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    Tikvah Fund

    ActiveEducation
    NEW YORK, NYWebsite2127961672EIN: 13-3676152

    About Tikvah Fund

    The Tikvah Fund concentrates its philanthropy on strengthening Jewish intellectual life and institutional capacity, with large, strategic gifts to organizations that promote Jewish higher education, public policy research, and leadership. Its few but substantial grants indicate a focus on building enduring institutions (notably in Israel and the Anglo-Jewish world) rather than broad-based small-dollar giving.

    Focus Areas

    Support for Jewish liberal-arts higher education (e.g., Shalem College)Funding Jewish intellectual and public policy research centers/think tanksEndowment/capital and capacity-building grants to sustain institutional infrastructureFacilitating donor-directed philanthropy through donor-advised vehicles

    Who They Fund

    unspecified/any beneficiary population

    Giving Approach

    Highly concentrated giving: very few grants overall but large dollar amounts, including repeat/multi-installment support to the same institutions; emphasis on organizational-scale, capacity-building and endowment-type gifts rather than many small operational grants.

    Funding Style

    About Tikvah Fund

    The Tikvah Fund’s recent grantmaking is anchored by very large general-support grants to institutions that shape Jewish intellectual life, especially Shalem College and The Shalem Foundation. That pattern points to a funder that uses major institutional gifts to support higher education, ideas, and leadership rather than broad, dispersed small grants. In the latest grants on file, the largest award was $4,319,625 to the Jewish Communal Fund for general support, alongside additional seven-figure support for Shalem College and The Shalem Foundation. The foundation’s portfolio also connects those institutional gifts with fellowship and scholarship programming. Its active programs include summer institutes, year-long fellowships, collegiate forums, young professional fellowships, and overseas study in Israel, all centered on Jewish ideas, Zionism, and leadership development. Recent grants to Hiechal Hatorah, the University of Florida, Lubavitch Chabad Jewish Center in Gainesville, American Friends of Lubavitch, and Hillel of Massachusetts Amherst University show that the funder also supports specific educational and communal settings through smaller awards. Across the record, the emphasis is on sustaining organizations and training future leaders.

    What Tikvah Fund Funds

    A core theme is Jewish higher education. The Tikvah Fund gave $3,200,000 in 2023 and $3,100,000 in 2024 to Shalem College, both for general support, showing repeated investment in an institution rather than one-time project funding. Another theme is communal infrastructure and donor-directed philanthropy. In 2025, the foundation awarded $4,319,625 to the Jewish Communal Fund for general support and $2,825,000 to The Shalem Foundation for general support, indicating a preference for strengthening organizations that can channel resources or sustain long-term operations. The grant list also includes smaller, program-specific support for educational and campus-linked activity. Hiechal Hatorah received $15,000 in 2023 for a specific program, while the University of Florida and the Lubavitch Chabad Jewish Center in Gainesville received grants in 2025 tied to their work in Gainesville.

    How Tikvah Fund Gives

    The published distribution is wide: the 25th percentile grant is $1,000, the median is $15,000, and the 75th percentile is $3,100,000. That spread shows a mix of very large institutional awards and much smaller program or operating grants. The recent record also suggests repeat support rather than one-off giving, with Shalem College funded in both 2023 and 2024. The foundation is structured as an organizational funder rather than an individual-grantmaker, and it does not make program-related investments. Several active programs accept unsolicited applications, including the Tikvah-Beren Collegiate Forum and the Tikvah Israel Fellowship, while other fellowship programs are invitation-based or otherwise not open to unsolicited requests.

    Financial Snapshot

    Annual Giving

    $7M

    Total Assets

    $87M

    Total Revenue

    $18.8M

    Total Expenses

    $25.7M

    Typical Grant Size

    Most grants fall between $1K and $3.1M, with a median of $15K.

    25th Percentile

    $1K

    Median

    $15K

    75th Percentile

    $3.1M

    Geographic Reach

    Regional3 states funded

    About 0% of grants go to recipients in MA.

    Funding intensity
    Low
    High
    Headquarters
    Funding intensity
    Low
    High

    Where Tikvah Fund Funds

    Top 2 recipient countries by grant volume for Tikvah Fund.

