ActBlue raised $19 million in its first three years, from 2004 to 2007. In the 2005–2006 campaign, the site raised $17 million for 1500 Democratic candidates, with $15.5 million going to congressional campaigns. By August 2007, the site had raised $25.5 million. In 2016, ActBlue took in nearly $800 million in small-dollar donations. In the 2018 midterm elections, Democratic candidates fundraised $1.6 billion through ActBlue's platform. In 2019, ActBlue raised roughly $1 billion for Democratic campaigns.
The Daily Beast noted that between January and mid-July 2019, ActBlue brought in $420 million. In 2020, several fundraising records were broken. In the week following the
murder of George Floyd, on May 31, over $19 million was raised, the highest single-day total so far that year. On June 1, that yearly record was again broken with $20 million in donations. Over half of all donations in the following week went to charitable (non-political) causes, including one ActBlue page devoted to a
bail fund which raised over $1.5 million from over 20,000 donors. In the day following
the death of Supreme Court Justice
Ruth Bader Ginsburg, over $70 million was donated through ActBlue, again breaking the single-day fundraising record. In 2022, ActBlue brought in $20.6 million on the day the Supreme Court issued its opinion in ''
Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization''. In the first 24 hours following the launch of
Kamala Harris's presidential campaign,
small-dollar and many first-time donors raised $81 million through ActBlue, making it the biggest 24 hour period ever on the platform for dollars raised sitewide. Over the first weekend, they raised $100 million from 1.1 million donors. == Fraud allegations ==