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The Save the Children Fund

Charity rating & review

85/100 Clarity Score · 4 stars · Charity Commission filings · How we score

Verified · Charity Commission data
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85 /100

Clarity score

Good

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Quick answer

Is The Save the Children Fund a good charity?

The Save the Children Fund scores 85/100 (4 stars, Good) on CharityCompare's Clarity Score, calculated from its Charity Commission filings. Its latest accounts year is 2024 (£305m total income, 87% of spending on charitable activities). This reflects financial transparency and stewardship on paper — not the real-world impact of its programmes. See the full breakdown.

London · UK-wide · EC1M 4AR Reg 213890 Registered charity Official website Charity Commission register

Mission

The Save the Children Fund is a registered charity (no. 213890) working in international aid across the United Kingdom. Its latest Charity Commission filing directs 87% of spending to charitable activities, holding roughly 2 months of reserves, and files its annual accounts on time. Reported income has been broadly stable over recent years. CharityCompare's Clarity Score rates the organisation only from public Charity Commission accounts — accountability, financial health, efficiency and community support — not the quality or impact of its programmes.

In short: THE SAVE THE CHILDREN FUND scores 85 out of 100 (4 stars). 87% average program spend (3-year average). Filings are up to date with no major concerns.

Overview

The Save the Children Fund has a Clarity Score of 85 out of 100 on CharityCompare (4 stars, Good). Charity Commission registration number 213890. Status: Registered. Primary cause area: International aid. Latest accounts year 2024: total income £305m, with 87% of expenditure on charitable activities. Accounts filing: up to date. Reserves: approximately 2 months of operating costs. No major red flags from our filing review. Scores are independent and based on official filings — not a donation recommendation.

Data from Charity Commission register, last updated .

Overall score

85/100

4★ · Good

Cause spend

87%

3-yr avg · charitable activities

Accountability

100/100

Finance beacon

Income

£305m

Latest year 2024

Reserves

2 mo

Months of running costs

Accounts filing

On time

Charity Commission

£8.2 raised per £1 fundraising (3-yr avg) · 13% overhead · Website on register · Confidence: high

How THE SAVE THE CHILDREN FUND compares

Clarity Score percentile against similar UK charities — the share of peers THE SAVE THE CHILDREN FUND scores higher than.

Income band (£10m+)76thpercentile

Scores higher than 76% of 943 charities in its income band · 85/100 vs 77 peer average (marker).

International aid charities78thpercentile

Scores higher than 78% of 618 charities in this cause · 85/100 vs 75 peer average (marker).

Data & confidence

Source
Charity Commission (E&W)
Accounts year
2024
Filing date
Profile reviewed

High confidence — complete filing data

Scores reflect the latest annual accounts on the register. Impact, leadership, and culture beacons require information beyond public filings.

Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. Sources: Charity Commission for England and Wales, Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator and Charity Commission for Northern Ireland. Open Government Licence v3.0 .

Beacon report

Detailed accountability and finance metrics from Charity Commission filings — structured for transparency in our four-beacon report.

Accountability & Transparency

Baseline trust from filing discipline, board oversight, and declared governance policies.

100/100

Accountability & Transparency metrics for THE SAVE THE CHILDREN FUND
Metric Score Value
Filing history (5 years)

100% on-time over five years = 15 pts · one late filing = 5 pts · two or more = 0 pts.

100% 15/15 pts
Trustee oversight

Three or more trustees on the register = 15 pts, scaled down for fewer (governance red flag below three).

100% 9 trustees · 15/15 pts
Declared policies

Safeguarding (4) · conflict of interest (3) · volunteer management (3) — from Charity Commission annual return.

100% 10/10 pts

Financial Health

Stability and solvency — reserves, revenue trend, and debt from Charity Commission accounts.

57/100

Financial Health metrics for THE SAVE THE CHILDREN FUND
Metric Score Value
Reserves (months of cash)

3–24 months = full marks, tapering on both sides · 0 months or 4+ years (hoarding) = 0 pts.

67% 2 months · 10/15 pts
Income stability / growth

+20% or more over the window = 10 pts · flat = 5 pts · −20% or worse = 0 pts, scaled between.

60% 6/10 pts · 3-year average
Liabilities to assets

0% liabilities-to-assets = 5 pts, scaling down to 0 pts at 60%+ debt.

20% 52% · 1/5 pts

Financial Efficiency

How efficiently funds reach the cause — program spend and fundraising cost ratios.

