Right now, most charities are working too hard to stand still.
Lists aren’t growing fast enough; consent is a barrier.
And too many valuable moments of engagement… just disappear.
Soft opt-in gives charities a compliant way to continue conversations with supporters who have already engaged
Soft opt-in gives charities a legal way to follow up with people who’ve already shown genuine interest, without needing explicit consent every time.
It applies to email and SMS.
But only if you’ve:
- Collected the data directly from the individual during that interaction
- Had real engagement (donation, volunteering, clear interest in supporting the charity)
- Been upfront about comms and given an easy opt-out
And it only applies to data captured from 5th Feb 2026 onwards
Think of it as: Permission to continue the conversation, if you’ve earned it
Suggestions, If I were a charity, I would…
- Fix my data capture. Immediately.
- “We’ll keep in touch by email/SMS”
- What you’ll send
- Why it matters
- Treat first engagement like gold
- Build a relationship
- Tell your story
- Drive lifetime value
- Build proper onboarding journeys
- Reinforce why they engaged
- Show impact early
- Give clear next steps
- Align message to intent
- Get compliance nailed (properly)
- Document your decisions
- Complete LIAs
- Be transparent
Bottom line
Soft opt-in isn’t about sending more emails.
- It’s about: Holding onto hard-won attention
- Building a contactable audience that grows
- Nurturing moments into relationships
The charities that will make this successful, will be smarter, relevant, and better connected to the people already raising their hand.
If you’re still treating every interaction as one-and-done, you’re leaving growth on the table.
Melanie Wynne
Donor Growth Strategist – designing data-led acquisition strategies that balance smart targeting, compliance, and long-term value.