Over the course of my career and the countless planning conversations that I’ve had with fundraising colleagues and development partners, one particular consideration always gets brought up: “Are we asking too much of our donors? Do they need a break? Do our supporters have ‘donor fatigue’?”
If this sentiment feels both right and wrong to you at the same time, you’re not alone. And, it’s worth investigating because it can impact many of your campaign strategy decisions, even as early as the campaign-readiness, brand foundation-building phase.
You can’t see the forest for the trees
Stepping away from the individual donors for a moment, let’s look at the bigger picture. Generosity isn’t waning; it’s concentrating. U.S. giving reached $592.5B in 2024 — a record year. At the very same time, many organizations saw fewer donors and stubbornly weak retention. GivingTuesday’s Data Commons, analyzing Fundraising Effectiveness Project data, notes that U.S. donor retention dropped by about 3.5 percentage points in the most recent year, even as attitudes toward giving and trust in nonprofits stayed strong.
It isn’t that “people are tired”, but rather that brands are losing mind share because the donor’s experience isn’t compelling or clear enough. Couple that with the understanding that donor counts are down and retention rates are around 18–19% — fewer than 1 in 5 donors are kept year over year. Again, generosity persists while giving portfolios downsize.
At the top of the wealth curve, fewer affluent households give at all (down to ~81% in 2024 from ~91% in 2015), even as average gifts trend upwards. And we see the same pattern in higher education as well. RNL’s 2025 National Alumni Survey finds that while 81% of alumni say being philanthropic is important and 77% make charitable gifts, only 31% gave to their alma mater last year—yet most of those non-givers are donating elsewhere. This isn’t about compassion drying up; it’s about relevance, connection, and education between a mission and the donor. Thankfully, these are all issues well within an organization’s means to address.
So, why does donor fatigue feel real then?
You may want to sit down for this because we’re about to get real.
Donor fatigue is usually a diagnosis of convenience. What’s happening is message fatigue and stewardship fatigue — especially when communication stops feeling relevant, specific, and gives each segment a clear sense of agency.
Donors aren’t tired of giving. They’re tired of guessing whether their giving matters.
This diagnosis isn’t convenient just for fundraising teams and fundraisers either. The “fatigue” story is an easy go-to for:
- Executives/boards: It explains lagging results without confronting messaging monotony, weak differentiation, lack of organizational vision, or slow decisions.
- Fundraising leaders: It distracts from gaps in segmentation and stewardship strategies (and the KPIs that would expose them).
- MarComm teams: It justifies cautious creative and one-size-fits-all approaches.
- Strategic partners/consultants (including us, if we’re lazy): It keeps the problem “out there,” and not in our creative processes and thinking.
And the hidden assumptions riding shotgun with that convenience? Frequency equals fatigue (when the issue is relevance), the market is saturated (when the brand is unremarkable), and the big one that’s already mentioned — “they’re tired of us” — when in truth they’re tired of wondering whether their support makes a difference.
None of this is to say that the fatigue that you and your team sense isn’t real. Campaigns can feel like sprinting a marathon. Internally, that looks like long planning cycles, intense seasons of deadlines and milestones, and board scrutiny and pressure. Under that strain, efficiency and focus decay, messages flatten, segmentation blurs, and roles and responsibilities become unclear. Over the course of a multi-year campaign, your team might understandably grow tired of using the same core messaging and brand; meanwhile, there are still audience segments discovering the campaign for the first time, even in the later phases. The critical thing to remember is that it’s fundraising fatigue, misdiagnosed as donor fatigue.
Giving actually energizes
There’s a wealth of research showing that giving (money, time, help) tends to increase the giver’s well-being. As Cherian Koshy notes in his Neurogiving work, neuroimaging studies show that when people think about charitable acts and legacy gifts, the same pleasure-and-reward regions of the brain “light up,” suggesting that generosity is wired into our neural reward system. The effect isn’t just a warm, fuzzy anecdote. It shows up in experiments, cross-cultural surveys, and even in the brain.
The act of giving isn’t a drain. When done right, it’s intrinsically rewarding. If donors are disengaging, the problem likely isn’t “too much giving”; it’s too little meaning. Said another way, if giving reliably rewards the giver, then donor fatigue isn’t about the act of giving, but rather about how we design the experience.
People stay engaged when they feel autonomy, competence, and relatability. If our messaging and asks don’t create agency (“here’s the difference you can make”), don’t show efficacy (“because of you, this happened”), or don’t connect people to others like them, energy and commitment will fade.
Just what the doctor ordered
So, if you’ve ever said, “our donors are tired,” consider this your own voice played back with a clearer diagnosis. We hear that fatigue, we believe it’s fixable, and we’re already thinking about the relevance, clarity, and connection that will help you rebuild trust and energy.
The question about donor fatigue came up in a recent meeting we had with a partner whose mission couldn’t be more compelling and world-changing. It would be implausible to question their community’s commitment to support and advocacy. In a room full of fundraising professionals and leaders, you could feel the tension of the silence that followed for several seconds. That diagnosis just didn’t feel right. But why?
And then, someone spoke the truth that cut through it all: “Love doesn’t get tired.”















