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    3. James Irvine Foundation
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    James Irvine Foundation

    ActivePhilanthropy & VoluntarismFunds Individuals
    San Francisco, CAWebsite4157772244

    About James Irvine Foundation

    The James Irvine Foundation concentrates funding in California with an emphasis on building inclusive regional economies, worker power, and civic engagement for low-income communities and communities of color. They fund intermediaries, community foundations, and grassroots organizations to advance fair work, workforce training/apprenticeships, and place‑based economic development in Inland Empire, Central Valley, Stockton and Bay Area neighborhoods. Grants frequently support policy and organizing campaigns, capacity building, and multi‑partner initiatives that connect local organizing to statewide policy change.

    Focus Areas

    Workforce advancement and apprenticeship capacity in California (Better Careers, apprenticeship programs)Fair work and low-wage worker organizing (Fair Work in California, domestic and warehouse workers)Place-based economic inclusion in Inland Empire, Central Valley, and StocktonCapacity building and pooled funding for community foundations and intermediariesLatino and other communities of color leadership and civic engagement (Latino Power Fund, leadership fellowships)

    Who They Fund

    low-wage workers in California (including day laborers and domestic workers)

    About James Irvine Foundation

    The James Irvine Foundation’s largest recent grants point to a clear pattern: it backs California intermediaries that can move money into worker organizing, community economic development, and housing advocacy at scale. In 2023, it gave $15,000,000 to Tides Center to strengthen worker organizations in California, followed that with $14,000,000 to Sierra Health Foundation Center for Health Pr to launch CEMI, and later used similar large grants to expand statewide efforts tied to fair work and inclusive economies. That emphasis shows up across several parts of its portfolio. The foundation funds community foundations, university-based centers, and coalition intermediaries rather than only direct service providers. Recent examples include $10,440,000 to Central Valley Community Foundation for Fresno’s inclusive economy and $9,345,000 to Inland Empire Community Foundation for community economic development. It also supports housing and labor infrastructure, with major awards to organizations such as San Francisco Foundation, Amalgamated Charitable Foundation Inc, and Regents of the University of California. The pattern is consistent with a funder focused on building regional capacity, worker power, and policy-oriented partnerships in California.

    What James Irvine Foundation Funds

    Workforce development is a major thread in the foundation’s giving. It awarded $4,400,000 to Foundation for California Community Colleges to support Better Careers in California, and $6,500,000 to Regents of the University of California on behalf of its Merced campus for the Community and Labor Center. The same area also includes support for apprenticeships and workforce systems through intermediary partners. Fair work and worker rights are another clear area. The foundation gave $3,600,000 to National Domestic Workers Alliance Inc to support Fair Work in California, $3,700,000 to PowerSwitch Action to support low-income workers in California, and $2,600,000 to Regents of the University of California on behalf of its Los Angeles campus to support workers' rights organizations. Housing advocacy appears in the grant list as well. It provided $7,550,000 to San Francisco Foundation to support Housing Affordability in California, $7,500,000 to the same foundation to expand the capacity of housing advocates, and $3,100,000 to Liberty Hill Foundation to support tenant organizing.

    How James Irvine Foundation Gives

    Financial Snapshot

    Annual Giving

    $155.3M

    Total Assets

    $3.4B

    Total Revenue

    $350.2M

    Total Expenses

    $196M

    Typical Grant Size

    Most grants fall between $3K and $200K, with a median of $10K.

    25th Percentile

    $3K

    Median

    $10K

    75th Percentile

    $200K

    Geographic Reach

    Local18 states funded

    About 88% of grants go to recipients in CA.

    Funding intensity
    Low
    High
    Headquarters

    Leadership

    DONALD J HOWARD

    PRES/CEO/DIR

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    Privacy PolicyTerms of ServiceSystem Status
    EIN (Tax ID): 94-1236937Latest Form 990: 2025Total assets: $3.4B3 filings on recordFind their full 990 filing →
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    Latino workers and Latino communities
    Black communities / Black-led organizations
    Tribal communities in California
    AAPI communities
    tenants and low-income renters
    youth (e.g., Stockton youth)
    low-income entrepreneurs and worker-owned business participants
    priority / historically marginalized communities in California

    Giving Approach

    Concentrated, California-focused grantmaking that mixes multi-year, sizable investments in intermediaries and community foundations with repeated operating and program support to grassroots organizations; pattern favors repeat grantees and collaborative pooled funds rather than many one-off small grants.

