All you need to know about…

giving happiness global impact

10 Philanthropic Women Making History on International Women’s Day

Philanthropic women are making history by funding education, health, justice, mental health, climate action, and community opportunity in ways that change real lives. On International Women’s Day 2026, their stories remind us that giving is not only about wealth. It is also about courage, consistency, and using what you have to help others rise. 

What you will learn in this article:

  • Why philanthropic women matter so much right now
  • 10 women whose giving is shaping history in different ways
  • What their stories teach us about everyday giving
  • How to turn inspiration into one simple action today

Why are philanthropic women so important in 2026?

Because women are not only participating in philanthropy. They are reshaping it. Research from the Women’s Philanthropy Institute shows that women play a critical role in giving, and its 2025 Women and Girls Index found that support for women’s and girls’ organizations rose above 2 percent of overall U.S. charitable giving for the first time, translating to more than $11 billion annually. That still leaves a lot of room to grow, which is exactly why visible leadership matters. 

Also, many of today’s most influential women donors are changing how giving works. They are funding grassroots groups, trusting communities, supporting girls’ education, backing health access, and investing in long term social change instead of one time publicity moments. 

Which philanthropic women are making history right now?

1. MacKenzie Scott

MacKenzie Scott has changed modern philanthropy through speed, scale, and trust. Yield Giving says her network has directed more than $26 billion through 2,700 plus gifts, and recent reporting says she donated about $7.1 billion in 2025 alone. Her unrestricted giving model matters because nonprofits can use funds where they are needed most, instead of spending months proving themselves to donors. 

What stands out here is not only the amount. It is the posture. Scott’s giving says, “I trust you to know your community.”

2. Melinda French Gates

Melinda French Gates continues to focus on one of the most underfunded areas in philanthropy: women and girls. In 2024, she announced an additional $1 billion commitment through 2026 to advance women’s power and influence globally through Pivotal. She has also framed her work around barriers that keep women from health, opportunity, and decision making power. 

Her approach feels especially relevant for international women’s day 2026 because it reminds us that equality does not move forward on good intentions alone. It needs resources.

3. Dr. Ruth Gottesman

Dr. Ruth Gottesman made one of the most transformative education gifts in recent memory. In 2024, she gave $1 billion to Albert Einstein College of Medicine so students could attend tuition free. The school said current fourth year students would be reimbursed and future students would receive free tuition beginning that year. 

That gift does more than remove bills. It changes who gets to imagine a future in medicine. It also changes who patients will eventually see in exam rooms, hospitals, and underserved communities.

4. Dolly Parton

Dolly Parton’s philanthropy is deeply practical. Her Imagination Library has mailed an extraordinary number of free books to children. In February 2025, the program reported more than 270 million books gifted, with over 2,700 local program partners helping deliver early literacy support to families. 

There is something beautiful about that kind of giving. A book each month may look small. Yet over time, it builds language, confidence, routine, and possibility. That is what smart philanthropy does. It meets people early and helps them grow.

Child reading a free book at home inspired by women led philanthropy and early literacy giving

5. Rihanna

Rihanna’s Clara Lionel Foundation has become a serious force in community rooted giving. The foundation’s 2024 reporting says it supported 45 partners across nine countries, reaching more than 1.5 million people through work tied to climate solutions, women’s entrepreneurship, health equity, arts and culture, and education. AP also highlighted the foundation’s trust based, community led model. 

That matters because philanthropy is strongest when it listens before it acts. Rihanna’s model puts local leadership at the center.

6. Oprah Winfrey

Oprah Winfrey has spent decades tying philanthropy to education and leadership. Her foundation says the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy for Girls was built for students who have overcome poverty and trauma, and the Oprah Winfrey Charitable Foundation says she added $13 million to support scholarships at Morehouse College, bringing total grant support there to $25 million. 

Oprah’s giving has always carried a message bigger than celebrity. Open the door wider. Then hold it open for someone else.

7. Priscilla Chan

Priscilla Chan brings a pediatrician’s perspective to philanthropy. The Chan Zuckerberg Initiative says she leads efforts to advance biomedical research and technology, with a goal to help scientists cure, prevent, or manage disease by the end of this century. CZI also continues to work across science, education, and local community needs. 

Her example is powerful because it shows that philanthropy is not only about generosity. It is also about building systems that improve life over time.

8. Sara Blakely

Sara Blakely has built her philanthropy around helping women soar through education, entrepreneurship, and the arts. Her foundation states that mission clearly, and her earlier public giving included a $5 million effort to support women entrepreneurs with direct funding. Her Giving Pledge letter also points to years of supporting girls’ education and women’s advancement. 

This kind of giving matters because many women do not need someone to rescue them. They need funding, belief, and a real shot.

9. Selena Gomez

Selena Gomez has used her platform to build one of the most visible youth mental health philanthropy efforts in pop culture. The Rare Impact Fund says it is mobilizing $100 million for organizations that increase access to youth mental health services and education globally. Recent reporting says the fund has raised over $20 million and supports nonprofits across five continents. 

