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https://www.effectivealtruism.org/
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Title:Effective Altruism | Find the best ways to help others
Description:Effective altruism is a philosophy and a movement that asks the question: how can we do the most good with our time, money, and resources?
HTML Size:430 KB
Markdown Size:12 KB
Fetched At:November 18, 2025

Page Structure

h1Turning good intentions into greater impact
h6Meet people applying effective altruism to do more good with their time, money, and resources.
h2What is effective altruism?
h3A philosophy
h3A movement
h3Get more ideas on how to make a difference
h2Effective altruism in action
h6“I found other people who deeply cared about making a positive difference in the world, and really wanted to use all the tools that they could to find the best opportunities to do that.”
h6I found other people who deeply cared about making a positive difference in the world, and really wanted to use all the tools that they could to find the best opportunities to do that.
h6“Seeing the intellectual humility of people really trying to interrogate whether or not they are in fact doing the right thing — that wasn't something I had encountered in any workplace or community t
h6Seeing the intellectual humility of people really trying to interrogate whether or not they are in fact doing the right thing — that wasn't something I had encountered in any workplace or community to
h6“We're often the first organization to enter these overlooked spaces, trying not only to solve immediate problems but also to marshal interest into issues most people haven't considered.”
h6We're often the first organization to enter these overlooked spaces, trying not only to solve immediate problems but also to marshal interest into issues most people haven't considered.
h6“Before I discovered EA, I was wrestling with a common question: how can I use my time and my career in a way that's actually useful for the world?”
h6Before I discovered EA, I was wrestling with a common question: how can I use my time and my career in a way that's actually useful for the world?
h6“Two principles really resonated with me: taking seriously the interests of people and animals geographically distant from you, and approaching charity as a quest to have the greatest impact possible.
h6Two principles really resonated with me: taking seriously the interests of people and animals geographically distant from you, and approaching charity as a quest to have the greatest impact possible.
h6“The financial sacrifice of moving from a job in finance to the animal NGO space was a challenge, but the promise of meaning outweighed the costs for me.”
h6The financial sacrifice of moving from a job in finance to the animal NGO space was a challenge, but the promise of meaning outweighed the costs for me.
h6“We can be more than we often make ourselves out to be, especially morally speaking. We can do more, we can be more.”
h6We can be more than we often make ourselves out to be, especially morally speaking. We can do more, we can be more.
h6“To me, effective altruism means thinking deeply and putting care into using our resources — thoughtfully and impartially to best improve the lives of others.”
h6To me, effective altruism means thinking deeply and putting care into using our resources — thoughtfully and impartially to best improve the lives of others.
h6“One of the best skills EA has given me is the ability to prioritize. I don't know if all philosophy students are prone to analysis paralysis, but that was certainly the case for me.”
h6One of the best skills EA has given me is the ability to prioritize. I don't know if all philosophy students are prone to analysis paralysis, but that was certainly the case for me.
h6“Hearing that your dollar could go 100 times further overseas really struck me. Of course, if I could help a hundred times more people, I wanted to do that.”
h6Hearing that your dollar could go 100 times further overseas really struck me. Of course, if I could help a hundred times more people, I wanted to do that.
h6“These ideas, along with other influences, helped me identify farmed animal welfare, wild animal welfare, invertebrate welfare, and AI welfare as areas of focus.”
h6These ideas, along with other influences, helped me identify farmed animal welfare, wild animal welfare, invertebrate welfare, and AI welfare as areas of focus.
h6“I studied arts management with dreams of organizing festivals and concerts, but when I actually tried it, I realized it didn't give me a sense of purpose.”
h6I studied arts management with dreams of organizing festivals and concerts, but when I actually tried it, I realized it didn't give me a sense of purpose.
h6“I was really unsure how my life was going to unfold, but I knew that I wanted to make a difference and live a life in service to others.”
h6I was really unsure how my life was going to unfold, but I knew that I wanted to make a difference and live a life in service to others.
h6“I value the combination of moral seriousness, scope sensitivity, and being agentic that effective altruism inspires. There's something powerful about really taking suffering seriously and then actual
h6I value the combination of moral seriousness, scope sensitivity, and being agentic that effective altruism inspires. There's something powerful about really taking suffering seriously and then actuall
h2What the community has achieved
h6Global health and economic development
h5Protected hundreds of millions of people against malaria through the distribution of insecticide-treated nets
h5Built mobile financial solutions for millions of users across Africa
h5Advocated for human challenge trials to understand COVID-19
h5Implemented regulations that are projected to prevent lead exposure in tens of millions of children by 2100
h5Supported the delivery over $800 million in cash transfers to over 1.6 million people in need in 12 countries
h6Animal welfare
h5Freed hundreds of millions of hens from painful battery cages
h5Helped secure regulatory clearance for cultivated meat in the United States
h5Established a new legal framework for animal advocates to challenge animal cruelty in court
h5Secured commitments from top companies to adopt higher animal welfare policies
h6Existential risk and the long-term future
h5Researched the implications of superintelligent AI for humanity's future
h5Pioneered advances in the field of mechanistic interpretability

