Our strategy up to 2030:

Together for animal welfare

The foundation of our strategy is working in partnership with people, communities and organisations. It is key to delivering on our ambitions because we cannot deliver seismic change for animals alone.

As the RSPCA, we have a unique role to play in mobilising and driving change, raising animal welfare as the cause of our time.

We can’t reach all animals ourselves, but by inspiring and empowering people, partners and communities, we can create societal change and together we can create a better world for every animal.

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Priorities

Our strategic priorities, which are currently being updated as part of our strategy refresh, focus on:

Rescue and care

We rescue and care for animals in need

Advocacy

We change attitudes, behaviours, and laws

Prevention

We inspire kindness and compassion to all animals

Supporters

We grow support and income

Organisational effectiveness

We strive for excellence in all that we do

Refresh

A huge amount has changed for animals, for people and the world around us. As we mark the end of our 200th anniversary, it is both an incredibly proud moment for us and a key opportunity to reflect. In the coming months we will be unveiling a refresh of our existing strategy – a chance to focus and respond to new opportunities and challenges to deliver real and lasting change for animals. It will include:

We’ve achieved a lot since 2021

Transformed the 200-year-old charity,

with modernised leadership, culture and governance.

Set an ambitious strategic direction of partnership working-

strengthening relationships with Eurogroup and the World Animal Federation and outside the animal welfare sphere with Network Rail, NSPCC, Mind and Relate

Launched an impactful brand

that is rallying the public, charities and organisations, thought leaders and those critical in shaping legislation to tackle the huge challenges facing animals we share our world with today and in the future

Responded to the Covid frontline,

delivered a £1.5m cost-of-living fund to support struggling pet owners and animal charities, delivered one million meals through a new pet food bank.

Funded help for animals in Ukraine

and supported pets who were fleeing the conflict with their owners.

Funded help for animals in Ukraine

and supported pets who were fleeing the conflict with their owners.

Introduced a new three-tier prevention framework

to deliver more impact for animals – from raising public awareness, through targeted intervention where cruelty and neglect are most severe in society.

Introduced a new science-based holistic approach

to assessing an animal’s welfare which considers their physical and emotional wellbeing and focuses on ensuring they thrive.

Landmark legislative changes

such as having animal sentience enshrined in law, tougher sentencing for animal abuse, compulsory cat microchipping, effectively banning primates as pets and the banning of live animal exports.

Developed our thought leadership:

Launching the Animal Kindness Index; our annual Wilberforce Lecture; developing research, with reports on alternative proteins; and our ground-breaking Animal Futures Project that paints a picture of the potential future for animals.

A huge amount has changed for animals, for people and the world around us. As we mark the end of our 200th anniversary, it’s both an incredibly proud moment for us and a key opportunity to reflect.

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