This picture has been floating around Facebook for a while now. Whoever made this bag had good intentions and a generous heart, and there are many versions of these bags being handed out all across the country. Over the past 6 years of running a homeless ministry, we’ve learned a few things about the needs of our street friends. We know what’s practical and what isn’t, so I’d like to help you improve on these goodie bags.
We call our version of these, SEVENS Packs. Ours include our contact information, a bottle of water, assorted snacks, a pair of new socks, and when we’ve received enough through donations, a gift card for a fast food meal and/or a $10 gift card to a grocery store.
Here are some tips for making your own goodie bags, no matter where you live.
WHAT TO INCLUDE
If you don’t know what would be helpful to the needy people in your area, ask someone who does. The organizations who walk beside the homeless and hurting can tell you what the needs are, and what they have in surplus. This will save you time and money.
Toiletries
NEVER mix toiletries in with food items. The smell/taste of things like soap, deodorant, and toothpaste permeate everything else in the bag, and the food will not be edible. We once received a large donation of bags similar to this one and we had to throw all of the food items away.
Bars of soap are cheap, but they’re bulky and messy. Baby wipes are a better option for a quick clean up. Any place our street friends can access a shower will have soap, shampoo, etc. for them to use. Any toiletries should be put in a separate bag, and we suggest freezer bags instead of storage bags because of the thicker plastic. Suggested items:
- Baby wipes/wet wipes
- Lip balm
- Lotion
- Sunscreen
Snacks
In general, our street friends do not have access to dental care other than teeth extraction, so we try to stick with easy to chew snacks instead of crunchy ones, though a variety is nice. They trade what they don’t like for items they do.
- Fruit /applesauce/pudding cups (with or without a plastic spoon)
- Chewy granola bars (Cereal bars tend to get crushed into mush)
- Fresh fruit
- Assorted crackers or cookies
- Fruit snacks
- Beef Jerky (this is a favorite even though it’s hard to chew)
- Small bags of nuts or trail mix
- Hard candy like peppermints or butterscotch
- Bottled water
Misc. Gifts
It doesn’t have to be a holiday to give gifts. Some of the things on this list aren’t really gifts as much as possible needed items when you call the streets your home.
- Travel coffee mugs from local gas stations that get them discounted coffee refills
- New socks – When you travel everywhere by foot, clean, dry socks are a must.
- $5-$10 gift cards to nearby restaurants or grocery stores
- Travel size first aid kits
Winter Items
- Hand warmers
- Warm gloves (NOT the little knit ones that don’t keep anyone warm)
- Beanies
WHAT NOT TO INCLUDE
- Used items
- Hotel shampoos & soaps
- Religious Literature*
*A Note for my Christian Friends:
Homelessness does not equal Godlessness. PLEASE do not include religious literature. Your intentions are good, and your motivation sharing the love of Jesus, but don’t assume anything. Unless you have the time to build a relationship with someone, you don’t know what their story is and what role religion has played in it, both good and bad. Trust that God was on the streets long before you came into the picture, and faith conversations happen within the context of relationship.
ONE LAST THING
Presentation is important. Look people in the eye. Smile. Offer your gift in love and without agenda. You’re giving hope and help to someone who is walking through a dark time in their life. That matters, and it tells them that they matter too.






I love this so much!
Thank you.
We’ve seen a small version of these handed out at our Saturday night meals and had to walk around picking up some of the extra items our street friends didn’t want…lotion, gum, scripture cards.