
There are many types of “singles” charities..
Some example for single parents (especially single mothers) include:
Gingerbread (UK) — A leading charity providing advice, support, and campaigning for single-parent families.
Various U.S. organizations like Empowering Single Moms, Inc., Single Mom Strong, The Life of a Single Mom, and SPIN Foundation — These offer financial aid, childcare, education, and community for single mothers and their children.
Advocacy groups like Singles Equality (formerly Unmarried Equality) — Focus on fairness and rights for unmarried/single people, addressing discrimination in taxes, benefits, etc., but not direct financial charity.
Childless single adults rarely have dedicated charities. Discussions (e.g., on forums) highlight a gap, noting that resources prioritize families with children, leaving single adults without kids underserved in poverty or crisis support.
Singles Involved in Charity
A more common concept involves singles participating in or organizing charity work:
Groups like Singles for Charity — A volunteer organization where single adults come together to help nonprofits through community service, providing social opportunities while giving back.
Meetup groups and events labeled “singles charity events” — These combine volunteering, fundraising, or social activities for singles (e.g., charity mixers or volunteer days).
Broader singles ministries or social groups (often church-affiliated) — Frequently include charity components, like fundraising events or service projects.
In summary, while there isn’t a major, universal “singles charity” dedicated solely to helping all single/unmarried adults (regardless of parental status), the idea exists in niche forms—either as support for single parents or as volunteer/social groups for singles doing charitable work. The term frequently pops up in contexts like events combining dating/socializing with philanthropy.
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