90/100

Financial Efficiency metrics for THE SAVE THE CHILDREN FUND
Metric Score Value
Program expense ratio

90%+ on charitable activities = full marks, scaling down to 0 pts at 50% or below.

90% 87% · 9/10 pts (3-year average)
Fundraising efficiency

≤10p to raise £1 = full marks, scaling down to 0 pts at 40p or above (fundraising cost ÷ income).

90% 12p per £1 income · 9/10 pts (3-year average)

Community Support

Grassroots backing from Charity Commission workforce data — volunteers vs paid staff.

100/100

Community Support metrics for THE SAVE THE CHILDREN FUND
Metric Score Value
Volunteer-to-staff ratio

Volunteers at 2x staff or more = full marks · no volunteers = 0 pts, scaled between.

100% 3,351 volunteers / 910 staff · 10/10 pts

How we calculate beacon scores →

Clarity Score

85/100 total · Good · 4 of 5 stars

Four pillars (40 + 30 + 20 + 10 points) from Charity Commission filings — see methodology for full weightings.

100/100
Accountability & Transparency
57/100
Financial Health
90/100
Financial Efficiency
100/100
Community Support

Accountability & Transparency

Baseline trust from filing discipline, board oversight, and declared governance policies.

100/100

Filing history (5 years)15/15 pts
Trustee oversight9 trustees · 15/15 pts
Declared policies10/10 pts

Financial Health

Stability and solvency — reserves, revenue trend, and debt from Charity Commission accounts.

57/100

Reserves (months of cash)2 months · 10/15 pts
Income stability / growth6/10 pts · 3-year average
Liabilities to assets52% · 1/5 pts

Financial Efficiency

How efficiently funds reach the cause — program spend and fundraising cost ratios.

90/100

Program expense ratio87% · 9/10 pts (3-year average)
Fundraising efficiency12p per £1 income · 9/10 pts (3-year average)

Community Support

Grassroots backing from Charity Commission workforce data — volunteers vs paid staff.

100/100

Volunteer-to-staff ratio3,351 volunteers / 910 staff · 10/10 pts

Revenue & expenses

Latest filed year 2024 · Source: Charity Commission annual accounts

THE SAVE THE CHILDREN FUND revenue and expenses for 2024
Category Amount % of spend
Total income £305m
Total expenditure £309m
Charitable activities £265m 86%
Fundraising £40m 13%
Governance & admin £957k 0%
86%On charitable activities

Where the money goes

Latest accounts (2024) · £309m spent

  • Charitable activities86%
  • Fundraising13%
  • Governance0%
  • Other spending1%

Trust indicators

Pulled from the Charity Commission register — filing behaviour, board size, and workforce where reported.

  • Accounts filed on time

    up to date · last filing

  • Trustee board size (3–12)

    9 trustees on the Charity Commission register

  • Workforce on register

    910 employees · 3,351 volunteers (4:1 volunteer-to-staff)

Fundraising Regulator

Status not yet checked

Separate from our financial scores — shows whether the charity follows the Code of Fundraising Practice.

Check Fundraising Regulator →

Official register

Reg 213890

Full trustee list, accounts, and regulatory history on the Charity Commission.

View on Charity Commission →

Trustees & officers

  • Kajal Odedra since 2019
  • Richard Thomas George WINTER since 2020
  • Dr Tsitsi Dadirai Chawatama-Kwambana Chair · since 2021
  • Catherine Ann Doran since 2022
  • TIMOTHY FALLOWFIELD since 2023
  • Jason Daniel Graeme Allen since 2024
  • Laura Catherine King since 2024
  • Stuart Russell McMinnies since 2025
  • Dr Tamsyn Sherlle Barton since 2025
How we score charities +

The Clarity Score is a 100-point rating from UK Charity Commission data. Four pillars — Accountability & Transparency (40), Financial Health (30), Financial Efficiency (20), and Community Support (10) — each scored on a continuous scale, not pass/fail cutoffs. A statutory inquiry sets the score to 0 automatically.

Full methodology →

Accountability & Transparency

Scored from filings

40 points — filing history (15), trustee oversight (15, scaling up to a board of three or more), declared policies (10).

Financial Health

Scored from filings

30 points — reserves (15, full marks 3–24 months, tapering on both sides), income stability (10), liabilities to assets (5, scaling down as debt rises).

Financial Efficiency

Scored from filings

20 points — program expense ratio and fundraising cost, each on a graduated scale (not a single cutoff). Kept at 20% of the total: financial-ratio scoring alone is not a reliable effectiveness signal (see "why not just an overhead ratio?" below).

