Kindora
FeaturesSocial Impact InvestmentsPricing
AboutLive Demos
Sign InSign Up
    Kindora
    FeaturesSocial Impact InvestmentsPricing
    AboutLive Demos
    Sign InSign Up
    1. Home
    2. Foundations
    3. Shelter Providers of Phoenix
    Shelter Providers of Phoenix logo

    Shelter Providers of Phoenix

    ActiveHousing & Shelter
    SCOTTSDALE, AZWebsite4803595523

    About Shelter Providers of Phoenix

    Shelter Providers of Phoenix focuses on supporting frontline housing and crisis services for people experiencing homelessness, domestic violence, and family instability in the Phoenix metro area. Their giving emphasizes direct service providers that operate shelters, transitional housing and wraparound programs for women, families, and vulnerable youth. Grants appear to be pragmatic and local—funding program operations and capacity of established community organizations rather than one-off national initiatives.

    Focus Areas

    Emergency and transitional shelters for women and families (e.g., Maggie’s Place)Domestic violence shelter and survivor services (e.g., Sojourner Center)Youth and family homelessness prevention and supportive housing (e.g., Thrive AZ)Re-entry, case management and legal-support services tied to housing stability (e.g., House of Refuge)Local Catholic-charitable and community-based social services (e.g., St. Vincent de Paul)

    Who They Fund

    people experiencing homelessnessindividuals and families at risk of homelessness

    About Shelter Providers of Phoenix

    Shelter Providers of Phoenix centers its giving on emergency shelter, transitional housing, and crisis services for people facing homelessness, domestic violence, and family instability in the Phoenix area. The largest recent grant in the data, $222,007 to Maggies Place in Phoenix, points to a preference for direct support of organizations serving women and families. Another major grant, $214,776 to Sojourner Center, shows continued backing for survivor services tied to domestic violence. The foundation’s recent awards also reach organizations working with youth and families at risk of housing loss, including Thrive AZ and House of Refuge, suggesting a portfolio built around housing stability rather than broad social-service funding. Across the recent grants list, the recipients are all Arizona organizations, with awards concentrated in Phoenix and nearby cities. The pattern reflects support for local providers that run shelters, transitional housing, and related wraparound services for vulnerable households. Leadership is listed under Cindy Quenneville.

    What Shelter Providers of Phoenix Funds

    A clear thread in the foundation’s giving is shelter and transitional housing for women and families. In 2025, it gave $222,007 to Maggies Place in Phoenix, a grant that aligns with emergency and transitional housing support. Domestic violence services are another recurring focus: the 2024 award of $214,776 to Sojourner Center in Phoenix fits that category. The foundation also supports organizations tied to homelessness prevention and housing stability for youth and families; Thrive AZ in Peoria received $84,599 in 2025. Re-entry and case-management services connected to housing are also part of the mix, as shown by the $75,016 grant to House of Refuge in Mesa. A smaller award to Keys to Change in Phoenix indicates support for local housing-response infrastructure as well.

    How Shelter Providers of Phoenix Gives

    The foundation’s typical grant size is tightly clustered: p25, median, and p75 are all $214,776. That indicates a small set of grants at nearly identical levels, rather than a wide spread of awards. Recent grants include both 2024 and 2025, suggesting ongoing annual grantmaking rather than a single isolated cycle. The foundation is not listed as funding individuals and does not make program-related investments. Its recent awards are local and Arizona-based, with all listed recipients in the state.

    Financial Snapshot

    Annual Giving

    $427K

    Total Assets

    $833K

    Total Revenue

    $903K

    Total Expenses

    $636K

    Typical Grant Size

    Most grants fall between $215K and $215K, with a median of $215K.

    25th Percentile

    $215K

    Median

    $215K

    75th Percentile

    $215K

    Geographic Reach

    Local1 state funded

    About 100% of grants go to recipients in AZ.

    Funding intensity
    Low
    High
    Headquarters

    Leadership

    CINDY QUENNEVILLE

    Deep Analysis

    Unlock Deep Analysis

    Sign up for a free Kindora account to access AI-generated insights into this funder's giving patterns, decision-makers, and fit signals.

    Get Started Free

    Similar Funders

    See Similar Funders

    Free Kindora accounts unlock side-by-side comparisons with foundations that share this funder's focus areas and giving profile.

    Get Started Free

    Explore related grant guides

    Homelessness GrantsGrants in Arizona

    Want a Personalized Pitch for Shelter Providers of Phoenix?

    Sign up free to see how well your nonprofit fits this funder, get an AI-generated pitch, and unlock similar foundations.

