The Emirates Airline Foundation, in collaboration with Emirates Auction, successfully raised AED 8.8 million (USD 2.4 million) through a month-long global auction of rare Emirates Skywards memberships. The auction, held from 17 December 2025 to 17 January 2026, drew over 900 bids from participants in 131 countries. Seven exclusive Platinum-tier membership numbers were offered, including two 20-year and five 15-year memberships, with the highest bid reaching AED 1.6 million. All proceeds are earmarked for humanitarian programmes supporting vulnerable children across nine countries, including Kenya, South Africa, and Zimbabwe.
In Kenya, the funds will strengthen partnerships with Little Prince Nursery and Primary School in Kibera, Alfajiri Street Kids, which provides art therapy for over 200 children, and Starehe Boys’ Centre, offering scholarships to academically talented students from disadvantaged backgrounds. Across Africa, the Foundation supports initiatives in education, healthcare, nutrition, and housing, working with 14 non-governmental organisations to improve outcomes for children in vulnerable communities.
The auction reflects a growing trend in philanthropy where exclusive products and experiences are leveraged to mobilise high-net-worth capital for social impact. While such funding is modest in macroeconomic terms, it can have a significant effect at the programme level, enabling additional classrooms, counselling sessions, or scholarships, particularly in informal settlements like Kibera. Multi-year and predictable funding is especially valuable for sustaining educational and community programmes.
In the broader African context, supplementary funding from corporate philanthropy complements public expenditure, addressing gaps where community-based organisations provide essential services. Emirates Foundation’s model, largely supported by customer and employee contributions, channels almost all donations directly to programme implementation, ensuring that funds reach local initiatives efficiently.
The organisers plan to make the auction an annual event, aiming to institutionalise a predictable revenue stream for beneficiary organisations. This approach illustrates the intersection between global consumer markets and local development outcomes, using aviation loyalty programmes to fund grassroots interventions thousands of kilometres away. While the AED 8.8 million represents a small fraction of overall development finance, for individual schools or centres, it can be transformative, enabling programme expansion and long-term stability.
Transparency and governance are central to the initiative’s credibility, with clear allocation mechanisms and measurable outcomes key to maintaining public trust. As African countries face fiscal constraints, demographic pressures, and climate-related challenges, diversified funding sources, including corporate philanthropy, are likely to remain an important component of the social investment ecosystem.







