Orphanage business ⚠️

Portrait of a child standing indoors in warm light, used to discuss the orphanage business and orphanage tourism.

This page supports a wider conversation about the orphanage business and why some “volunteer with children” offers can be harmful. The goal is protect children first, and choose projects where help is accountable, supervised, and respectful.

The orphanage business is not a single organisation or a single country. It is a pattern that can appear when institutions rely on visitors, donations, and short-term placements to keep running. In that model, children can become part of the marketing, and access to children becomes a “feature” that gets sold. Strong child safeguarding avoids that by setting strict boundaries: screening, training, supervision, and privacy protections are non-negotiable.

Orphanage business and orphanage tourism

Orphanage tourism often looks like a harmless visit, a few hours of “help”, photos, then a donation. But many child protection specialists warn that institutional care is a high-risk environment for children, and that volunteering or visiting can create incentives that do not align with a child’s best interests. Ethical support focuses on families and community services, not on creating demand for access to children.

Fast red flags 🚩

  • You can start working with children immediately, with little or no checks, training, or supervision.
  • The placement highlights physical affection, “bonding”, or one-to-one time as the main activity.
  • Children’s faces, names, or personal stories are used to sell the experience or raise funds.

If you want to contribute without increasing risk, pick roles that strengthen services while limiting direct access to children. This can mean supporting admin, logistics, communications, translations, grant writing, monitoring and evaluation, or training for local staff. These roles may feel less dramatic, but they are easier to safeguard and can be genuinely useful.

Better starting points

Look for organisations that prioritise family-based care, support parents and caregivers, and can show a clear safeguarding policy with reporting pathways and staff supervision. If an organisation cannot explain how it keeps children safe, it is not ready to host volunteers.

Further reading from organisations working on safeguarding and alternative care:

photo credit: Khan Nirob via Pexels

Author: Voluntouring staff

Become a voluntourist and explore meaningful travel experiences worldwide! Discover volunteer opportunities that allow you to give back while you travel. New opportunities are added daily. Visit us at www.voluntouring.org and stay updated by following us on Facebook!

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