Your campus has more to give than you think.
Students miss free meals, spare textbooks, pantry restocks, and shared supplies every day because the signal never reaches them in time.
Last confirmed 3 min ago. Countdown stays live so students only walk when the odds are good.
A campus can be full of support and still feel invisible.
of students face food insecurity while balancing class, rent, and transportation.
in average annual food costs can shape whether a student can stay focused and enrolled.
free meals, extra supplies, and event leftovers can go unclaimed across campus every week.
Built for fast campus moments, not for perfect planning.
Someone shares
A student drops a pin for free pizza, a pantry restock, or leftover event materials in under a minute.
Your campus verifies
The trust layer keeps posts honest with live still-there and gone confirmations before anyone walks across campus.
You grab it
Students filter by category, distance, and freshness so the map feels useful instead of noisy.
Practical product decisions for a problem students feel every week.
Real-time map
Pins appear the moment someone shares something useful, so the product feels alive instead of stale.
Community verification
Still-there and gone votes create a lightweight trust layer that keeps the map dependable.
Smart notifications
Watch zones surface new resources near your classes without spamming every event across campus.
Contribution rewards
Points, badges, and the monthly leaderboard reward students who post real, useful information.
CampusShare started with a familiar UNT pattern: free food disappearing in fifteen minutes, students hearing about it an hour too late, and useful supplies sitting unseen in the next building over. We wanted a product that felt credible enough to trust, fast enough to use between classes, and generous enough to make campus resources actually circulate.
The best signal is when students change their route because they trust the map.
“I found free lab goggles someone posted outside the Chemistry Building and picked them up before my afternoon lab started.”
“The verification system matters. If two people say it is gone, I do not waste time walking across campus hoping there is still pizza left.”
“I set a watch zone around Willis Library and got a notification for donated calc textbooks ten minutes before my study group.”