Time Banks are a special way for neighbors to help each other without using money. Instead, people trade time. When you help someone for one hour, you earn one Time Credit.
You can then spend that credit to get help from someone else in your community. For example, you might help an elderly neighbor with grocery shopping and earn one credit. Later, you could use that credit to get help fixing your computer from another neighbor.
This system was created by Dr. Edgar Cahn in 1995 to bring communities together and show that everyone's time is valuable. Time Banking helps people who don't have much money still contribute to their community.
It makes invisible work like caring for others more visible and valued. The system builds trust between neighbors and creates stronger communities. People can start their own Time Bank using toolkits and resources available online.
This approach shifts focus from money to meaning, helping people feel more connected and less isolated while addressing inequality in creative ways.