Markdown Content

Effective Altruism | Find the best ways to help others

Learn

Intro essay

Videos, books, podcasts

Online intro course

Community stories

EA Newsletter

EA Handbook

EA Forum

Take action

Courses

Conferences

Opportunities board

FAQs

Learn

Intro essay

Videos, books, podcasts

Online intro course

Community stories

EA Newsletter

EA Handbook

EA Forum

Take action

Courses

Conferences

Opportunities board

FAQs

# Turning good intentions into greater impact
###### Meet people applying effective altruism to do more good with their time, money, and resources.

Learn more

Take action

## What is effective altruism?

* * *

### A philosophy

Using reason and evidence to find the most effective ways to help others. Read more in this essay.

### A movement

A global network of people and organizations putting the ideas into practice.

As featured in

### Get more ideas on how to make a difference

Sign up for the Effective Altruism Newsletter, a monthly email with the latest ideas, updates, and opportunities to make a difference.

Subscribe

60k\+ subscribers, 39 subscribed today. Read past editions

## Effective altruism in action

From global health to existential risk: see how people apply effective altruism across diverse fields

Watch

###### “

###### I found other people who deeply cared about making a positive difference in the world, and really wanted to use all the tools that they could to find the best opportunities to do that.

”

* * *

Julia Wise

Social worker turned community health lead

Watch

###### “

###### Seeing the intellectual humility of people really trying to interrogate whether or not they are in fact doing the right thing — that wasn't something I had encountered in any workplace or community to this extent before.

”

* * *

Zachary Robinson

Management consultant turned nonprofit CEO

Watch

###### “

###### We're often the first organization to enter these overlooked spaces, trying not only to solve immediate problems but also to marshal interest into issues most people haven't considered.

”

* * *

Devon Fritz

Software engineer turned charity incubator COO

Read

###### “

###### Before I discovered EA, I was wrestling with a common question: how can I use my time and my career in a way that's actually useful for the world?

”

* * *

Melanie Brennan

English teacher turned community builder

Watch

###### “

###### Two principles really resonated with me: taking seriously the interests of people and animals geographically distant from you, and approaching charity as a quest to have the greatest impact possible.

”

* * *

Lewis Bollard

Lawyer turned animal welfare grantmaker

Read

###### “

###### The financial sacrifice of moving from a job in finance to the animal NGO space was a challenge, but the promise of meaning outweighed the costs for me.

”

* * *

Andrés Jiménez Zorrilla

Morgan Stanley investor turned animal welfare advocate

Read

###### “

###### We can be more than we often make ourselves out to be, especially morally speaking. We can do more, we can be more.

