The Issue:
Food insecurity in Canada is reaching alarming levels. According to Statistics Canada, 16.9% of Canadians lived in food-insecure households in 2022, which marks a significant increase of 5.3% from 2018 to 2022. This positive correlation can be linked to the rising cost of living, housing insecurity, and the pandemic aftershock has left food banks overwhelmed and families vulnerable.
Food insecurity is not just linked to poverty, but also chronic stress, worsening health outcomes, and undermines children’s educational success. Food insecurity not only affects the body, but it also affects the future of the nation. But while this issue is complex, there are solutions already in motion. Charities nationwide are stepping up to provide immediate relief and long-term solutions through meals, food rescue programs, and nutrition education.
Second Harvest: Saving Food, Fueling Lives (secondharvest.ca)
Every year in Canada, we throw away over 58% of all food produced, which is almost 35 million tonnes that could have gone to feed hungry people, but instead end up in landfills, creating millions of tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions.
Second Harvest is the largest food rescue organization in Canada and a global thought leader on food recovery. Their mission is evident: no waste, no hunger. They are responsible for recovering surplus, unsold, or near-expired food from farms, grocery stores, and restaurants – food that is still perfectly safe and nutritious – and redirecting it to over 4600 frontline charities like shelters, food banks, after-school programs, and senior centres
The Stop Community Food Centre: Nourishment and Dignity (thestop.org)
Located in the west end of Toronto, The Stop Community Food Centre goes beyond just handing out food. They believe that it is a human right – and they fight for this right every day, through a combination of emergency food programs, education, advocacy, and community-building. The Stop offers daily drop-in meals, a low-barrier foodbank, community kitchens and urban gardens, perinatal support for expectant mothers, and civic engagement workshops focused on food justice. The Stop Community Food Centre has recently reported a 32% surge in food bank usage, with over 28,000 people served in the past year alone. However, the rising cost of food prices has strained their capacity.
What makes The Stop Community Food Centre unique is its holistic approach. It doesnt just feed hunger, but also feeds connection, confidence, and community, even targeting marginalized and stigmatized individuals who are most at need.
Moisson Montréal: The Largest Food Bank You’ve Never Heard Of (moissonmontreal.org)
In Québec, Moisson Montréal is a powerhouse in food redistribution. This incredible organization supplies food to over 300 community organizations across the greater Montreal area. They cover everything from shelters and soup kitchens to school lunch programs and senior residences. Each month, Moisson Montréal responds to nearly 1 million food aid requests. That number has surged dramatically since 2020, and it continues to rise.
Through strategic partnerships, including recent collaborations with Lufa Farms and IGA, Moisson Montréal has been able to increase its delivery of fresh produce and dairy, two of the most needed but least donated food categories.
Moisson Montréal’s model is efficient, collaborative, and trusted. Their reach touches every corner of the city, and your support can help them go even further.
Breakfast Club of Canada: Fueling Young Minds (breakfastclubcanada.org)
It’s a simple truth: kids can’t learn when they’re hungry.
Breakfast Club of Canada ensures that children across the country have access to a healthy meal before class starts, because starting the day with nourishment sets the tone for everything that follows. Today, they support over 3,500 school breakfast programs from coast to coast. Still, the need is greater than ever. Over 800,000 Canadian children go to school hungry, especially in rural, remote, and Indigenous communities. In response, the Government of Canada recently announced a $1 billion investment to support a national school food program, with Breakfast Club of Canada as a key partner.
Donations give kids the energy and focus they need to succeed, not just in class, but in life.
FoodShare Toronto: Food Justice in Action (foodshare.net)
In the heart of Canada’s largest city, FoodShare Toronto is addressing hunger not just through handouts, but through systems change. This innovative nonprofit operates on the belief that food is a fundamental human right—and that access to healthy, affordable, and culturally appropriate food should never depend on your income or postal code.
FoodShare works directly with communities across Toronto to deliver subsidized Good Food Boxes, support urban farms, and establish affordable produce markets in underserved areas. But their reach goes far beyond groceries. FoodShare is also at the forefront of anti-racism and equity work within the charitable sector, offering living wages, transparent pay structures, and community-led decision-making. Through food-growing programs, community kitchens, and food justice education, the organization empowers people to build long-term food security and resilience from the ground up.
