The healing power of generosity

Helping others can add years to your life. Here are kind acts to perform today.

Group of volunteers propping up a wooden frame to build a house

Updated on November 8, 2024.

Generosity, even one small act, has the power to create a ripple effect. It can spread kindness from person to person until your good deed touches the lives of complete strangers. Before long, you can improve the lives of people you love, people in your community, and people you might not even know.

But starting a chain of generosity doesn’t just help others. You’re also doing yourself a favor. Being generous can improve both your mental and physical health.

Generosity boosts your physical health

There are a variety of ways to be generous, and even the smallest gesture can be meaningful. Generosity can involve giving material goods, like money or a gift. Or it can involve giving your time, support, or love. It can involve just about any act of giving, in fact, as long as it’s well-intended, considers another person’s feelings and situation, and adds positivity and value to their life.

When you engage in a generous act, it can affect you physically in several ways. For one thing, it can increase your levels of feel-good hormones, like oxytocin, serotonin, and dopamine. Oxytocin, often called the “cuddle hormone,” is typically released in the body through physical touch and inspires feelings of closeness. Serotonin is associated with feelings of happiness, while dopamine is linked to motivation.

Practicing generosity can also reduce your levels of the stress hormone cortisol. Studies show that these hormone shifts stimulate the region of the brain linked to empathy, caring, and feeling pleasure.

Generosity—especially volunteering—can also help you build social connections and get more physical activity. It may help you remain relaxed and even help lower blood pressure

Take one 2016 study published in the journal Health Psychology, for example. Adults with high blood pressure were assigned to spend money on others for three weeks. They ended up with lower blood pressure than people who spent money on themselves. Another 2023 study in the Annals of Behavior Medicine suggested that giving is even related to lower levels of inflammation in the body.

Each of these benefits can help reduce the risk of chronic, life-threatening illnesses like heart disease and stroke. In fact, in a 2020 study published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine (AJPM), volunteering at least 100 hours per year was linked to a 44 percent lower risk of dying prematurely.

Generosity can lift your mood

There are also mental health benefits to generosity. Volunteering has been particularly well-studied. Adults who volunteer tend to have:

This can help boost overall outlook and, importantly, lower the risk of depression. In the 2020 AJPM study, volunteering was linked to fewer depressive symptoms and more optimism in adults ages 50 and older.

Ways to practice generosity

Every little act of kindness counts. Here are several you can try today.

  • Write a positive online review for a local business you like.
  • Pay for the person behind you at the drive-through window.
  • Join the bone marrow registry, become an organ donor, or donate blood.
  • Take care of a neighbor’s pet or pick up their mail while they’re away.
  • Shop for an older person or offer to help them with chores.
  • Sneak a loving note or a small piece of candy into your partner or child’s coat pocket.
  • Bake cookies or cupcakes and hand deliver them to nursing home residents.
  • Watch a friend or family member’s children so they can get away for a few hours on their own.
  • Donate to a nonprofit organization that you support.

Choose from this list or come up with acts of kindness on your own. If possible, try to complete multiple acts on your next day off. Psychology research suggests that planning and performing small acts of kindness back-to-back can improve your overall happiness. Imagine all of the people who will have better days if you start a chain of generosity.

Article sources open article sources

Cleveland Clinic. Why Giving Is Good for Your Health. December 7, 2022.
Park, S., Kahnt, T., Dogan, A. et al. A neural link between generosity and happiness. Nat Commun 8, 15964 (2017).
Whillans AV, Dunn EW, Sandstrom GM, Dickerson SS, et al. Is spending money on others good for your heart? Health Psychol. 2016 Jun;35(6):574-83.
Inagaki TK, Alvarez GM, Orehek E, Ferrer RA, et al. Support-Giving Is Associated With Lower Systemic Inflammation. Ann Behav Med. 2023 May 23;57(6):499-507.
Kim ES, Whillans AV, Lee MT, Chen Y, et al. Volunteering and Subsequent Health and Well-Being in Older Adults: An Outcome-Wide Longitudinal Approach. Am J Prev Med. 2020 Aug;59(2):176-186.
Mayo Clinic. Mayo Clinic Q and A: Health benefits of volunteering. December 5, 2023.
Otake K, Shimai S, Tanaka-Matsumi J, Otsui K, et al. Happy people become happier through kindness: a counting kindness intervention. J Happiness Stud. 2006 Sep;7(3):361-375.

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