Micro Lending
Empowering women with access to fair, affordable financing
Turning Skills Into Sustainable Income
Training is essential — but training alone does not generate income.
Across the communities we work with, women consistently possess practical skills and strong motivation to improve their lives. Many have learned trades such as soap-making, tailoring, hair braiding, food preparation, or small-scale farming. Yet without access to even modest amounts of capital, these skills remain underutilized. Women know what to do, but lack the means to turn those skills into revenue-generating activities.
Microloans provide the missing link. They offer the start-up capital required to purchase raw materials, tools, or productive assets, allowing women to immediately put their skills into practice. At Hands of Hope Africa, lending is not a standalone intervention. Loans are paired with financial literacy, mentoring, and ongoing monitoring to ensure capital is used productively and responsibly.
By linking training directly to capital, we are taking down the barriers keeping women from financial independence. We support them as they build real businesses, generate income, and take control of their financial futures.
What are VSLAs?
A proven, community-led foundation for microloans
Village Savings and Loan Associations (VSLAs) are small, self-organized savings groups that allow women excluded from formal financial systems to save, borrow, and support one another. They are built on trust, proximity, and shared responsibility — and they form the foundation of Hands of Hope Africa’s microloan program.
Rather than lending to individuals in isolation, we work through VSLAs because they reflect how communities already organize, manage risk, and hold one another accountable.
Here’s How We Form VSLA Groups:

Trust-Based Groups
Women form groups by village, ensuring members know one another and can meet regularly. Trust and proximity are essential for VSLAs to work.

Weekly Meetings
VSLAs meet every week to save, repay loans, and discuss their businesses. Regular meetings build financial discipline and peer support.

Member-Led
Each group elects its own chairperson, treasurer, and secretary and sets its own rules. This leadership builds ownership and confidence.

Save, Borrow, & Bank Together
Members save collectively, access loans, and deposit funds into a group bank account. For most, this is the 1st step toward formal financial services.
what is group Lending?
Loans issued through Hands of Hope Africa are backed by a group guarantee. This means the group, not an individual, is responsible for ensuring repayments are made.
The group guarantee is not about punishment. It is about shared commitment. When challenges arise, members support one another, adjust plans, and work together to protect the group as a whole. This approach has been proven across Uganda and East Africa to increase repayment, resilience, and long-term success.
Savings Groups in Action:
From training to income: Stories from women entrepreneurs
Meet Sylvia
Building a Firewood Business
Before joining a savings group, Sylvia relied on irregular income and struggled to provide consistent support for her family. Like many women in her community, she worked hard but had little opportunity to save or invest in a stable business.
Through Hands of Hope Africa’s training and a small loan, Sylvia was able to build a firewood business and expand into bar soap production, creating multiple income streams. With regular mentoring and the support of her savings group, she has grown her customer base and increased her earnings.
Today, Sylvia earns more consistent income, reinvests in her business, and actively participates in her VSLA, planning for the future rather than surviving week to week.
“I gained confidence and hope that I will one day be among the women who are going to teach others the skills I gained from Hands of Hope. I want to teach people the skills that I have so they can come out of poverty.”
Meet Lydia
Running a Hair Salon in Her Village Centre
At 24 years old, Lydia was living in extreme poverty with limited opportunities to earn a stable income. After learning hair-braiding skills, she took her first step toward independence by renting a small space in town to serve local clients, but her business remained fragile and constrained by limited capital and training.
Through Hands of Hope Africa’s vocational and financial literacy training, Lydia learned how to produce her own soap and shampoo and received a small loan to grow her salon. Today, she earns income from multiple streams—including hair services, soap and cosmetic sales—and has expanded her customer base. With growing demand, Lydia now employs trainees to help run her shop, building both a sustainable business and opportunities for others in her community.
Measuring Impact →
Stories like Sylvia’s and Lydia’s show what’s possible, but lasting impact requires more than one-time capital. At Hands of Hope, we pair every loan with ongoing mentorship and structured data tracking to ensure women are supported, businesses are sustainable, and progress is measurable over time.
This approach allows us to learn what works, adapt quickly, and remain accountable to both the women we serve and the supporters who make this work possible.
Weekly Mentorship & Monitoring
Each savings group is visited weekly by our coordinators and mentors who:
Review business activity and challenges
Monitor loan use and repayment progress
Provide coaching on sales, inventory, and savings habits
This consistent presence helps women problem-solve early before small setbacks become failures.
Business & Income Tracking
We collect data throughout the loan cycle, including:
Type of business activity started or expanded
Weekly income and sales patterns
Costs, profits, and reinvestment decisions
Loan repayment consistency
This ensures loans are used for business activity , not short-term consumption.
Savings & Financial Behavior
Because long-term financial inclusion is the goal, we track:
Group savings contributions
Use of lockboxes and group bank accounts
Transitions from cash-only systems to formal banking
For many participants, this is their first ever experience saving consistently.