A donation to FoodShare supports both immediate food access and deep, transformative change. Even $10 helps deliver fresh produce to a family for several days, while larger gifts help expand youth-led urban agriculture programs, cooking classes, and education initiatives. When you support FoodShare, you’re not just feeding a city—you’re helping to rebuild it, one neighbourhood at a time.
Community Food Centres Canada: Building Dignity Through Food (cfccanada.ca)
While many charities focus on providing food, Community Food Centres Canada (CFCC) focuses on what happens around the food—how it’s shared, who gets a seat at the table, and how communities can reclaim power through nourishment. Based in Toronto but working nationwide, CFCC supports a growing network of over 350 partner organizations, each offering welcoming spaces where people can cook, grow, share, and advocate for better food systems.
CFCC’s model is unique in that it blends food access with community development. Centres typically include shared meal programs, community gardens, cooking workshops, and peer support groups, all grounded in principles of dignity, respect, and inclusion. Whether it’s a newcomer learning to cook Canadian produce, a senior harvesting kale in a garden, or a single parent finding a safe space to speak up about poverty, CFCC helps foster belonging through food.
Donations help support these centres with the resources they need to keep meals flowing and community programs running. Even a small gift can fund a nutritious meal, a week’s worth of garden supplies, or help train an advocate with lived experience to push for policy reform. CFCC believes that food should not be a privilege, and with your support, it doesn’t have to be.
Where Do We Go From Here?
Fighting food insecurity is not just about responding to immediate need—it’s about building a future where hunger is no longer part of the Canadian experience. And that requires action on multiple fronts: community, government, and individual.
First, we must continue to give. Monthly donations—whether $10 or $100—help charities plan ahead and respond quickly to demand. Strategic, sustained giving supports everything from transportation logistics to food purchasing, volunteer training, and infrastructure maintenance. But financial support alone isn’t enough.
Second, we need to center dignity in our approach to food. The best charities don’t just fill bellies—they restore power, connection, and purpose. They ask people what they need instead of assuming, and they provide choice and respect in how food is shared. Supporting these organizations means supporting models of care that uplift the whole person.
Third, there’s a role for each of us beyond the wallet. Volunteering your time—whether that’s delivering food boxes, helping in a garden, or providing graphic design or fundraising support—makes a tangible impact. Many of the organizations featured here rely on skilled volunteers as much as on donations.
Fourth, we must educate ourselves and others. Hunger in Canada is not a fluke—it’s a result of policy decisions, wage stagnation, systemic racism, and colonial displacement. The more we talk about it, the more pressure we can place on leaders to make real changes. Share these stories. Start conversations. Normalize talking about food as a human right.
Finally, push for structural change. Food charity cannot replace fair wages, affordable housing, or universal school food programs. That’s why many of these organizations also advocate for policy reform. You can too. Write to your MP, sign petitions, vote for equitable policies, and support movements that fight poverty, Indigenous food sovereignty, and economic justice.
We all eat. And because food is so central to life, it can also be the foundation of change.
Final Thoughts
We’re living in a time of paradox. Canada is rich in farmland, resources, and food innovation—and yet millions of our neighbours are skipping meals, rationing groceries, or relying on food banks just to get by. The contrast is jarring, but it doesn’t have to be permanent.
Thanks to the relentless work of organizations like Second Harvest, The Stop, Moisson Montréal, Breakfast Club of Canada, FoodShare Toronto, and Community Food Centres Canada, we’re not just treating the symptoms of hunger—we’re reshaping the landscape. Every hot meal served, every crate of rescued food, every garden planted, and every child who starts the day nourished brings us closer to a more just and compassionate society.
And it all starts with care. With choosing to act rather than look away. With understanding that you don’t have to be wealthy or powerful to make a difference, you just have to be willing.
Your donation is not abstract. It is a full fridge. It is a classroom where kids can concentrate. It is a smiling elder at a cooking workshop. It is a garden blooming in the middle of concrete. It is a volunteer’s hands packing boxes on a cold morning.
In a world where so much feels uncertain, this much is true: you can be part of the solution.




















