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Volunteers

Why Volunteers Stop Showing Up (and How to Keep Them)

Jen Maslanski, Argenta Copywriter
Jen Maslanski, Argenta Copywriter
May 27, 2026
Most nonprofits put their energy into recruiting volunteers. The harder problem is keeping them. About one in three volunteers does not come back the next year, and for plenty of organizations the number is worse than that. The first shift is where a lot of them quietly disappear.

Industry benchmarks put the average volunteer retention rate around 65 percent, and recent surveys show retention has passed recruitment as the top concern for volunteer programs. That tracks with what most coordinators already feel. Getting someone in the door is the easy part.

The reasons people leave are rarely dramatic. They had a confusing first day. Nobody told them whether they did a good job. The work did not feel connected to anything. Fixable things, mostly.

The first shift decides a lot
A volunteer's first day tells them whether they will come back. If they stood around unsure what to do, or finished and went home without a word from anyone, you probably will not see them again. It is worth treating the first shift like it matters, because to them it does.

A few things that help:
• Give them a real job, not busywork. People can tell the difference.
• Have one person who is clearly theirs to ask. Not the whole staff, one name.
• Say thank you before they leave, out loud, to their face.

Tell them what their time did
Volunteers want the same thing donors want, which is proof it mattered. After a shift or an event, tell them what happened because they showed up. How many meals, how many kids, how many calls. It takes two minutes, and it is the difference between I helped out once and I am part of this.

Make coming back the easy choice
If signing up again means digging through old emails or calling to ask when the next shift is, some people just will not. Keep a simple way for them to see what is coming and grab a slot. The fewer steps between that was nice and I am on the calendar again, the better.

Keep light contact between shifts too. Not a newsletter blast. A short note now and then so they do not forget you exist.

Watch the number
Pick your retention rate and actually look at it. How many of last year's volunteers came back this year? If it is under 60, something in the experience is leaking people, and it is usually one of the things above. When the number moves, you will know your changes are working.

The part that quietly makes this hard
All of this depends on knowing your volunteers. Who showed up, how often, what they are good at, when you last thanked them. For a lot of organizations that lives in a sign-in sheet, a couple of spreadsheets, and someone's memory. When it is scattered, the thank-you slips, the follow-up does not happen, and good volunteers drift off without anyone noticing.

When your volunteer hours, contacts, events, and communications sit in one place, it gets a lot easier to spot who is slipping and reach out before they are gone.

Start here
If you want a practical guide to the operations side of all this, we put together a free 49-page Nonprofit Operations Guide. It covers volunteers, board structure, finances, grant writing, and donor engagement, with no cost and no catch.

Get the free guide

And if you would like to see how Argenta keeps volunteers, fundraising, events, and accounting in one place, there is a Book A Demo button right on that page.
Reconnecting…