Action Center

Ways to Get Involved

From raising awareness to starting fundraisers, from playing games to sending letters to Congress, there are many ways for you to help end world hunger.

Learn about Global Hunger

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Take the Quiz

How much do you know about the causes of global hunger? Let’s find out! The answers may surprise you.

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Get inspirational stories and bite-sized facts and news updates on fighting global hunger.

Take action to fight hunger

Write to Congress

Sign petitions and send emails to your representative in Congress to advocate for ending world hunger.

Raise Awareness on Social

Leverage your influence and raise awareness by reposting WFP’s content on social media.

Join Our Team

Find open positions where you can use your skills, experience and passion to help us fight hunger.

Help Raise money to help end hunger

Play Freerice

With the Freerice trivia game, 10 grains of rice are donated every time you answer a question correctly.

Share a Meal

Help send food every time you sit down to eat. Use your phone to “share your meal” with someone in need.

Start a Fundraiser

Empower your social network to fight hunger by creating a personal fundraiser on Facebook.

Photo: WFP/Michael Tewelde

Donate Today

Make a direct impact today by donating to send life-saving food to vulnerable people around the world.

Be Part of a Global Movement

There are 17 Sustainable Development Goals agreed upon by more than 190 member states of the United Nations, and there’s a reason Zero Hunger is at the top of the list: If people don’t have enough to eat, they won’t have the strength to reach the other goals.

Click on an icon to see how food fuels each goal.

Photo: WFP/Damilola Onafuwa

Goal 1: No Poverty

In 2019, WFP distributed over $2 billion dollars to nearly 28 million people so they could buy food and other basics necessities in their local markets. Cash has a magical multiplier effect: It helps strengthen local economies, encourages small entrepreneurs to start business, and – when it’s given to women – promotes gender equality.

How to Reach Zero Hunger

Step 1

Protect the Most Vulnerable

To realize the full potential of our global economy, governments must expand social protections for the most vulnerable people in it. These safety nets (think food stamps, Medicare and social security) are some of the best tools we have to promote equitable economic growth. Safety nets raise the purchasing power of the poorest people which in turn creates demand for products and services. Demand generates new jobs and jump-starts local economies. Investing in safety nets isn’t just the right thing to do; it makes good business sense.

Photo: WFP/Hussam Al Saleh

Step 2

Improve Rural Infrastructure

Access to affordable, nutritious food for everyone — all 8 billion of us — depends on making our supply chains more efficient and sustainable. We must innovate and invest in farm-to-market programs that connect the world’s small farmers to local economies. This means improving rural infrastructure like roads, bridges, irrigation systems, means of transportation, food storage and electrification. These improvements will ensure farmers can feed their families, reach consumers and earn an income.

Photo: WFP/Matteo Cosorich

Step 3

Reduce Food Waste & Loss

About one third of all the food we produce for human consumption each year is lost or wasted. This isn’t just a travesty for hungry people, it costs the global economy nearly $1 trillion annually. In high-income countries, food is often wasted at home. In low-income countries, it is lost before it even reaches the plate due to extreme weather, poor storage or because farmers cannot get their goods to market. If we could recover all the world’s lost and wasted food, we could feed every hunger person twice over.

Photo: Unsplash/Elevate

Step 4

Increase Biodiversity & Sustainability

Around the world today, just four crops (rice, wheat, corn and soy) represent 60% of all calories consumed. This overdependence on a few plants and animals for food is risky in numerous ways. In order to cope with the challenges of climate change, food availability and food access, we must help farmers grow a more diverse range of crops and livestock. That means teaching farmers new techniques, equipping them with modern tools, and educating communities about the nutritional importance of eating a wide range of foods.

Photo: Unsplash/Natalie Walters

Step 5

Prioritize Children & Nursing Mothers

Nothing is more important to the development of a child than good health and nutrition, particularly in the first 1000 days of life (from conception until the age of two). To prevent stunting and to promote healthy development, we must ensure that children and nursing mothers have access to the required nutritious foods.

Photo: WFP/Saikat Mojumder
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