”

* * *

Cecil Abungu

Law student turned AI safety researcher

Read

###### “

###### To me, effective altruism means thinking deeply and putting care into using our resources — thoughtfully and impartially to best improve the lives of others.

”

* * *

Sam Anschell

Poker dealer turned global aid grantmaker

Read

###### “

###### One of the best skills EA has given me is the ability to prioritize. I don't know if all philosophy students are prone to analysis paralysis, but that was certainly the case for me.

”

* * *

James Herbert

Consultant turned community leader

Read

###### “

###### Hearing that your dollar could go 100 times further overseas really struck me. Of course, if I could help a hundred times more people, I wanted to do that.

”

* * *

Grace Adams

Management consultant turned champion for effective giving

Read

###### “

###### These ideas, along with other influences, helped me identify farmed animal welfare, wild animal welfare, invertebrate welfare, and AI welfare as areas of focus.

”

* * *

Jeff Sebo

Philosophy PhD turned author and NYU professor

Read

###### “

###### I studied arts management with dreams of organizing festivals and concerts, but when I actually tried it, I realized it didn't give me a sense of purpose.

”

* * *

Sarah Tegeler

Arts management student turned nonprofit director

Read

###### “

###### I was really unsure how my life was going to unfold, but I knew that I wanted to make a difference and live a life in service to others.

”

* * *

Lucas Moore

English tutor turned partnerships manager

Read

###### “

###### I value the combination of moral seriousness, scope sensitivity, and being agentic that effective altruism inspires. There's something powerful about really taking suffering seriously and then actually doing something about it.

”

* * *

Elliot Teperman

Psychology student turned donor advisor

## What the community has achieved

Browse projects from the effective altruism community

###### Global health and economic development

##### Protected hundreds of millions of people against malaria through the distribution of insecticide-treated nets

Against Malaria Foundation

##### Built mobile financial solutions for millions of users across Africa

Wave

##### Advocated for human challenge trials to understand COVID-19

1Day Sooner

##### Implemented regulations that are projected to prevent lead exposure in tens of millions of children by 2100

Lead Exposure Elimination Project (LEEP)

##### Supported the delivery over $800 million in cash transfers to over 1.6 million people in need in 12 countries

GiveDirectly

###### Animal welfare

##### Freed hundreds of millions of hens from painful battery cages

Open Wing Alliance

##### Helped secure regulatory clearance for cultivated meat in the United States

Good Food Institute

##### Established a new legal framework for animal advocates to challenge animal cruelty in court

Legal Impact for Chickens

##### Secured commitments from top companies to adopt higher animal welfare policies

Anima International

###### Existential risk and the long-term future

##### Researched the implications of superintelligent AI for humanity's future

Forethought

##### Pioneered advances in the field of mechanistic interpretability

Neel Nanda, Google Deep Mind

##### Developed a monitoring network to detect concerning biological sequences before they spread

Nucleic Acid Observatory

###### Research and charity evaluation

##### Directed more than $2.4 billion of donations to evidence-backed charities, informed by 60,000+ research hours each year

GiveWell

##### Produced groundbreaking research that influenced millions in philanthropic funding decisions, including studies on animal welfare, global health priorities, and existential risk reduction

Rethink Priorities

##### Incubated 40+ effective nonprofits serving 35 million people and 1 billion animals

Charity Entrepreneurship

##### Influenced more than $68 million toward highly effective charities and projects helping animals

Animal Charity Evaluators

###### Grantmaking, fundraising, and donor advising

##### Built a network of thousands of pledgers who have donated more than $300 million

Giving What We Can

##### Empowered entrepreneurs to give effectively, mobilizing $1.5 billion in charitable donations across 2,500+ pledges

Founders Pledge

##### Advised millions of dollars to evidence-based climate interventions

Giving Green

##### Founded Germany's leading effective giving platform, directing millions of Euros to highly impactful charities

Effektiv Spenden

## Four ideas you probably already agree with

That could mean you're already on board with effective altruism

* * *

#### 1\. It’s important to help others

When people are in need and we can help them, we think that we should. Most people think millionaires should give back, but few realize that even those earning the median wage in a rich country typically rank among the global top 5% of the world’s wealthy. See where you fall on the global income scale.