    Funding Style

    general operating supportcapacity building and organizational strengtheningseed / pooled fund creationprogram expansion and new initiative launchpartnerships and collaborative funding (community-labor, coalitions)

    Notable grantees: Tides Center, Inland Empire Community Foundation, Chinese Progressive Association, Sierra Health Foundation, PolicyLink

    Topics

    worker rights and low-wage workforce support (including day laborers and domestic workers)housing affordability, tenant organizing, and pooled housing fundsinclusive economic development and community ownershipworkforce development, apprenticeships, and quality jobscivic engagement and political power-building for communities of color (Latino, Black, AAPI)climate resilience and nonprofit resilience fundingresearch, policy change, and public program improvement

    Grant sizes range widely. In the provided distribution, the 25th percentile is $2,763, the median is $10,000, and the 75th percentile is $200,000, showing a mix of small grants and large institutional awards. The foundation is a regular funder and appears to use both one-time and repeated support across years, including multiple grants to the same intermediaries and initiatives. The recent record also shows several general operating support awards, along with program launches, capacity-building grants, and collaborative fund structures. It does fund individuals, but the grants list here centers on organizations and pooled intermediaries.

    Where James Irvine Foundation Makes Grants

    This is a California-centered grantmaker: 88% of its grants go to recipients in California, and the top state by grant count is CA. Grants land in major metro and regional hubs including San Francisco, Los Angeles, Sacramento, Oakland, Stockton, Fresno, Riverside, Mountain View, San Jose, Watsonville, Monterey, and Merced. Outside California, the recent grants list includes Washington, DC, and New York, NY. The recipient-country distribution is entirely U.S.-based in the data provided.

    Frequently Asked Questions About James Irvine Foundation

    What kinds of organizations does The James Irvine Foundation fund?

    It gives to intermediaries, community foundations, universities, and grassroots organizations. Recent grants include Tides Center for worker organizations, Central Valley Community Foundation for Fresno’s inclusive economy, and Regents of the University of California for the Community and Labor Center and workers' rights organizations.

    What are the main focus areas in the recent grants list?

    The list shows workforce development, fair work and worker rights, housing affordability and tenant organizing, and place-based economic development. It also includes support for priority communities, economic justice for Latinos, Black freedom work, and research and development in California.

    How does The James Irvine Foundation usually structure its grants?

    It often uses large awards for capacity building, program launch, and general operating support. Examples in the recent list include general operating support to Housing California, support for a new workforce fund at Amalgamated Charitable Foundation Inc, and support for the California Black Freedom Fund through Silicon Valley Community Foundation.

    Where does The James Irvine Foundation give most often?

    California is the clear center of its grantmaking. The data shows 88% of grants to recipients in California, with recent awards spread across San Francisco, Los Angeles, Sacramento, Oakland, Stockton, Fresno, Riverside, San Jose, and other California cities.

    Does the foundation fund only one-time grants, or do some recipients appear more than once?

    Some recipients appear multiple times across years. Tides Center received $15,000,000 in 2023 and $11,150,000 in 2025, while Amalgamated Charitable Foundation Inc received $5,575,000 in 2023, $5,000,000 in 2024, and $3,000,000 in 2023 for a related fund.

    Accepts unsolicited proposals
    Latest 990 Filing

    2025

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

    Recent Grants

    Most recent grants reported to the IRS.

