The 5P Foundation is a highly focused health-oriented funder that concentrates its giving on a single organization supporting people with blood disorders. All recorded grants are repeat, unrestricted/general-purpose awards to the same grantee, indicating a preference for sustaining an established partner rather than distributing funds broadly. The foundation appears to prioritize core operational support for organizations addressing blood disorder needs.
Concentrated and repeat: a small number of relatively large grants exclusively to a single organization, provided as general-purpose (unrestricted) support.
The largest recorded grants from 5p Foundation go to Pahuja Trust for Blood Disorders in New Delhi, including a $250,000 award in 2025 and a $400,000 award in 2023, both for general purposes. That repeated support makes the foundation’s core pattern clear: it backs a single blood-disorder nonprofit with substantial unrestricted funding, rather than spreading gifts widely across many institutions. The same recipient also received a $100,000 grant in 2023, reinforcing the relationship over multiple years. Beyond that central partnership, the foundation’s recent giving shows smaller general-purpose awards to health and community organizations in the United States. VCU Massey Cancer Center in Richmond received $20,000, and Virginia Treatment Center for Children in Richmond received $10,000. The broader record includes grants to organizations such as Plan International USA, Vedic Somaj NJ Inc, and World Food Program USA, but the clearest defining feature remains the sustained support for blood-disorder services through one primary grantee.
Health-related giving dominates the foundation’s identifiable pattern. In blood disorder support, 5p Foundation gave $250,000 in 2025 and $400,000 in 2023 to Pahuja Trust for Blood Disorders for general purposes, showing repeated unrestricted backing for that work. The foundation also supported cancer-related research and treatment infrastructure in Richmond through a $20,000 grant to VCU Massey Cancer Center for general purposes. In child and family services, it made a $10,000 general-purpose grant to Virginia Treatment Center for Children. A smaller set of grants went to organizations with broader humanitarian, educational, or community-service missions, including Plan International USA, World Food Program USA, and No Kid Hungry. Those awards were materially smaller than the blood-disorder grants and were also designated for general purposes.
Typical grant size is modest relative to the largest awards, with a p25 of $1,010, a median of $10,000, and a p75 of $20,000. The distribution is shaped by a few very large unrestricted grants, especially the repeated support to one blood-disorder grantee. The record shows a recurring relationship rather than one-off giving: the same primary recipient appears in multiple years, including 2023 and 2025. Grants are made as general-purpose support, and the foundation is not a funder of individuals. It also has a regional giving scope.
$250K
$1.6M
$273K
$261K
Most grants fall between $1K and $20K, with a median of $10K.
25th Percentile
$1K
Median
$10K
75th Percentile
$20K
About 40% of grants go to recipients in VA.
Top 2 recipient countries by grant volume for 5p Foundation.
| Rank | Country | Grants | Total | Share |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | United StatesDomestic | 10 | $62K | 76.9% |
| 2 | India | 3 | $750K |
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Notable grantees: Pahuja Trust for Blood Disorders
Grant recipients are split mostly between the United States and India, with 10 grants to US recipients and 3 to India. Virginia is the top state by grant count, and 40% of grants go to recipients in the foundation’s headquarters state. Named recipient locations include Richmond, Virginia; New Delhi, India; Warwick, Rhode Island; Basking Ridge, New Jersey; Troy, Michigan; Washington, DC; Buckingham, Virginia; McMinnville, Tennessee; and Fairfax, Virginia. The strongest concentration is in Virginia, but the largest individual awards in the record went to New Delhi.
The clearest focus is support for blood disorder treatment, research, and patient services. The recent grant record shows repeated general-purpose funding to Pahuja Trust for Blood Disorders in New Delhi across multiple years, including very large awards in 2023 and 2025.
It shows a repeat-grant pattern. The same primary grantee appears in multiple years, with a $400,000 grant in 2023, a $100,000 grant in 2023, and a $250,000 grant in 2025, all for general purposes.
The grant-size distribution is small-to-midrange for most awards: p25 is $1,010, median is $10,000, and p75 is $20,000. A few much larger grants sit above that range and drive the overall pattern.
Virginia is the top state by grant count, and 40% of grants go to recipients in Virginia. Recent Virginia recipients include organizations in Richmond, Buckingham, and Fairfax.
Yes. The recipient country distribution includes 3 grants to India, and the largest recorded awards went to New Delhi-based Pahuja Trust for Blood Disorders.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Recipient country reflects the grantee's headquarters per IRS 990-PF and Schedule F filings, not the program's implementation country.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PAHUJA TRUST FOR BLOOD DISORDERS | NEW DELHI | $250,000 | 2025 | GENERAL PURPOSES (EQUIVALENCY DETERMINATION AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST) |
| PAHUJA TRUST FOR BLOOD DISORDERS | NEW DELHI | $400,000 | 2023 | GENERAL PURPOSES |
| PAHUJA TRUST FOR BLOOD DISORDERS | NEW DELHI | $100,000 | 2023 | GENERAL PURPOSES |
| VCU MASSEY CANCER CENTER | RICHMOND, VA | $20,000 | 2023 | GENERAL PURPOSES |
| PLAN INTERNATIONAL USA | WARWICK, RI | $15,000 | 2023 | GENERAL PURPOSES |
| VIRGINIA TREATMENT CENTER FOR CHILDREN | RICHMOND, VA | $10,000 | 2023 | GENERAL PURPOSES |
| VEDIC SOMAJ NJ INC | BASKING RIDGE, NJ | $10,000 | 2023 | GENERAL PURPOSES |
| ARYA PRATINIDHI SABHA AMERICA | TROY, MI | $2,500 | 2023 | GENERAL PURPOSES |
| WORLD FOOD PROGRAM USA | WASHINGTON, DC | $1,030 | 2023 | GENERAL PURPOSES |
| YOGAVILE | BUCKINGHAM, VA | $1,010 | 2023 | GENERAL PURPOSES |
| ISHA FOUNDATION | MCMINNVILLE, TN | $1,000 | 2023 | GENERAL PURPOSES |
| SEVA TRUCK | FAIRFAX, VA | $512 | 2023 | GENERAL PURPOSES |
| NO KID HUNGRY | WASHINGTON, DC | $500 | 2023 | GENERAL PURPOSES |
PAHUJA TRUST FOR BLOOD DISORDERS
$250,000GENERAL PURPOSES (EQUIVALENCY DETERMINATION AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST)
PAHUJA TRUST FOR BLOOD DISORDERS
$400,000GENERAL PURPOSES
PAHUJA TRUST FOR BLOOD DISORDERS
$100,000GENERAL PURPOSES
VCU MASSEY CANCER CENTER
$20,000GENERAL PURPOSES
PLAN INTERNATIONAL USA
$15,000GENERAL PURPOSES
VIRGINIA TREATMENT CENTER FOR CHILDREN
$10,000GENERAL PURPOSES
VEDIC SOMAJ NJ INC
$10,000GENERAL PURPOSES
ARYA PRATINIDHI SABHA AMERICA
$2,500GENERAL PURPOSES
WORLD FOOD PROGRAM USA
$1,030GENERAL PURPOSES
YOGAVILE
$1,010GENERAL PURPOSES
ISHA FOUNDATION
$1,000GENERAL PURPOSES
SEVA TRUCK
$512GENERAL PURPOSES
NO KID HUNGRY
$500GENERAL PURPOSES