#### 2\. Everyone deserves equal consideration

Everyone has an equal claim to being happy, healthy, fulfilled and free, whatever their circumstances. Everyone matters, wherever they live, however rich they are, and whatever their ethnicity, age, gender, ability, or religious views.

#### 3\. Helping more is better than helping less

All else being equal, we should save more lives, help people live longer, and make more people happier. If the same resources will improve 20 lives instead of one, it’s better to improve 20.

#### 4\. Our resources are limited

We have a finite amount of money to spend. This is also true of our time. Choosing to spend money or time on one option is an implicit choice not to spend it on other options.

- It’s important to help others
- People are equal
- Helping more is better than helping less
- Our resources are limited

* * *

Read more in the intro

## Research and ideas

Insights and research that have shaped the movement

##### What are the most important moral problems of our time?

Will MacAskill at TED

##### Why you think you're right — even if you're wrong

Julia Galef at TED

##### The why and how of effective altruism

Peter Singer at TED

##### The case that career choice is your key moral decision

80,000 Hours

##### Which charities improve global health the most per dollar?

GiveWell

##### Why this might be humanity’s most important century

Holden Karnofsky

View more resources

“Many of the concepts in effective altruism will be familiar to economists. What is unusual is to see these tools used to develop a **practical guide on how to live an ethical life**. It doesn’t tell you what choices to make; instead it sets out a simple framework for how to think through decisions.”

Dr. Rachel Glennerster, Associate Professor at the University of Chicago

## Receive a book of ideas related to effective altruism

Get a copy for free through the Impact Books program

Request a free book

## Find ways to help

There are many ways to take action—through donations, career choices, volunteering, and much more

##### Take a free online course

Identify high-impact career paths that match your skills, apply to opportunities, and build a network

##### Read the intro essay

A short essay introducing EA’s key concepts and principles

##### Donate to effective charities

Make your donation go further with the highest-impact charities

##### Get career guidance

You'll spend 80,000 hours on your career, making it one of your best opportunities to do good

##### Join a group

Find a supportive community of ambitious, aspiring altruists where you are or online

##### Attend a conference

EA Global and EAGx feature experts and opportunities to learn more and advance your career

More ways to take action

Join 60k subscribers and sign up for the EA Newsletter, a monthly email with the **latest ideas and opportunities**

Sign up

View past editions

effectivealtruism.org is made by the Centre for Effective Altruism, which is an Effective Ventures project. Effective Ventures Foundation (UK) (EV UK) is a charity in England and Wales (with registered charity number 1149828, registered company number 07962181, and is also a Netherlands registered tax-deductible entity ANBI 825776867). Effective Ventures Foundation USA Inc. (EV US) is a section 501(c)(3) organization in the USA (EIN 47-1988398). EV UK and EV US are separate charities that collaborate closely under the “Effective Ventures” name. All content © Centre for Effective Altruism or its respective authors, unless otherwise noted. For enquiries and feedback contact us.

© 2025 Effective Ventures

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effectivealtruism.org is made by the Centre for Effective Altruism, which is an Effective Ventures project. Effective Ventures Foundation (UK) (EV UK) is a charity in England and Wales (with registered charity number 1149828, registered company number 07962181, and is also a Netherlands registered tax-deductible entity ANBI 825776867). Effective Ventures Foundation USA Inc. (EV US) is a section 501(c)(3) organization in the USA (EIN 47-1988398). EV UK and EV US are separate charities that collaborate closely under the “Effective Ventures” name. All content © Centre for Effective Altruism or its respective authors, unless otherwise noted. For enquiries and feedback contact us.

© 2025 Effective Ventures