    RankCountryGrantsTotalShare
    1United StatesDomestic7$7.2M
    77.8%
    2Israel2$6.3M

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    3 filings on record
    See If You're a Fit — FreeFree account · instant fit score · similar funders
    general operating support
    unrestricted/general support
    program-specific/project funding
    multi-purpose funding
    organizational stability

    Notable grantees: Shalem College, The Shalem Foundation, Jewish Communal Fund

    Topics

    unspecified/organization-wide supportprogram delivery capacitycore operations fundingno defined thematic focus

    Where Tikvah Fund Makes Grants

    Grant activity is regional, with the most frequent giving in Massachusetts. The recent grants list also shows activity in New York, New Jersey, Florida, Washington, DC, and Israel. Recipient locations include Amherst, Gainesville, Teaneck, and New York City, plus Arzh Maon Haropa for Shalem College and The Shalem Foundation. By country, 77.8% of recent grants went to US recipients and 22.2% to Israel recipients, reflecting a cross-border pattern rather than a single-city focus.

    Frequently Asked Questions About Tikvah Fund

    What kinds of organizations does The Tikvah Fund support?

    The recent record centers on Jewish intellectual life, Jewish higher education, leadership development, and public affairs. It also supports scholarship and fellowship programs, campus-based programs, and institutional capacity through general-support grants.

    What is a typical grant size?

    The grant-size distribution is highly skewed. The 25th percentile is $1,000, the median is $15,000, and the 75th percentile is $3,100,000, so most grants are small but a few are very large.

    Does The Tikvah Fund support recurring recipients?

    Yes. Shalem College received grants in both 2023 and 2024, each for general support, which shows repeat support across multiple years rather than only one-time awards.

    Are any of Tikvah’s programs open to unsolicited applications?

    Yes. The Tikvah-Beren Collegiate Forum accepts unsolicited applications, and the Tikvah Israel Fellowship also accepts unsolicited applications. Other listed fellowship programs are marked as not accepting unsolicited requests.

    Where does The Tikvah Fund give most often?

    Massachusetts is the top state by grant count. Recent recipient locations also include New York, New Jersey, Florida, Washington, DC, and Israel.

    Latest 990 Filing

    2025

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

    22.2%

    Recipient country reflects the grantee's headquarters per IRS 990-PF and Schedule F filings, not the program's implementation country.

    Recent Grants

    Most recent grants reported to the IRS.

    RecipientLocationAmountYearPurpose
    JEWISH COMMUNAL FUNDNEW YORK, NY$4,319,6252025GENERAL SUPPORT
    THE SHALEM FOUNDATIONNEW YORK, NY$2,825,0002025GENERAL SUPPORT
    UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDAGAINESVILLE, FL$12,3762025GENERAL SUPPORT
    LUBAVITCH CHABAD JEWISH CENTER IN GAINESVILLEGAINESVILLE, FL$5,0002025GENERAL SUPPORT
    SHALEM COLLEGEARZH MAON HAROPA$3,100,0002024GENERAL SUPPORT
    SHALEM COLLEGEARZH MAON HAROPA$3,200,0002023GENERAL SUPPORT
    HIECHAL HATORAHTEANECK, NJ$15,0002023SPECIFIC PROGRAM
    AMERICAN FRIENDS OF LUBAVITCHWASHINGTON, DC$1,0002023GENERAL SUPPORT
    HILLEL OF MASSACHUSETTS AMHERST UNIVERSITYAMHERST, MA$3602023GENERAL SUPPORT

    JEWISH COMMUNAL FUND

    $4,319,625
    NEW YORK, NY2025

    GENERAL SUPPORT

    THE SHALEM FOUNDATION

    $2,825,000
    NEW YORK, NY2025

    GENERAL SUPPORT

    UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA

    $12,376
    GAINESVILLE, FL2025

    GENERAL SUPPORT

    LUBAVITCH CHABAD JEWISH CENTER IN GAINESVILLE

    $5,000
    GAINESVILLE, FL2025

    GENERAL SUPPORT

    SHALEM COLLEGE

    $3,100,000
    ARZH MAON HAROPA2024

    GENERAL SUPPORT

    SHALEM COLLEGE

    $3,200,000
    ARZH MAON HAROPA2023

    GENERAL SUPPORT

    HIECHAL HATORAH

    $15,000
    TEANECK, NJ2023

    SPECIFIC PROGRAM

    AMERICAN FRIENDS OF LUBAVITCH

    $1,000
    WASHINGTON, DC2023

    GENERAL SUPPORT

    HILLEL OF MASSACHUSETTS AMHERST UNIVERSITY

    $360
    AMHERST, MA2023

    GENERAL SUPPORT