PERC is dedicated to advancing conservation through markets, incentives, property rights, and partnerships.
Property and Environment Research Center’s largest recent grant was $60,000 to Petrich Family for Paradise Valley, a signal that the funder’s work reaches beyond policy writing into place-based conservation issues. The organization funds projects tied to conservation through markets, incentives, property rights, and partnerships, with recent support spanning outreach, conservation innovation, and a research lab in Wyoming. Its 2025 grants also included awards to State Policy Network in Arlington, National Review Institute in New York, and Theodore Roosevelt Conserva in Washington, showing a mix of policy-oriented and field-facing work. PERC’s grantmaking reflects a small number of relatively focused awards rather than many small transactions, and its active programs reinforce that pattern through fellowships and a virtual fencing fund. Those programs point to interest in research, testing, and deployment rather than general operating support. The foundation’s profile is shaped by conservation policy, land stewardship, and practical tools that connect wildlife, ranching, recreation, and water use.
PERC’s focus areas cluster around conservation policy and applied land management. In public lands and outdoor recreation, the foundation gave $20,000 to State Policy Network for outreach, suggesting an interest in policy communications around land and resource issues. In wildlife and ranching innovation, it awarded $10,000 to Bim Kendall House - Uni of Wy for a conservation innovation lab, aligning with its virtual fencing work and broader interest in wildlife-livestock coexistence. The foundation also supports the research side of conservation law and policy: its fellowship program invites scholars, lawyers, and graduate students to work on environmental challenges at PERC headquarters in Bozeman. Water conservation and market-based conservation innovation are part of the stated focus set, linking the grants to a broader incentive-driven approach rather than a single-issue strategy.
Typical grants sit in a relatively narrow band: the 25th percentile is $10,000, the median is $12,500, and the 75th percentile is $20,000. One recent award was materially larger at $60,000, which shows that the foundation can make outsized grants when a project fits its priorities. The 2025 list also suggests a mix of one-off awards and program-linked support rather than repeated funding to the same recipient in the data provided. PERC is a regular funder, not a DAF, and it does not fund individuals or make program-related investments. Its active fellowship and virtual-fencing programs indicate support for research, testing, and implementation.
$113K
$12.4M
$6.8M
$4.4M
Most grants fall between $10K and $20K, with a median of $13K.
25th Percentile
$10K
Median
$13K
75th Percentile
$20K
About 20% of grants go to recipients in VA.
BRIAN YABLONSKI
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Grant recipients are all in the United States, with a national footprint. The top state by grant count is Virginia, while 20% of grants went to recipients in Montana. Recent awards reached Livingston, Arlington, New York, Washington, and Laramie, showing a spread from the Mountain West to the East Coast. That pattern fits a national funder with a strong Montana presence but a broader policy and conservation network.
The foundation funds conservation through markets, incentives, property rights, and partnerships. Its stated focus areas include public lands funding and management, wildlife management and conservation, forest restoration and wildfire risk reduction, outdoor recreation and park funding, water conservation and water markets, and market-based conservation innovation.
Typical awards are concentrated in a fairly tight range. The 25th percentile is $10,000, the median is $12,500, and the 75th percentile is $20,000. A recent grant of $60,000 sits above that usual range.
The top state by grant count is Virginia. Montana accounts for 20% of grants, and the recent recipient list also includes New York, Washington, and Wyoming, which points to a national giving pattern rather than a single-state focus.
It does not fund individuals. The active PERC Fellowships program invites scholars, lawyers, and graduate students to work at its Bozeman headquarters, but the program description says it does not accept unsolicited applications.
Two active programs are listed: PERC Fellowships and the Virtual Fencing Fund, also described as Virtual Fence Grants. The fellowship program supports research at PERC headquarters in Bozeman, while the virtual fencing effort subsidizes or awards grants for deploying and testing virtual fencing technology on ranches.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PETRICH FAMILY | LIVINGSTON, MT | $60,000 | 2025 | PARADISE VALLEY |
| STATE POLICY NETWORK | ARLINGTON, VA | $20,000 | 2025 | OUTREACH |
| NATIONAL REVIEW INSTITUTE | NEW YORK, NY | $12,500 | 2025 | OUTREACH |
| THEODORE ROOSEEVELET CONSERVA | WASHINGTON, DC | $10,000 | 2025 | OUTREACH |
| BIM KENDALL HOUSE - UNI OF WY | LARAMIE, WY | $10,000 | 2025 | CONSERVATION INNOVATION LAB |
PETRICH FAMILY
$60,000PARADISE VALLEY
STATE POLICY NETWORK
$20,000OUTREACH
NATIONAL REVIEW INSTITUTE
$12,500OUTREACH
THEODORE ROOSEEVELET CONSERVA
$10,000OUTREACH
BIM KENDALL HOUSE - UNI OF WY
$10,000CONSERVATION INNOVATION LAB