A Global Day of Generosity, Equity, and Hope
Each year on 1/11, the world is invited to pause, reflect, and recommit to one simple but transformative idea: that a disciplined 1% can help change the destiny of the world's poorest 10%.
Givingtide Day is the ceremonial heartbeat of the Givingtide movement — the moment when institutions, nations, and individuals publicly align around a shared moral rhythm: generosity with structure, compassion with proportion, and solidarity with measurable intent.
Givingtide Day is envisioned as a worldwide civic and philanthropic observance. It invites institutions and individuals everywhere to begin the year with a public act of generosity — remembering the vulnerable, standing in solidarity with those still trapped in extreme poverty, and committing to measurable change.
This is not merely symbolic. It is an annual moment anchored in a simple conviction:
"Small commitments, when adopted collectively, can transform the trajectory of humanity."
Every institution that observes Givingtide Day becomes part of a growing chorus of organised generosity — a tide that lifts not merely those who give, but the world they share.
A commitment to dedicate at least 1% of one's core resource — whether national income, corporate revenue, foundation endowment, or personal wealth — to uplift the world's poorest 10%. This is the scale of commitment that gives the movement its substance and moral weight.
A commitment to direct at least 1% of philanthropic giving beyond one's own continent. This ensures that generosity crosses borders, expands moral imagination, and expresses a truly global ethic of shared humanity.
Each year, Givingtide gathers support around one flagship initiative of world-changing potential. For 2026, that project is the Institute of Preemptology — a platform for preventive health, scientific training, and life-saving systems innovation.
Givingtide Day is a living ceremony — observed by institutions across continents, each marking the occasion in ways that reflect their capacity and commitment.
Governments and public bodies declare new commitments to structured giving — lending the full weight of governance to the principle of organised generosity.
Foundations, corporations, and individuals formally announce their commitments — adding their voice to the growing tide of disciplined generosity.
Cross-border partnerships between aligned institutions are announced — bridging resources, expertise, and reach across nations and cultures.
New programmes supporting the world's poorest communities are launched — beginning their life under the light of collective intention and global witness.
At 1:11 PM local time, wherever they are in the world, participants are invited to enter a shared moment of stillness. In boardrooms and parliaments, in schools and hospitals, in places of worship and in homes — Givingtide Day calls people to pause together in a synchronised act of remembrance, solidarity, and resolve.
This ritual is universal and inclusive — simple enough to be observed anywhere, profound enough to be remembered everywhere.
Participants may wear Givingtide colours — Blue for Love and Green for Life.
A bell may be sounded at the start of each minute, where appropriate.
The atmosphere should be quiet, dignified, and deeply reflective.
We honour those who did not make it into this new year — those whose lives were cut short by preventable poverty, avoidable disease, exclusion, hunger, and systemic neglect. We remember them not as statistics, but as human lives of equal worth. We acknowledge that many of these losses were not inevitable.
We turn our attention to those still living in extreme poverty today. We refuse indifference. We stand — in spirit and in conscience — with families carrying impossible burdens, with children denied opportunity, and with communities still waiting for justice to arrive. Givingtide Day asks the world not merely to notice suffering, but to see it — and to respond.
We make a public commitment that by this time next year, suffering should be lower, dignity higher, and opportunity broader. This minute is not only reflection — it is decision. It is where compassion becomes commitment, where the generosity of the heart becomes the discipline of the hand.
January 11 sets the moral rhythm for the year. It invites the world to offer its first fruits not only in ambition, but in generosity. The date 1/11 mirrors the logic of the Givingtide framework and reinforces the discipline of proportion that defines the movement.
The chosen time — 1:11 PM local time — makes the observance globally accessible while preserving a shared symbolic identity across time zones. It is a moment that belongs to everyone, everywhere, simultaneously.
For 2026, Givingtide Day directs global attention toward the Institute of Preemptology — a bold initiative dedicated to preventive medicine, early detection of disease, and the training of physicians capable of identifying risk before illness becomes destiny.
The project represents the movement's conviction that generosity should not only relieve suffering, but help prevent it at scale. It is science in the service of solidarity.
Prevention before Destiny.
Explore the Institute of PreemptologyParticipation is open to every person, institution, and nation. There is no minimum threshold — only the discipline of beginning. Join the movement at whatever level reflects your capacity and conviction.
Publicly affirm your commitment to disciplined generosity by aligning with the Givingtide framework and dedicating 1% of your resources to the world's poorest 10%. This is the act of structured leadership that defines Givingtide membership.
Lead a 1:11 PM Givingtide pause in your workplace, institution, school, community, or place of worship. Register your observance and join thousands worldwide in a shared moment of reflection.
Help advance the Institute of Preemptology as a flagship expression of structured global generosity. Every contribution becomes part of the movement's shared moral record.
The tide rises when enough choose to lift it.
Will you help turn the tide on January 11?