You chose The Felix Project as your London Charity Partner for 2025-26!

Over the next two years, Citi London colleagues will come together to support the food rescue and redistribution work of The Felix Project’s new South London depot, enabling our team and volunteers to collect, store, and distribute more food, and set us on a path to double our supply and provide 64 million meals across London annually - all made from nutritious food that would otherwise end up in landfill.

With an estimated 1 in 4 working Londoners struggling to feed their families, The Felix Project needs your support now more than ever to increase our meal output and get good food to those who need it across the capital.

To celebrate the launch of the partnership, we invite you to give an hour to help feed Londoners in need. Want to make an even bigger contribution to our work? Why not commit a full day of your pay towards our mission to see a London where no good food goes to waste and no-one goes hungry.

Ready to donate?

To donate an hour of your salary, take your net monthly salary and divide by 154.

To donate a day of your salary, take your net monthly salary and divide by 22.

Thank you so much for supporting our work, we can't wait to partner together to rescue more surplus food and feed more communities who desperately need it.

With a little help from our friends...

The Felix Project wins colleague vote to become Citi’s London Charity Partner

The Felix Project is delighted to announce it has been chosen by Citi London colleagues to be its London Charity Partner for 2025-2026.

The Felix Project gets green fingers!

A unique collaboration between The Felix Project and Square Mile Farms has seen another harvest of herbs grown, collected and used by the charity. In total tens of kilograms of sorrel and basil have been grown in Felix’s Canary Wharf office.

Why collaboration is key to addressing poverty crisis

Why collaboration is key to addressing poverty crisis

Felix finds two thirds of working parents worry about the affordability of healthy food as we welcome Minister and announce a record year of impact

The new year is often seen as good time to try to be healthier, to eat more fruit and vegetables, yet a redistribution charity has found two thirds of working parents are worried that the food they can afford is not very healthy.