TimeBanks.org and the Global Roots of Time Banking
Updated May 2026 by TimeBank Ireland to improve clarity, remove old filler, and keep the article useful for members, volunteers, community groups and search visitors.
TimeBanks.org is part of the wider international story of time banking: a movement built around reciprocity, dignity and community connection. Its core message is close to the heart of TimeBank Ireland: give an hour, receive an hour, and let useful help circulate.
That global context matters because it reminds us that time banking is not a novelty. Communities in different countries have used time-based exchange to reduce isolation, share skills, support older people, help families and strengthen local resilience.
Reciprocity Is the Real Innovation
The most valuable idea in time banking is not the credit itself. It is reciprocity. People are not divided neatly into helpers and helped. Everyone has needs, and everyone has something to offer.
That shift changes the emotional tone of community support. Asking for help becomes less like receiving charity and more like participating in a shared network.
Why Local Adaptation Matters
International examples are useful, but every timebank has to fit its place. A dense city neighbourhood, a rural West Cork area and a national Irish network will all need different rhythms.
The common thread is trust. Members need to understand what is being exchanged, how hours are recorded and how to communicate safely and respectfully.
Where TimeBank Ireland Fits
TimeBank Ireland is part of that wider movement, but its work is local: helping people in Ireland turn goodwill into practical exchange, recognised contribution and stronger communities.
Comments (0)
View the full discussion
Sign in to read and join the discussion.