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AARP’s Commitment to Giving

HOW AARP IS FIGHTING FOR YOU

AARP Takes On Giving

Illustration showing 3 people pushing the side wall of a red house up in place

HELPING others has been part of AARP’s DNA from its very beginnings 65 years ago. Founder Ethel Percy Andrus’ motto, “To serve, not to be served,” is woven into the organization’s fabric. AARP’s giving takes many forms. There are cash grants to communities to help with local projects. AARP Foundation provides free legal services for those fighting age discrimination; it also runs the nation’s largest free tax preparation program. AARP has donated millions of dollars through the years to victims of natural disasters in the U.S. and overseas. Those are just a few examples.

Here are some details on AARP and AARP Foundation’s commitment to giving this year.

→ The AARP Community Challenge provides dozens of cash grants to fund projects that can help communities become more livable for people of all ages. In Cleveland, the Union Miles Development Corporation used its 2022 Community Challenge grant to repair homes owned by older adults in one of Cleveland’s most economically challenged neighborhoods. 

→ Wish of a Lifetime from AARP (WOL) helps older Americans like June, whose story WOL shared with her hometown Albemarle Symphony Orchestra in Virginia. That enabled her to fulfill her lifelong dream of playing piano in concert.

→ When older Washington, D.C., residents with low to moderate incomes need legal assistance, AARP’s Legal Counsel for the Elderly (LCE) champions their rights. When Mabel Henson, age 103, faced a 400 percent rent increase and eviction, LCE was able to convince the landlord to make major repairs, dismiss the rent hike and withdraw the eviction.

→ Through the annual AARP Purpose Prize award, each of five extraordinary people over 50 who are using their life experience to make a difference receive $50,000 to help them broaden the impact of the nonprofit organizations they’ve founded.

AARP’s members embrace this same giving ethos. Nearly 2 million AARP members gave $46.1 million in 2023 to back AARP Foundation’s efforts to end senior poverty. This generosity enabled AARP to help seniors find jobs, secure tax refunds and benefits they earned, and defend their rights in court.

Since its founding in 1958, AARP has built a legacy of giving. But it’s those who volunteer their time and resources through AARP who make much of that giving possible. —Claire Casey, President, AARP Foundation


AARP BOARD OF DIRECTORS Board Chair Lloyd E. Johnson, First Vice Chair Beth Ellard, Second Vice Chair Robert Blancato, Governance Committee Chair Margot James Copeland, Joseph F. Coughlin, Jeffrey D. Dunn, Jo Ann Jenkins, Rosanna A. Márquez, Alan Murray, Julio Portalatin, Marie Quintero-Johnson, Libby Sartain, David Windley

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