Feeding Brighter Futures

CEO Roisin Currie visits Hunslet Moor breakfast club and sits chatting with a pupil.

For over 25 years, The Greggs Foundation has offered UK primary schools support for their children and families. Since our first Breakfast Club opened its doors in 1999, we have now grown our school network to help more than 75,000 children at over 1,000 schools every single day.  

A child eating cereal at a Greggs Breakfast Club

Now called Feeding Brighter Futures, our schools programme is expanding to cover even more of the school day. We will be offering funding for breakfast clubs, after school clubs and holiday club provision, and focus on providing children with equal access to extracurricular opportunities to enhance their school experience.

We know every school is different. Feeding Brighter Futures supports small groups to over 100 children every day. However, the core principle is the same. We want to offer children a safe space to eat, spend time with their friends, engage in learning and enjoy access to fun and engaging extracurricular activities.

Feeding Brighter Futures will continue to support all Greggs Foundation breakfast clubs for as long as needed. For now, we will be running a series of pilot sessions trialling after school and holiday clubs with our network until 2026, when we anticipate schools will be able to start applying for wider funding.

What we can offer schools

We prefer to let the schools in our network choose the right mix of food and activities for their pupils, so we supply termly cash grants to schools directly.  

Clubs offer a place for children to have fun and schools offer games, resources, creative activities and sports for wider learning opportunities. They also provide time for children to engage in enrichment activities using school resources when parents or guardians are at work.

Three pupils put blueberries and strawberries on pancakes at a breakfast club.
Two girls smile whilst holding 'agents of change' lanyards.

Additional benefits of Feeding Brighter Futures

All schools in our network get access to our hardship programme. This programme awards in excess of £1m in grants every year and supports children and families in financial crisis with food and clothing vouchers, as well as beds and home appliances including ovens, fridge freezers and washing machines. 

In 2022, we launched a new education programme with charity Rethink Food, to deliver one million hours of education into schools. This focuses on issues of food security, active lifestyles, healthy eating and sustainability and has a range of resources for teachers to use in school via the free Agents of Change multimedia programme.  This programme is available to all schools in our network and will be running until July 2026.   

Education is one of the most impactful ways to deliver long-term change

We're always looking for ways to add value to our schools. The schools in our network welcome the opportunity to have dedicated educational resources which can complement areas already touched upon in the existing curriculum.

Agents of Change

A school teacher holding a tablet standing beside a red banner with the words "Agents of change"

Agents of Change is a bespoke educational resource created by Rethink Food for the Greggs Foundation. It introduces a range of key topics in a fun and engaging way for primary school children in year 3 and 4.

To help schools retain flexibility in how to deliver each module, the Agents of Change has been created as a multimedia programme around four key subject areas, including:

  • Food security

  • Active lifestyles

  • Healthy eating

  • Sustainability

How a breakfast club impacts the school community at Kobi Nazrul Primary School

Before attending, a pupil would come to school and be quite unsettled, demanding a lot of attention from the teacher and disrupting the flow of the morning routine. They would actively seek interactions with adults. Since attending, they’re more settled at the start of the school day; they’ve typically had significant interaction with adults before entering the classroom, resulting in them being more ready to learn by the time class starts.

Teacher feedback from a Breakfast Club school

Easing into the school day at Bishops Primary School

What are the benefits to your school?

There are so many benefits to being part of Feeding Brighter Futures

Extracurricular activities

We want all children to have access to the learning opportunities offered by taking part in extracurricular activities. By removing financial barriers, Feeding Brighter Futures offers equal opportunities for children to thrive.

Focus and attention

Its easy to understand why it can be hard to focus in a busy classroom environment, even more so when you can feel your tummy rumbling. Hunger is such a huge barrier to learning. This is one of the key disadvantages we focus on – we want to make sure children are equipped to reach their potential. 

Support for working parents

School clubs can help parents take the stress out of the working week and improve job security knowing you can meet the demands of a working day. We estimate around 70% of the children attending our clubs have at least one parent or guardian working. Knowing their children are safe can really help to manage that morning or evening rush and ensure children are in school on time and ready to learn. 

Healthy and nutritious food

We give schools the funding freedom to choose what their pupils would like to eat. Meaning they get free, nutritious and balanced food to suit their own tastes. 

Role of our partners

We have over 160 partners and individual supporters who sponsor a number of our schools. This financial support from the business community is a wonderful way to connect businesses with local schools. Our commercial partners frequently develop a very supportive relationship with schools, often creating design competitions, delivering careers advice and workshops or involving pupils in key business milestones. 

Partners are a hugely valuable part of the work we do here at the Greggs Foundation. To learn more about how some of our partners benefit our school network, visit our news hub. If you are interested in becoming a partner of the Greggs Foundation, visit our partner page for a more detailed introduction, or contact Lynne Hindmarch.

Two children laughing and smiling at a Greggs Breakfast Club

A brighter day at Larkspur Primary

Would you like to join our network?

Our waiting list is temporarily closed to new schools, but please keep an eye on our social channels for details on when the waiting list will reopen for applications.

We are continuing to support all Greggs Foundation breakfast clubs during the transition to the new government-funded breakfast club programme. Pilot sessions for after school and holiday club funding with our current school network will run until 2026. All schools will be contacted when applications are then open.

To learn more about eligibility criteria, you can find more information in our FAQs.