    RecipientLocationAmountYearPurpose
    Tides CenterLos Angeles, CA$11,150,0002025To support Fair Work in California
    Inland Empire Community FoundationRiverside, CA$8,000,0002025To support Priority Communities in California
    San Francisco FoundationSan Francisco, CA$7,550,0002025To support Housing Affordability in CA
    Foundation for California Community CollegesSacramento, CA$4,400,0002025To support Better Careers in California
    Movement Innovation CollaborativeOakland, CA$4,000,0002025To support Research and Development in CA
    National Domestic Workers Alliance IncNew York, NY$3,600,0002025To support Fair Work in California
    Community Foundation for Monterey CountyMonterey, CA$3,350,0002025To support Priority Communities in California
    Tides CenterLos Angeles, CA$3,050,0002025To support Better Careers in California
    Regents of the University of CaliforniaBerkeley, CA$2,750,0002025To support Priority Communities in California
    Coalition for Responsible Community DevelopmentLos Angeles, CA$2,500,0002025To support Better Careers in California
    Borealis PhilanthropyMinneapolis, MN$2,500,0002025To support Research and Development in CA
    Tides CenterLos Angeles, CA$2,350,0002025To support Just Prosperity in California
    Community PartnersLos Angeles, CA$2,150,0002025To support Just Prosperity in California
    Chinese Progressive AssociationOakland, CA$2,050,0002025To support Just Prosperity in California
    Canal AllianceSan Rafael, CA$2,000,0002025For general operating support
    Anti-Recidivism CoalitionLos Angeles, CA$2,000,0002025For general operating support
    Fresno Community Development Financial InstitutionFresno, CA$2,000,0002025To support Priority Communities in California
    PICO CaliforniaLos Angeles, CA$2,000,0002025For general operating support
    Ampac Tri-state CDC IncOntario, CA$2,000,0002025To support Priority Communities in California
    California Calls Education FundLos Angeles, CA$1,850,0002025To support Just Prosperity in California
    Kitchen Table AdvisorsBerkeley, CA$1,750,0002025To support Priority Communities in California
    PowerSwitch ActionOakland, CA$1,700,0002025To support Fair Work in California
    University of California Berkeley FoundationBerkeley, CA$1,600,0002025To support Housing Affordability in CA
    Action Council of Monterey County IncSalinas, CA$1,500,0002025To support Priority Communities in California
    Catalyst CaliforniaLos Angeles, CA$1,500,0002025For general operating support
    California Community FoundationLos Angeles, CA$1,300,0002025To support Housing Affordability in CA
    Maintenance Industry Labor-Management Cooperation Trust FundEl Monte, CA$1,248,3342025To support Fair Work in California
    Regents of the University of CaliforniaBerkeley, CA$1,152,0002025To support Fair Work in California
    National Employment Law ProjectNew York, NY$1,140,0002025To support Fair Work in California
    State Democracy ProjectBrooklyn, NY$1,075,0002025To support Fair Work in California
    Fresno Area Hispanic FoundationFresno, CA$1,005,0002025For general operating support
    Coalition for Humane Immigrant RightsLos Angeles, CA$1,000,0002025To support Just Prosperity in California
    Community Development Technologies CenterLos Angeles, CA$1,000,0002025To support Better Careers in California
    PolicyLinkOakland, CA$1,000,0002025To support Just Prosperity in California
    Milken InstituteSanta Monica, CA$1,000,0002025To support Research and Development in CA
    Community Coalition for Substance Abuse Prevention and TreatmentLos Angeles, CA$1,000,0002025To support Just Prosperity in California
    Amalgamated Charitable Foundation IncWashington, DC$1,000,0002025To support Research and Development in CA
    California Black Power NetworkLos Angeles, CA$1,000,0002025For general operating support
    Warehouse Worker Resource CenterOntario, CA$1,000,0002025To support Fair Work in California
    Center for Empowered Politics Education FundOakland, CA$1,000,0002025To support Additional Grantmaking in CA
    Rockwood Leadership InstituteSan Francisco, CA$1,000,0002025To support Just Prosperity in California
    Liberty Hill FoundationLos Angeles, CA$1,000,0002025To support Housing Affordability in CA
    San Francisco FoundationSan Francisco, CA$1,000,0002025To support Better Careers in California
    Time for Change FoundationSan Bernardino, CA$1,000,0002025To support Priority Communities in California
    California Immigrant Policy CenterLos Angeles, CA$1,000,0002025For general operating support
    Jobs to Move AmericaLos Angeles, CA$975,0002025To support Research and Development in CA
    Reinvent Stockton FoundationStockton, CA$900,0002025To support Priority Communities in California
    Entertainment Industry FoundationLos Angeles, CA$850,0002025To support Better Careers in California
    UFW FoundationLos Angeles, CA$800,0002025To support Just Prosperity in California
    El Pajaro Community Development CorporationWatsonville, CA$800,0002025To support Priority Communities in California