Community Support

Scored from filings

10 points — volunteer-to-staff ratio from Charity Commission workforce data, scaling continuously up to a 2:1 ratio.

Overall score

Sum of all pillar points. Display stars map the 0–100 score onto a familiar 5★ scale (≈20 points per star): 90–100 → 5★, 70–89 → 4★, 50–69 → 3★, 30–49 → 2★, 1–29 → 1★.

Five-year trends

£0k £77300k £154600k £231900k £309200k 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 Income 2020: £288,730k Spending 2020: £283,161k Cause spend 2020: £252,118k Income 2021: £240,409k Spending 2021: £235,928k Cause spend 2021: £202,555k Income 2022: £294,356k Spending 2022: £286,371k Cause spend 2022: £251,455k Income 2023: £296,015k Spending 2023: £295,425k Cause spend 2023: £256,291k Income 2024: £304,834k Spending 2024: £308,811k Cause spend 2024: £265,104k
  • Income
  • Spending
  • Cause spend

Values in £ thousands · Cause spend plotted only when the filing discloses a split · Source: Charity Commission accounts

Key facts

Overall score
85/100 (4★)
Income
£305m
Cause spend
87% of expenditure
Reg number
213890
Scope
UK-wide
Reserves
2 months
Trustees
9
Accounts year
2024
Filing
up to date

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Frequently asked questions

Common questions about The Save the Children Fund's rating, finances, and Charity Commission status.

Is The Save the Children Fund a good charity? +

The Save the Children Fund scores 85 out of 100 (4 stars — Good) on CharityCompare's Clarity Score, our independent read of its Charity Commission filings. Around 87% of its spending goes to charitable activities and its accounts are up to date. That reflects how transparent and financially healthy it looks on paper — it does not measure the real-world impact of its work, so treat it as one factor alongside the cause you care about. CharityCompare never tells you where to donate.

Is The Save the Children Fund a legitimate charity? +

Yes — The Save the Children Fund is registered with the Charity Commission for England and Wales under registration number 213890. You can verify the entry on the official register: https://register-of-charities.charitycommission.gov.uk/en/charity-search/-/charity-details/213890

What is The Save the Children Fund's charity rating? +

The Save the Children Fund scores 85 out of 100 on CharityCompare (4 stars — Good). The Clarity Score V1 sums four pillars from Charity Commission filings: Accountability & Transparency (40 pts), Financial Health (30), Financial Efficiency (20), and Community Support (10).

How much of my donation reaches The Save the Children Fund? +

According to its 2024 Charity Commission filing, 87% of The Save the Children Fund's total spending went to charitable activities (3-yr avg across disclosed years). That is the closest official figure to "how much of your donation reaches the cause" — it is an average across all spending in the filing, not a pound-by-pound breakdown of an individual gift.

What are The Save the Children Fund's overheads? +

According to its 2024 Charity Commission filing, fundraising costs were about 12% of total expenditure and combined overheads (fundraising plus governance) were about 13% of total expenditure at The Save the Children Fund. The filings CharityCompare uses do not publish CEO or senior-staff pay, so we cannot say what The Save the Children Fund's chief executive is paid — where disclosure rules apply, senior pay appears in the trustees' annual report on the Charity Commission register.

How much income does The Save the Children Fund receive? +

The Save the Children Fund reported £305m total income in its 2024 accounts, based on Charity Commission filings. Five-year trend: stable.

Are The Save the Children Fund's accounts up to date? +

Filing status: up to date (last filing 2026-06-24). CharityCompare flags late or missing accounts separately from the financial score.

Where is The Save the Children Fund based? +

The Save the Children Fund is listed at London · UK-wide · EC1M 4AR and operates UK-wide, focused on international aid.

How does CharityCompare score The Save the Children Fund? +

We analyse Charity Commission annual accounts using three-year averages for program expense, fundraising efficiency, and overhead (disclosed years only); working capital from reserves vs average expenditure; liabilities-to-assets from the latest balance sheet when available. Impact, leadership, and culture beacons are not yet assessed from public data alone. See our methodology for weights and thresholds. CharityCompare is free for donors, takes no commission on donations, and scores cannot be bought.

How often is this page updated? +

This profile was last updated on 17 July 2026 from the latest Charity Commission data available to CharityCompare, and The Save the Children Fund's most recent accounts cover 2024. Scores and figures refresh whenever we re-ingest the register, so the page reflects our latest data pull rather than a one-off review.