
Nearly 1 in 2 people will get cancer in their lifetime*. All of us can support the research that will beat it.

Our Recruitment Beats Cancer boards harness their networks to host prestigious events to fundraise for Cancer Research UK. Guests are treated to an evening of fine dining, networking, inspiring talks from influential industry leaders and Cancer Research UK experts, and exciting auctions and raffles.
Over the last 50 years, Cancer Research UK’s work has helped double cancer survival in the UK. Every pound raised supports our life-saving research.

There are lots of different ways you can get involved.
Set up a new Recruitment Beats Cancer board - We can help you set up a new board in your area.
Join our existing Recruitment Beats Cancer board - Our inaugural Recruitment Beats Cancer board is actively looking for members.
Attend a Recruitment Beats Cancer event - enjoy an evening of fine dining, networking, auctions and raffles, hosted by our Recruitment Beats Cancer board.
Donate to our Recruitment Beats Cancer board - donate to our board to help fund life-saving cancer research. You can also donate an auction or raffle prize.
No matter how you choose to support our boards, our team is here to guide you every step of the way, offering everything from advice to event delivery support.

Find out about Recruitment Beats Cancer Scotland.
Thanks to advances in cancer prevention, diagnosis and treatment, more than one million deaths have been avoided in the UK since the mid-1980s.* But we have so much more to do. Every pound raised helps power progress.

8 in 10 people who receive cancer drugs on the NHS in the UK receive a drug developed by us*.

We helped fund cutting-edge research that discovered two sub-types of prostate cancer using AI.

We are co-funding trailblazing researchers to help develop the worlds first vaccine to prevent lung cancer.
Find out about the other board types you can get involved with.
*cruk.org/lifetimerisk
*The mid-1980s is when cancer mortality rates started falling. If they’d remained at their peak levels, there would have been more than a million additional deaths between then and now.