    Tides Center

    $11,150,000
    Los Angeles, CA2025

    To support Fair Work in California

    Inland Empire Community Foundation

    $8,000,000
    Riverside, CA2025

    To support Priority Communities in California

    San Francisco Foundation

    $7,550,000
    San Francisco, CA2025

    To support Housing Affordability in CA

    Foundation for California Community Colleges

    $4,400,000
    Sacramento, CA2025

    To support Better Careers in California

    Movement Innovation Collaborative

    $4,000,000
    Oakland, CA2025

    To support Research and Development in CA

    National Domestic Workers Alliance Inc

    $3,600,000
    New York, NY
    2025

    To support Fair Work in California

    Community Foundation for Monterey County

    $3,350,000
    Monterey, CA2025

    To support Priority Communities in California

    Tides Center

    $3,050,000
    Los Angeles, CA2025

    To support Better Careers in California

    Regents of the University of California

    $2,750,000
    Berkeley, CA2025

    To support Priority Communities in California

    Coalition for Responsible Community Development

    $2,500,000
    Los Angeles, CA2025

    To support Better Careers in California

    Borealis Philanthropy

    $2,500,000
    Minneapolis, MN2025

    To support Research and Development in CA

    Tides Center

    $2,350,000
    Los Angeles, CA2025

    To support Just Prosperity in California

    Community Partners

    $2,150,000
    Los Angeles, CA2025

    To support Just Prosperity in California

    Chinese Progressive Association

    $2,050,000
    Oakland, CA2025

    To support Just Prosperity in California

    Canal Alliance

    $2,000,000
    San Rafael, CA2025

    For general operating support

    Anti-Recidivism Coalition

    $2,000,000
    Los Angeles, CA2025

    For general operating support

    Fresno Community Development Financial Institution

    $2,000,000
    Fresno, CA2025

    To support Priority Communities in California

    PICO California

    $2,000,000
    Los Angeles, CA2025

    For general operating support

    Ampac Tri-state CDC Inc

    $2,000,000
    Ontario, CA2025

    To support Priority Communities in California

    California Calls Education Fund

    $1,850,000
    Los Angeles, CA2025

    To support Just Prosperity in California

    Kitchen Table Advisors

    $1,750,000
    Berkeley, CA2025

    To support Priority Communities in California

    PowerSwitch Action

    $1,700,000
    Oakland, CA2025

    To support Fair Work in California

    University of California Berkeley Foundation

    $1,600,000
    Berkeley, CA2025

    To support Housing Affordability in CA

    Action Council of Monterey County Inc

    $1,500,000
    Salinas, CA2025

    To support Priority Communities in California

    Catalyst California

    $1,500,000
    Los Angeles, CA2025

    For general operating support

    California Community Foundation

    $1,300,000
    Los Angeles, CA2025

    To support Housing Affordability in CA

    Maintenance Industry Labor-Management Cooperation Trust Fund

    $1,248,334
    El Monte, CA2025

    To support Fair Work in California

    Regents of the University of California

    $1,152,000
    Berkeley, CA2025

    To support Fair Work in California

    National Employment Law Project

    $1,140,000
    New York, NY2025

    To support Fair Work in California

    State Democracy Project

    $1,075,000
    Brooklyn, NY2025

    To support Fair Work in California

    Fresno Area Hispanic Foundation

    $1,005,000
    Fresno, CA2025

    For general operating support

    Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights

    $1,000,000
    Los Angeles, CA2025

    To support Just Prosperity in California

    Community Development Technologies Center

    $1,000,000
    Los Angeles, CA2025

    To support Better Careers in California

    PolicyLink

    $1,000,000
    Oakland, CA2025

    To support Just Prosperity in California

    Milken Institute

    $1,000,000
    Santa Monica, CA2025

    To support Research and Development in CA

    Community Coalition for Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment

    $1,000,000
    Los Angeles, CA2025

    To support Just Prosperity in California

    Amalgamated Charitable Foundation Inc

    $1,000,000
    Washington, DC2025

    To support Research and Development in CA

    California Black Power Network

    $1,000,000
    Los Angeles, CA2025

    For general operating support

    Warehouse Worker Resource Center

    $1,000,000
    Ontario, CA2025

    To support Fair Work in California

    Center for Empowered Politics Education Fund

    $1,000,000
    Oakland, CA2025

    To support Additional Grantmaking in CA

    Rockwood Leadership Institute

    $1,000,000
    San Francisco, CA2025

    To support Just Prosperity in California

    Liberty Hill Foundation

    $1,000,000
    Los Angeles, CA2025

    To support Housing Affordability in CA

    San Francisco Foundation

    $1,000,000
    San Francisco, CA2025

    To support Better Careers in California

    Time for Change Foundation

    $1,000,000
    San Bernardino, CA2025

    To support Priority Communities in California

    California Immigrant Policy Center

    $1,000,000
    Los Angeles, CA2025

    For general operating support

    Jobs to Move America

    $975,000
    Los Angeles, CA2025

    To support Research and Development in CA

    Reinvent Stockton Foundation

    $900,000
    Stockton, CA2025

    To support Priority Communities in California

    Entertainment Industry Foundation

    $850,000
    Los Angeles, CA2025

    To support Better Careers in California

    UFW Foundation

    $800,000
    Los Angeles, CA2025

    To support Just Prosperity in California

    El Pajaro Community Development Corporation

    $800,000
    Watsonville, CA2025

    To support Priority Communities in California