Corporate Giving Isn't Shrinking. It's Concentrating.
By Catalin Serban in Blog
July 06, 2026 21:00
ACCP's 2026 Predictions Survey says nearly 80% of CSR budgets will hold or grow this year. The real story is underneath that number: fewer partners, larger grants, and a shortlist that is getting harder to make.
Every January, the Association of Corporate Citizenship Professionals asks its members, the people who actually run corporate giving inside major companies, what they expect from the year ahead. The 2026 edition, drawing on 159 corporate social impact professionals, opens with what looks like reassurance: 79% expect their CSR budgets to stay the same or grow.

Budgets holding in a year of political scrutiny, new tax rules, and CFO pressure is genuinely good news. But read one layer down and the survey is describing something more interesting than stability. It is describing a reallocation.
Same budgets, fewer checks
The number that matters is not the 79%. It is the 19%: nearly one in five companies plans to decrease the number of grants it makes while increasing the average size of each one. Another 12% anticipate shifting their focus areas entirely. And in the same research cycle, more than 40% of practitioners report restructuring their philanthropy around measurable outcomes rather than transactional, one-off gifts.

Put those together and the shape of 2026 comes into focus. The pool of corporate money is roughly the same size. The number of relationships it flows through is getting smaller. ACCP's own framing is blunt: companies are concentrating resources through larger grants to fewer nonprofit partners, in pursuit of clearer, measurable outcomes.
Companies aren't cutting. They're concentrating.
Stability is the baseline, not the story
For completeness, the budget picture itself: 62% of practitioners expect flat budgets, 17% expect increases, 21% expect decreases. In a year this politically and economically noisy, that is a strong stability signal, and ACCP reads it as commitment: respondents worry more about the reputational damage of walking back CSR commitments than about the cost of keeping them.

Don't just give back. Give Better.
Source: ACCP 2026 Predictions Survey (159 corporate social impact professionals, January 2026), with companion ACCP insights and Deloitte workforce research cited by ACCP.