It’s Okay to Give Money to Homeless People

Featured Video Play Icon

If you feel the urge to give money to a homeless person and you feel safe, then it’s perfectly fine, and your act of kindness can provide basic life-saving needs that only cash can buy.

People experiencing homelessness are human beings. We should treat them with respect. But too often, we view the homeless person asking for money as a bum or con artist. We blame homelessness on the person when their situation could be caused by a variety of reasons: lack of affordable housing, lack of a living wage, or some kind of trauma.

“Panhandlers use money to purchase drugs or alcohol.” This is also a common belief stopping people from giving money to panhandlers. Let’s think about that: if you’re going to the bathroom behind a dumpster in a McDonald’s parking lot, life sucks. You might as well have a beer!

We are not advocating for alcohol abuse in any way. We are simply trying to provide a little perspective. It’s hard to be homeless. Alcohol and drugs offer an escape from the pain. We often look the other way when people we know abuse drugs: The soccer mom who hits the bottle to get through the day; your brother-in-law who drinks a case of beer on the weekend; the lawyer who smokes the pipe filled with crack; and the postal worker popping a few pills to help make their rounds. But when it’s a person experiencing homelessness, we look down upon them.

Homeless People Need Money for Basic Needs

There are things only money can buy. Most homeless people only receive food stamp benefits, which do not allow the purchase of tampons, medicine, toilet paper, vitamins, pet food, tents, tarps, hand warmers, socks, or hygiene items. Often your gift of a few dollars can mean the difference between life and death for an unhoused person trying to survive.

The real truth is in our great country, no one should have to beg for money. We must make preventing and solving homelessness a priority. Your voice can help end homelessness. Click here to tweet, email, call, or Facebook your federal and state legislators to tell them that ending homelessness and creating more affordable housing is your priority.


IP 19 Logo Icon crop

Invisible People

           

We imagine a world where everyone has a place to call home. Until then, we strive to be the most trusted source for homelessness news, education and advocacy.

Related Topics



Your support can create amazing change

Join the campaign to end homelessness by supporting the only newsroom focused solely on the topic of homelessness. Our original reporting — posted five to seven days a week — can also be found on Apple News and Google News. Through storytelling, education, news, and advocacy, we are changing the narrative on homelessness.

Invisible People is a nonprofit organization. We rely on the support of friends like you — people who understand that well-written, carefully researched stories can change minds about this issue. And that’s what leads to true transformation and policy change. Our writers have their fingers on the pulse of homeless communities. Many are formerly or currently homeless themselves. They are the real experts, passionate about ending homelessness. Your support helps us tell the true story of this crisis and solutions that will end it. Your donations help make history by telling the real story of homelessness to inspire tangible actions to end it.

Your donation, big or small, will help bring real change.

DONATE NOW



Get the Invisible People newsletter


RECENT STORIES

Where Will She Go? Homeless Woman's Heartbreaking Struggle.

Kellie

Homeless Veteran's ID Taken by Police Stripped of Access to Shelter

Ken

Homeless Man Across from the White House

Milton

A Homeless Man's Struggle for Survival in San Diego

Mississippi


RECENT ARTICLES

Social workers, homeless service workers

Homeless Service Workers Need Significant Pay Raises to Afford Housing

House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy and political gamesmanship jeopardizes federal housing programs

Gamesmanship Over Government Spending Threatens Federal Housing Programs

Unemployment and Homelessness

Does Unemployment Cause Homelessness?

Permanent Supportive Housing is the Solution to Homelessness

Why Permanent Supportive Housing Is the Answer to Homelessness

Get the Invisible People newsletter