Participation Report 2024
⁴ Independent Sector — 2025 Value of Volunteer Time Report
⁵ NSW State of Volunteering Report 2025
⁶ Volunteer Engagement 2025: Latest Data on Volunteer Hours and Recruitment Channels
⁷ Economic Factors in U.S. Volunteerism Decline
⁸ United Nations Volunteers — State of the World’s Volunteerism Report 2026


