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WHO WE ARE

Negros Women for Tomorrow Foundation was founded in 1984 and has since empowered women and families, and communities in the Philippines through microfinance services.

It has operated as a non-governmental organization for over 40 years and as a Microfinance Institution for over 35 years, using the Grameen method. The foundation focuses on helping clients achieve self-sufficiency through various microfinance loan products, helping them gain access to financial capital, essential skills, and knowledge needed to improve their lives.

The organization’s efforts have positively impacted nearly 600,000 clients across Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao with 350 branches, hoping to reach more women, families, and communities nationwide.

The Negros Women for Tomorrow Foundation, Inc. will continue to pave the way for sustainable progress and inclusive growth in communities, one empowered woman at a time.

OUR MISSION

To provide sustainable financial and client-responsive developmental services to the poor.

OUR VISION

A sustainable institution of change: Building vibrant, “Dungganon” communities.

WHAT WE DO

ENVIRONMENT

HEALTH & WELLNESS

EDUCATION & TRAINING

MICROFINANCE

SOCIAL BUSINESS

TECHNOLOGY

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Building Sustainable Communities

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Clients Served
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Dungganon Branches
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NWTF Group Employees

CLIENT STORIES

Virginia Lubguban

Virginia and Aly Lubguban had foresight, were goal-oriented, and always worked as a team. Early in their marriage they invested in planting Gmelina (Beechwood) trees on their property in the [...]

Zosima Ybañez

Zosima first started buying and selling firewood that she would peddle to bakeries across her town. Parents of 10 children, she and her husband, Remigio, knew that they needed to [...]

Jesusa Altamera

Like countless others in her community, Jesusa Altamera was no stranger to poverty. It was a constant struggle to provide for her three growing children. Her husband, Gilberto’s, wages wasn’t [...]

Daria Ango

Daria Ango was content living her life as a housewife to her husband, Agapito. She would spend her days on watching their four girls while Agapito worked delivering water around [...]

Myrna Millarez

Myrna and her husband, Guillermo, met while she was in high school and married after graduation. They lived in a bamboo hut with a roof weaved from coconut leaves. Myrna [...]

Mary Jane Lagunay

Mary Jane shared a shanty with her husband’s siblings in a fishing village. Living conditions were poor and unhealthy, especially for their children. Their worst fears were realized when their [...]

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