What's New on Raised: June 2026
See how Raised made team fundraising easier this June, with better privacy controls and simpler ways to manage donations and product catalogues.

This June, we made team fundraising much easier to organise. If you run a school house challenge or sports club fundraiser, most of these updates are for you. They also suit other campaigns where people raise money as a group.
Here's the detail.
A better way to run a team fundraiser
Team fundraising pages now give each group and participant a clearer place in the campaign.
Team and member profile pictures can now appear on public fundraiser pages. Each team can have its own target, and supporters can see its progress. Public leaderboards let parents and friends check how each team is doing without logging in.
Organisers can add a whole class or club roster by uploading a spreadsheet, rather than entering every person by hand. Team members can also create a poster for their own fundraising page to print or share online.
Automatic emails can now guide team members from joining their team through to sharing their page. Team settings are also easier to find, so organisers can manage join approvals and goals. They can also choose what appears publicly.
We have also replaced the old "competition" wording with "teams" and "contributions". It better describes school and club fundraisers where people work towards a shared goal, even when there is a friendly leaderboard.
For example, a club can upload its junior squad from a spreadsheet. Each player gets a page with a photo and target, while the public leaderboard keeps everyone up to date. Players can then share their own posters with family and friends.
More control over privacy
Not every fundraiser should show participant names and leaderboards publicly. Privacy mode gives organisers more control over what visitors can see.
You can limit the details shown on leaderboards and supporter lists. This is useful when fundraising with children or for a cause where participants would rather not be named. Organisers still receive the order and donation details needed to run the fundraiser.
If a parent asks whether their child's name needs to appear publicly, this setting gives you another option.
Suggested donation amounts
Crowdfunding and donation campaigns can now show a few suggested amounts while still letting donors enter their own amount. Donors can also leave a short message with their gift.
Options such as $20, $50, or $100 give people a useful starting point. They still have the freedom to give $35 or any other amount that suits them.
Organisers choose these suggested amounts in the fundraiser settings. They can help when donors are unsure how much people usually give to a school trip or community appeal.
Catalogue improvements
Product fundraisers got better catalogue tools.
You can group items into categories, search within a catalogue, and set a custom sort order so bestsellers or seasonal lines sit at the top. The catalogue builder also supports PDF import, which helps when a wholesaler or supplier already has a product list you don't want to retype.
You can import or build your catalogue, group similar products together, and put popular items first. Supporters can then use search instead of scrolling through a long list.
Share your fundraiser from one place
Fundraiser links and promotional tools now sit together in one place. You can quickly copy your link when you launch or send a reminder later in the fundraiser.
You no longer need to search through different settings pages to find the public link.
Easier-to-share crowdfunding pages
Crowdfunding pages now have clearer banners and show campaign progress better on mobile. After donating, a supporter can use the "Share my contribution" button to tell others about the fundraiser.
Supporters often bring in the next donation by sharing the campaign with friends. Putting that option straight after checkout makes it easier for them to help without the organiser having to ask.
The updated mobile layout also makes the goal and campaign story easier to read before someone reaches the donate button.
That's June
Teams now have clearer public pages and better privacy controls. Donation campaigns are easier to set up, while product catalogues take less work to manage.
If you're kicking off a house challenge or club season fundraiser, start on Raised and use the new teams tools from day one.