Jog Your Memory 5K Inc concentrates its philanthropic activity on funding research to find a cure for Alzheimer’s disease, directing the vast majority of its dollars to biomedical research organizations and a smaller amount to elderly services related to dementia. Its giving is mission-focused and research-driven, favoring established research nonprofits over a broad portfolio of causes.
Highly concentrated giving: a few large grants (three to Cure Alzheimer's Fund) account for most dollars, with occasional smaller gifts to related elder-service groups; repeat, heavyweight support to the same national research nonprofit.
Jog Your Memory 5k Inc centers its philanthropy on research aimed at finding a cure for Alzheimer’s disease, with nearly all recent dollars flowing to biomedical research rather than a wide mix of charitable fields. The largest recent award on file was $280,424 to Cure Alzheimer's Fund in 2024 for research toward a cure, followed by another $219,739 grant to the same organization in 2023. In 2025, the foundation again supported Cure Alzheimer's Fund with a $200,000 grant for the same purpose, showing a continued commitment to a single research-oriented pipeline. The grant record also includes a smaller $93,011 award labeled Numerous Grants in 2025 for research toward a cure, alongside a $10,000 grant to Elderly Services. That pattern points to a funder that keeps its main emphasis on Alzheimer’s research while also making limited support available for dementia-related services. The organization’s grantmaking is tightly defined by mission, and the named recipients suggest a preference for established nonprofits working on research and care connected to dementia.
The core topic is Alzheimer’s disease cure research. In 2024, Jog Your Memory 5k Inc gave $280,424 to Cure Alzheimer's Fund for research toward a cure, and it repeated that support in 2023 with a $219,739 grant for the same purpose. A further $200,000 grant in 2025 continued that pattern. A second theme is broader research support. The foundation awarded $93,011 in 2025 to Numerous Grants, also labeled for research toward a cure, which suggests it allocates some funding beyond a single recipient while staying within the same disease mission. The only non-research line item in the recent record is a $10,000 grant to Elderly Services in 2025. That places a smaller share of the foundation’s activity in dementia-related services for older adults.
Typical grant size is substantial: the 25th percentile is $93,011, the median is $200,000, and the 75th percentile is $219,739. The recent record shows repeated support across multiple years, including back-to-back grants to the same research organization in 2023, 2024, and 2025. That indicates recurring support rather than one-off giving. The foundation’s total assets are modest relative to annual grants, and the record shows no program-related investments and no individual giving.
$803K
$90K
$284K
$332K
Most grants fall between $93K and $220K, with a median of $200K.
25th Percentile
$93K
Median
$200K
75th Percentile
$220K
JESSICA RICE
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Notable grantees: Cure Alzheimer's Fund, Numerous Grants (aggregated Alzheimer’s research grants), Elderly Services
All recent grants went to recipients in the US, accounting for 100% of the listed grant count. The recipient distribution does not show non-U.S. countries. Because the recent-grants table provided here does not include recipient city fields, the geography that can be stated with confidence is national rather than city-specific. The foundation’s giving is therefore documented as U.S.-based in recipient location, not concentrated in Massachusetts.
Its recent grantmaking is centered on Alzheimer’s disease cure research. Three of the four larger recent grants went to Cure Alzheimer's Fund, with purposes labeled research for cure, and the remaining research grant went to Numerous Grants for the same purpose.
Yes. The recent record includes a $10,000 grant to Elderly Services in 2025, which fits the foundation’s smaller line of support for dementia-related elderly services alongside its main research focus.
Recent grants are relatively large for the foundation’s asset base. The 25th percentile is $93,011, the median is $200,000, and the 75th percentile is $219,739.
The record shows recurring support. Cure Alzheimer's Fund received grants in 2023, 2024, and 2025, which suggests the foundation repeatedly funds the same research pathway over multiple years.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CURE ALZHEIMER'S FUND | — | $200,000 | 2025 | RESEARCH FOR CURE |
| NUMEROUS GRANTS | — | $93,011 | 2025 | RESEARCH FOR CURE |
| ELDERLY SERVICES | — | $10,000 | 2025 | RESEARCH FOR CURE |
| CURE ALZHEIMER'S FUND | — | $280,424 | 2024 | RESEARCH FOR CURE |
| CURE ALZHEIMER'S FUND | — | $219,739 | 2023 | RESEARCH FOR CURE |
CURE ALZHEIMER'S FUND
$200,000RESEARCH FOR CURE
NUMEROUS GRANTS
$93,011RESEARCH FOR CURE
ELDERLY SERVICES
$10,000RESEARCH FOR CURE
CURE ALZHEIMER'S FUND
$280,424RESEARCH FOR CURE
CURE ALZHEIMER'S FUND
$219,739RESEARCH FOR CURE