    Get Started FreeView Pricing
    Free plan available
    No contracts
    Cancel anytime
    Free Weekly Newsletter

    The Grant Brief

    Weekly grant intelligence for social impact leaders. Curated opportunities, funding trends, and strategic insights — free.

    Join 500+ social impact leaders. Unsubscribe anytime. Privacy Policy

    Trusted by mission-driven teams at organizations nationwide

    Kindora Logo

    At Kindora, we combine data-driven insights with a human touch to create meaningful, strategic fundraising solutions for mission-driven organizations of all sizes.

    Get The Grant Brief — free weekly grant intelligence

    Quick Links

    • Features
    • Social Impact Investments
    • About Us
    • Mission
    • How It Works
    • Pricing
    • Sales deck
    • Philanthropy Jobs
    • Nonprofit Compensation
    • Live demo (every plan)
    • Individual prospecting demoBeta
    • Blog
    • FAQ
    • Getting Started

    Connect With Us

    LinkedInTwitterFacebook

    Find Grants

    Grants by CauseGrants by StateFoundations by CityEducation GrantsHealth GrantsArts & Culture GrantsEnvironment GrantsCommunity Development GrantsYouth Development Grants

    © 2026 Kindora. All rights reserved.

    Privacy PolicyTerms of ServiceSystem Status
    EIN: 37-1945833
    2 filings on record
    See If You're a Fit — FreeFree account · instant fit score · similar funders

    Giving Approach

    Concentrated local giving: relatively few, moderately large grants focused on repeat core service providers and shelter operators in the Phoenix area; funding appears aimed at program/operational support rather than broad grantmaking across many sectors.

    Funding Style

    direct service (construction of housing/program facilities)capital projects / facility developmentcommunity engagement and volunteer-driven implementationskills-building through education and training

    Notable grantees: Maggie’s Place, Sojourner Center, Thrive AZ, House of Refuge, St. Vincent de Paul

    Topics

    safe and dignified housing constructionprogrammatic facilities for service delivery (shelters, transitional housing)homelessness prevention and housing stabilityconstruction-related education and workforce developmentcommunity-based volunteer mobilization

    Where Shelter Providers of Phoenix Makes Grants

    All of the recent grants in the data went to Arizona organizations, and 100% of grants were awarded to recipients in the HQ state. Phoenix received multiple awards, including Maggies Place, Sojourner Center, St Vincent De Paul, and Keys to Change. Other Arizona cities appearing in the list are Peoria and Mesa. The pattern is local rather than regional or national, with no non-U.S. recipient countries listed.

    Frequently Asked Questions About Shelter Providers of Phoenix

    What kinds of organizations does Shelter Providers of Phoenix support?

    It supports direct service organizations working on emergency shelter, transitional housing, domestic violence survivor services, and homelessness prevention for women, families, youth, and vulnerable households. Recent recipients include Maggies Place, Sojourner Center, Thrive AZ, House of Refuge, St Vincent De Paul, and Keys to Change.

    What is the typical grant size?

    The grant-size distribution is very consistent: p25, median, and p75 are all $214,776. That means the recent awards cluster around a single amount rather than varying widely.

    Where do its grants go?

    All of the listed grants go to Arizona recipients, with 100% of grants in the HQ state. Phoenix appears most often, and other recipient cities in the data include Peoria and Mesa.

    Does the foundation fund individuals or make program-related investments?

    No. The profile lists Funds individuals as False and Makes program-related investments as False, so the giving shown here is through grants to organizations.

    Are the recent grants recurring or one-time awards?

    The recent grants show activity in both 2024 and 2025, including a 2024 grant to Sojourner Center and multiple 2025 grants. That points to continued grantmaking over more than one year.

    Latest 990 Filing

    2025

    Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.

    Recent Grants

    Most recent grants reported to the IRS.

    RecipientLocationAmountYearPurpose
    MAGGIES PLACEPHOENIX, AZ$222,0072025—
    THRIVE AZPEORIA, AZ$84,5992025—
    HOUSE OF REFUGEMESA, AZ$75,0162025—
    ST VINCENT DE PAULPHOENIX, AZ$31,2732025—
    KEYS TO CHANGEPHOENIX, AZ$13,9532025—
    SOJOURNER CENTERPHOENIX, AZ$214,7762024—

    MAGGIES PLACE

    $222,007
    PHOENIX, AZ2025

    THRIVE AZ

    $84,599
    PEORIA, AZ2025

    HOUSE OF REFUGE

    $75,016
    MESA, AZ2025

    ST VINCENT DE PAUL

    $31,273
    PHOENIX, AZ2025

    KEYS TO CHANGE

    $13,953
    PHOENIX, AZ2025

    SOJOURNER CENTER

    $214,776
    PHOENIX, AZ2024