Mental health is often left out of traditional lists of “serious” giving. It should not be. Helping young people feel supported, seen, and safe is life changing work.

10. Laurene Powell Jobs

Laurene Powell Jobs has taken a broad, long view of philanthropy through Emerson Collective and education initiatives like XQ and College Track. Emerson describes its work as backing entrepreneurs and innovators who expand opportunity and human flourishing, while XQ says it was co founded by Powell Jobs to help rethink high school education. 

Her story is a reminder that philanthropy is not only about grants. It can also be about redesigning broken systems so more people have a real chance to thrive.

What do these philanthropic women teach us about giving?

First, giving does not have one look. Some women fund scholarships. Some fund health. Some back literacy, entrepreneurship, climate resilience, or mental health. Yet all of them use their influence to widen opportunity. 

Second, the best giving is often specific. A free tuition model. A monthly book. A grant for women entrepreneurs. A fund for youth mental health. A trusted gift to a grassroots nonprofit. Big change usually starts with a clear action. 

Third, giving creates ripple effects. That idea is not just inspiring. It is measurable. When people gain access to education, health support, safer communities, and real opportunity, the impact travels far beyond one person. That is also why giving and happiness are so often connected in both research and real life.

How can you honour international women’s day 2026 through giving?

You do not need a foundation to act like a giver. You can start much smaller, and still make it meaningful.

Try one of these today:

  • Donate to a local women’s shelter, girls’ education fund, or maternal health charity

  • Buy from a woman owned small business in your community

  • Mentor a younger woman entering your field

  • Sponsor books, school supplies, or transit support for a student

  • Share the story of a woman whose giving has changed your life

  • Write a thank you note to a woman who has lifted others quietly

Women volunteering together on international women’s day 2026 through everyday acts of giving

Why does this matter for all of us?

Because history is not only made in parliaments, boardrooms, or headlines. Sometimes it is made when a woman funds a scholarship. Sometimes it is made when a child receives a book. Sometimes it is made when a young person gets mental health support, or when a community group finally gets trusted funding.

That is why this list of philanthropic women matters. It is not just about celebrating success. It is about seeing what giving can do when it is brave, practical, and deeply human.

This International Women’s Day 2026, let these women inspire one give of your own. Then let that one give become a habit.

Turn Inspiration Into Action Today

Choose one woman centered cause and support it this week. Give money if you can. Give time if you cannot. Give encouragement, visibility, or practical help if that is what you have. Every act counts.

To make daily giving easier, try the Impact Tracker to record your acts of care and keep your momentum going. You can also use the Happy bot on the website to discover simple new ways to give each day. Then keep reading more inspiring articles for fresh ideas you can put into action right away. 

Women Who Create a Happier World- International Women’s Day

The Neuroscience of Giving: Why It’s a Prescription for a Good Life

+ posts

Sneha Iyer is a passionate Digital Marketing Professional, Content Writer, and Artist dedicated to inspiring positive change through her words. At 365give.ca, she shares uplifting stories, thoughtful insights, and practical tips to encourage small daily acts of kindness. With a love for lifestyle, creativity, and community impact, Sneha’s writing helps readers find joy in giving and meaning in the everyday. When she’s not writing, she’s exploring new ways to spark generosity or turning ordinary moments into something beautifully intentional.

What people are saying about 365give

“I wanted to express my gratitude for the teaching you provided today. Your message was delivered eloquently, compassionately, and without judgment. The kids were engaged, and now have knowledge with which they can change the world. We all appreciated how you took the time to help us learn to build positive mindsets and practice happiness.”
Shelley Gardner, Grade 6 Ridgeview Elementary (West Vancouver)
“Actions really do speak louder than words, which is why I believe the 365give Challenge has resonated throughout my community. Every give we do is so important to us and leaves us happier and appreciating our lives a little bit more than before.”
Mahina Niyozova (Tajikistan)
“After watching the 365give TEDx Talk, I was inspired to join and begin a daily giving program in India. Today, along with 12 other volunteer women, we provide 100 meals to local underprivileged children in Bangalore for school every day.”
Deepika Ahuja, Mom (Bangalore, India)
“My life has greater meaning now.”
Renate Jorge, @BeKindBrazil and 365give Member, Family Program (Brazil)
“I just wanted to share that 365give really helped me. I am a better person now, thank you.”
MayLee, 365give Member, Individual Program
“This 365give Challenge has really injected excitement and extra enthusiasm in each work day as I think about what we can do. It has motivated me and the students.”
Cristina Peters, School Counselor (New York City, USA)
“I have seen a huge shift in energy throughout my classroom since doing the 365give Challenge. The Challenge has empowered my students to make a positive difference in the school’s community and beyond.”
Cella Adriana, Special Needs Educator /The Holliswood School (New York City, USA)
“The 365give Challenge helps students understand their impact on others. It opens avenues for introducing and discussing global and local issues in classrooms. It is powerful to watch students of all ages think about how they can make a change in another person’s life with one small act.”
Jessica Hall, Primary Teacher, French Immersion at École Pauline Johnson (West Vancouver, Canada)