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Healthy School Fundraising

In 2008, The Parents' Jury surveyed schools to find out their views on healthy fundraising. We also asked members to send us a list of their most successful healthy fundraising activities, as part of our campaign to encourage more schools to incorporate healthy fundraising.

For more tips on how you can campaign for change at your school, click here.

On this page:
Healthy Fundraising Activities

What Schools Think

Healthy Fundraising Activities

Some examples of common healthy fundraising activities are listed below:

  • Auction/sale of donated goods and services
  • Auction/sale of students' artwork
  • Car wash
  • Casual dress/dress up days
  • Entry fee from school play/concert
  • Gala/Ball
  • Hot Cross Buns/Christmas cakes
  • Mother's/Father's day stalls
  • Purchasing from a fundraising catalogue
  • Raffle
  • Selling home baked foods or healthy foods (ie fruit drive)
  • Selling home made goods and crafts
  • Sports event (ie, fun run, lapathon or similar)
  • Trash and treasure/car boot sale
  • School fete

Schools and parents can source discounted or donated goods and services from local traders to be sold or auctioned off for profit. The Parents' Jury members have contributed the following suggestions:

  • Apple slinky machines (makes spirals of apple) and apple slinky stall at school
  • Apples direct from grower
  • Children's stickers and labels
  • Children's toys
  • Craft project kits
  • Energy efficient light globes
  • ‘Entertainment' Books
  • Frozen fruit ice creams (mashed banana base and add other fruit)
  • Greeting cards printed with children's art work
  • Jobs around the house such as window washing, gardening, etc
  • Locally written books
  • Newspaper and magazine subscriptions
  • Personalized t-shirts
  • Printed tea towels with kids' drawings or photos
  • Punnets of seedlings or bulbs
  • Re-usable cloth shopping bags with school logo or children's own designs
  • Stationery items
  • Theatre and movie tickets
  • Toiletry products that can bought in bulk
  • Toothpaste/toothbrush

If you have a terrific fundraising idea you would like added to this list please email us at  This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

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What Schools Think

Key results:

  • 39% of the schools surveyed have held a confectionery fundraiser twice or more in the last 12 months. 31% have held only one, and 30% have not held any.
  • 71% of schools that held a confectionery fundraiser found them successful.
  • In response to Have staff or parents ever complained about the use of unhealthy fundraising methods at your school?:
  • 13% responded Yes, and the school now has a healthy fundraising policy, a further 33% responded No, but we would consider their concerns if they did.
  • 22% responded Yes, but we need to continue to fundraise this way, and 22% responded No, this is not seen as a problem at our school.
  • An encouraging 88% of schools surveyed have implemented their state or territory government's school nutrition guidelines or a similar health/nutrition policy of their own, however of these, only 14% choose not to hold confectionery fundraisers.
  • The two biggest barriers to implementing a healthy fundraising policy were that confectionery fundraisers are easy and profitable and using healthier alternatives alone cannot raise the money we need.
  • Schools rated the following as the most successful healthy fundraising alternatives:
    1. Casual dress/dress up days
    2. Raffles
    3. Mother's/Father's day stalls
    4. School fete
    5. Auction/sale of donated goods and services
  • 94% of respondents believe that schools have a responsibility to teach children about healthy food and lifestyles.

The results show that schools are aware of the need to provide a positive nutrition environment and educate students on healthy lifestyles, but they still find confectionery fundraisers easy and profitable, and they believe that using healthier alternatives alone will not raise the money they need.

But  you can make a difference, because the survey also shows that schools welcome parents' feedback and that many school haven't considered abolishing unhealthy fundraising because no one has complained about it so far. So use your voice and campaign for change.

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