Impact the Future Fund

Across Halma, our companies are united by a shared purpose: to grow a safer, cleaner, healthier future for everyone, every day. Impact the Future Fund brings that purpose to life by empowering our companies to support non-profit organisations making a meaningful difference in their local communities.

Launched in September 2025, Impact the Future Fund builds on Halma’s previous global charitable campaigns, Gift of Sight and Water for Life. This time, it reflects Halma’s decentralised model by giving companies ownership of the causes they support and that matter to their people.

The Fund is built around long-term partnerships, not one-off donations. Alongside grant funding, Halma companies are encouraged to contribute through employee volunteering, specialist skills, technology and local engagement, helping non-profit partners go further and create sustainable impact.

The Fund is administered in partnership with the Charities Aid Foundation, helping us identify high-impact opportunities, support responsible grant-making and measure progress over time.

How it works

  1. Companies nominate causes that matter locally
  2. Non-profits are screened and invited to apply
  3. An employee-led committee awards grants
  4. Companies and partners deliver projects together

Supporting safer, cleaner, healthier communities

In its first year, the Fund awarded 19 grants across six countries, supporting projects in health, community safety, environmental sustainability, inclusion and support for vulnerable groups.

In Florida, US, a grant helped a local non-profit purchase a vehicle to reach more people experiencing homelessness in rural communities. Colleagues also continue to support the organisation by providing clothing, meals and personal care items.

In Europe, funding is supporting an organisation providing animal- and nature-based therapeutic activities deliver a free 10-week equine-assisted psychotherapy programme for nearly 40 people facing challenges including special educational needs and disability, social isolation or medical conditions.

In the Philadelphia region of the US, a grant supported an annual eye health drive for 500 children. The screenings assessed eye health, alignment and colour vision. Of the children screened, 400 received refractive exams to determine prescriptions for corrective lenses, and many were fitted for glasses on the day. Physicians also identified 65 children with more serious eye conditions.

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