We're Here For You
If you need food, we can help!
We are a fixed address hamper program that can serve you once every 30 days. We give you about 1-3 days worth of food. The items you receive are dependent on donations so the selection may vary each visit.
We are a fixed address hamper program that can serve you once every 30 days. We give you about 1-3 days worth of food. The items you receive are dependent on donations so the selection may vary each visit.
Looking to Help?
Your support is so important right now. If you can give a donation of time, money, or even a single can of food, every ounce you give will help a child, family, or person in your community.
What does it take to help our neighbours in need?
We can’t do it without you.
With no government funding, we are completely supported by the generosity of our community. Every year, you help feed thousands of our friends and neighbours who just need a little help getting their households back on track.
Food of the Month
Pasta
There are many ways you can help:
Donate Food
You can give at the Food Bank, community bins, or by doing your own Food Drive!
Donate Money
Giving online helps us buy fresh, perishable foods that can’t be donated.
Volunteer
Every hour you give allows us to feed even more neighbours.
Our Mission is to work within our community to gather and distribute nutritious food to those in need, and to contribute to public awareness, the conditions that lead to food insecurity.
About The North Bay Food Bank
Explore our history, see what we do and why we do it, and meet our volunteer Board of Directors, our Executive Director and Floor Supervisor.
Follow Us On Social Media
Get all the latest updates on our social channels!
We’ll let you know about our Food of the Month and other high-demand items as well as important news and events happing in our community.
Follow us to be the first to know about what we’re up to.
The North Bay Food Bank acknowledges that the sacred land on which we operate is traditional Anishinabek territory, occupied by the peoples of Nipissing and Dokis First Nations whose aboriginal and treaty rights are recognized by the Robinson Huron Treaty of 1850.









