Women-Led Philanthropy: How Women Are Reshaping Grantmaking

Women are a growing force in global philanthropy — as individual major donors, as leaders of foundations and giving circles, and as advocates for more equitable grantmaking practice. Research consistently shows that women give differently than men: more collaboratively, with greater attention to community needs, and with stronger focus on equity and social change. Understanding women-led philanthropy matters both for philanthropists seeking to engage more effectively and for nonprofits seeking to build relationships with women donors.

The evidence on women's giving

Women give more, relative to resources

Research shows that women give a larger proportion of their income to charity than men with equivalent resources. The Women's Philanthropy Institute at Indiana University has documented this across income levels, wealth bands, and demographic groups — the pattern is consistent.

Women give more collectively

Women are significantly more likely to participate in collective giving — giving circles, women's funds, community philanthropy — than men. Collective giving models, which pool resources for larger grants and engage donors in the grantmaking process, align with giving patterns and motivations common among women donors.

Women focus more on equity

Women philanthropists disproportionately fund organisations led by women and communities of colour, and are more likely to apply gender and equity lenses to their grantmaking. This isn't universal — but the aggregate pattern is consistent across research.

Women's funds and foundations

Women's funds

Women's funds are foundations specifically dedicated to funding women's rights, gender equity, and women's leadership. They exist at local, national, and global levels:

  • Global Fund for Women: international grantmaker for women's rights and gender justice
  • Ms. Foundation for Women: US-based women's rights funder
  • Sister Fund: US women's rights funder
  • International Women's Health Coalition: global women's health and rights
  • Women's Fund of New Zealand (Aotearoa): NZ-based women's fund
  • WINGS (Worldwide Initiatives for Grantmaker Support): global philanthropy infrastructure including gender

Women-focused community foundations

Many community foundations have established women's funds — donor advised funds aggregated toward women's issues — within their structures. Boston Women's Fund, New York Women's Foundation, and dozens of others operate as "in-house" women's funds within community foundations.

Giving circles

Women's giving circles are among the most distinctive and fastest-growing forms of collective philanthropy:

How giving circles work

Members pool resources — typically each contributing a set annual amount ($500-$5,000 is common) — and make collective grant decisions, often after extensive learning about community needs and site visits to potential grantees. The collective approach enables larger grants than individual members could make alone; the participatory process builds philanthropic knowledge and engagement.

Learning and community

Giving circles are explicitly educational as well as grantmaking. Members learn about the sector they're funding, visit grantee organisations, hear from community leaders, and develop philanthropic knowledge and networks. Many describe their giving circle as transformative — shifting from writing a cheque to active philanthropic engagement.

Prominent women's giving circles

  • Women Moving Millions: network of women who give $1M+ collectively
  • Women on the Move: JPMorgan Chase women's philanthropy initiative
  • Women's Giving Circle (various regional): hundreds of local women's giving circles
  • Funding Her Future: collective impact giving circle networks

Gender-lens grantmaking

What is gender-lens grantmaking?

Gender-lens grantmaking applies an explicit gender analysis to funding decisions — asking how grants affect women and girls, whether women have equal access to resources and decision-making, and whether funded organisations address gender-based barriers.

Gender lens doesn't mean only funding women's organisations — it means thinking about gender dynamics in all funding decisions. A gender lens in education funding asks: do girls have equal access to quality education? Does school design account for girls' safety? Are women teachers equitably represented?

Gender-lens investing

Gender-lens investing extends the analysis to investment portfolios: investing in companies with strong gender equity practices, women-owned businesses, or products and services that address women's specific needs. Many foundations have added gender-lens criteria to both their grantmaking and their endowment investment policies.

Women in foundation leadership

Growing leadership

Women now lead many of the world's major foundations — including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (Melinda French Gates), Ford Foundation (Darren Walker, but historically significant women leaders), MacArthur Foundation, and many others. Women are disproportionately represented in programme officer and grants management roles, though often underrepresented at CEO and board levels of major foundations.

The pipeline

The philanthropy sector's workforce is majority women at the programme level — but top leadership and trustee roles remain disproportionately male. Diversity and inclusion efforts within foundations are improving this, but the shift is slow.

Giving for gender equity in New Zealand and Australia

Women's organisations in NZ and AU

New Zealand and Australia have strong women's rights organisations — YWCA Aotearoa, Women's Refuge, Rape Crisis, WIRE (Women's Information and Referral Exchange), and many others — that need and benefit from gender-focused philanthropy.

Gaming trusts and gender

Gaming trusts in NZ and Australia are significant funders of women's sports, women's community organisations, and gender-based violence services. Some trusts have specific funding streams for women's organisations.

Philanthropic foundations

Several NZ and Australian foundations have explicit gender equity or women-focused funding priorities. The Tindall Foundation, Foundation North, and several others have made grants to women's rights and gender equity organisations.

Starting or joining a women's giving circle

If you want to start one

Identify 10-20 women with shared philanthropic interest. Decide on membership contribution levels, governance structure, and focus area. Many giving circles start informally and formalise over time. Philanthropy New Zealand and Philanthropy Australia have resources for starting giving circles; the Women's Philanthropy Institute has a comprehensive toolkit.

If you want to join one

Community foundations often host women's funds and giving circles — contact your local community foundation. Philanthropy New Zealand and Philanthropy Australia list giving circles in their directories.


Tahua's grants management platform supports women's funds, giving circles, and gender-lens grantmakers — with collective decision-making workflow, grant tracking, donor management, and the reporting tools that help women's philanthropic organisations work effectively together.

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