Volunteering Week, Time Credits and Stronger Community Recognition
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.
Volunteering Week is a valuable moment because it invites the public to notice work that often happens quietly. Volunteers do not only appear at big events. They keep clubs open, support neighbours, run community projects and make local life warmer.
The question for TimeBank Ireland is what happens after the applause. How can communities keep recognising volunteer hours once the campaign week is over?
Make Contribution Visible
Thank-you posts and certificates are good, but they are not the only tools available. Time credits can help record hours in a way that lets volunteers see their contribution as part of a wider community exchange.
This matters for retention. People are more likely to continue when they feel their time is noticed and respected.
Invite New People In
A national focus on volunteering can inspire people, but they still need clear local routes into action. Small, specific tasks are easier to say yes to than vague appeals for help.
TimeBank Ireland can help groups turn needs into simple requests and allow volunteers to contribute according to their availability.
Where TimeBank Ireland Fits
Volunteering Week should not be a once-a-year thank you. It should be a reminder to build better systems of recognition, reciprocity and support for the people who give their time.
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