16th April 2026
What is the Know Your Neighbourhood Fund?
Between January 2023 and March 2025, the Know Your Neighbourhood (KYN) Fund invested up to £30 million to widen participation in volunteering and tackle loneliness in 27 disadvantaged areas across England.

Between January 2023 March 2025, UK Community Foundations (UKCF) managed £15 million of funding, delivered through nine participating community foundations.
Originally scheduled to end in March 2025, in April 2025 the KYN Fund was extended to run until March 2026, with up to an additional £4.5 million of funding, of which UK Community Foundations managed £2.3 million.
Between January 2023 and March 2026, nine community foundations distributed a total of 190 grants between January 2023 and March 2026 to local community-led projects supporting volunteering, social connection and community cohesion.
The programme engaged a total of 144,632 participants across its funding streams.
Local delivery through Cumbria Community Foundation

As part of this national partnership, Cumbria Community Foundation distributed £1,716,000 in grant funding to support community‑led activity in Barrow‑in‑Furness, with a strong focus on volunteering, connection and community participation.
This included the Furness for You project, led by Groundwork, and Cumbria Wildlife Trust’s The Bay project. Furness for You is a place‑based programme designed to strengthen community connections, support local people to get involved in shaping activity in their neighbourhoods, and enable voluntary and community organisations to work together to respond to local priorities.
Delivery partners include Age UK South Cumbria, Brathay Trust, Barrow Leisure Centre, Barrow & District Disability Association, Cumbria CVS, Furness Multicultural Forum, the Poverty Truth Commission, Stitch Ability and Women’s Community Matters.
Independent report shares learning from successful approaches
A key focus of the KYN Fund has been to generate and share learning on how people in disadvantaged areas can be supported to volunteer and improve their social connections, which will help to support sustained action beyond the lifetime of the fund.
This independent report explores evaluation findings from KYN Fund delivery between January 2023 and March 2025.
It found that the KYN Fund successfully engaged people new to volunteering. Over half of volunteers (52%) reported they were volunteering for the first time through KYN‑funded activity.
Disabled people and those with long‑term health conditions were strongly represented. Nearly half of participants (48%) reported a long‑term disability or health condition, compared to 18% nationally.
The evaluation also found that the KYN Fund created conditions that supported participation by people at higher risk of chronic loneliness. ‘14% of participants reported feeling lonely often or always, compared to 7% nationally.’
At the same time, the evaluation highlights limits in how loneliness can be measured, noting that ‘there are recognised limitations in measuring loneliness which mean it can be challenging to capture impact in this area.’
Learning from the programme points to the importance of flexible, sustained funding approaches when working with communities experiencing chronic loneliness. The evaluation highlights the value of flexible delivery, sufficient setup time and multi‑year approaches to building trust and engagement.
The evaluation also identifies the role of place‑based delivery and local partnerships in supporting engagement and positive local outcomes. Local knowledge, trusted relationships and partnerships supported participation and were associated with improved feelings of belonging and neighbourhood connection. ‘Local partnerships, trusted relationships and community‑based assets were central to engaging participants.’
The report offers recommendations around recruitment and community engagement, project delivery and collaboration and evaluation approaches, which can be found online here.
Reports supported by UKCF throughout the KYN Fund can be found online here.
