CapitaLand Launches S$4 Million Community Resilience Initiative Round

CapitaLand has launched the second edition of its Community Resilience Initiative, with new funding of up to S$4 million for programmes that support vulnerable children and youth in Asia.

For Singapore readers, the useful angle is the type of impact money being put on the table. Corporate social-impact funding is often scattered across many small donations; this initiative is framed around resilience, youth outcomes and regional community partners.

What The Fund Supports

CapitaLand’s announcement positions the Community Resilience Initiative as support for vulnerable children and youth. The emphasis is not only immediate relief, but stronger community capability: education, care, development and social support that can continue beyond a single event or campaign.

The figure is substantial enough for social-service operators and non-profit partners to pay attention. Up to S$4 million can underwrite programme expansion, pilot work, cross-border community projects or capacity building when matched with the right partners.

  • Funding mentioned: up to S$4 million.
  • Target group: vulnerable children and youth in Asia.
  • Round: second Community Resilience Initiative.

Who Should Track It

Non-profits, schools, youth agencies and CSR teams should watch CapitaLand’s eligibility and partner requirements closely. Even if an organisation is not ready for this round, the stated focus is a useful indicator of where corporate philanthropy is moving: measurable community resilience rather than one-off giving.

Read the official CapitaLand announcement for the current framing, and check our Grants coverage for related opportunities.

  • Useful for: youth charities, education non-profits and CSR teams.
  • Prepare: programme evidence, beneficiary data and implementation partners.
  • Do not wait until deadlines to map eligible projects.
Priya Raman
Priya Raman
Priya Raman is Little Big Red Dot's Culture, Arts & Community Editor. She is the team's storyteller for the things that move people — art, music, theatre, heritage, festivals, and the diverse communities that make Singapore vibrant. She writes with passion, depth, and a genuine love for the arts.

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