Empowering The University of New Mexico to advance education, research and health for the benefit of our community and the world.
University of New Mexico Foundation Inc directs its grantmaking almost entirely to a single institution: the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque. The two largest recent grants on file, $64,012,806 in 2023 and $36,208,555 in 2024, both carried the same purpose statement: to enable the university to engage in comprehensive educational, research, and service programs. That pattern shows a funder working through institutional support rather than a broad portfolio of outside charities. The foundation’s focus aligns with higher education, research, health and medical programs, scholarships, endowments, and community engagement, with the university itself serving as the central recipient. Its giving is tied to capacity-building and infrastructure support for the institution, including programmatic and unrestricted support. The scale is substantial: annual grants given are listed at more than $100 million, with a total asset base of $454,667,512. For researchers, the clearest signal is that the foundation’s recent grantmaking is not dispersed across many organizations; it is concentrated on strengthening the University of New Mexico’s academic, research, and service mission.
Higher education is the clearest emphasis in the recent grant record. In 2024, University of New Mexico Foundation Inc gave $36,208,555 to the University of New Mexico for comprehensive educational, research, and service programs. A second large grant in 2023, at $64,012,806, used the same purpose language, reinforcing the foundation’s institutional approach. The stated focus areas also include research and health or medical programs, pointing to support for the university’s academic and service functions rather than isolated projects. Scholarships and endowments appear in the foundation’s focus list as well, along with community engagement, which fits a model of support that flows through a university to benefit students, faculty, researchers, and local beneficiaries served by university programs.
The foundation’s typical grant size is very large: the 25th percentile is $43,159,618, the median is $50,110,680, and the 75th percentile is $57,061,743. That distribution matches a small number of major institutional grants rather than many small awards. The recent record also shows repetition across years, with the University of New Mexico receiving the top two grants in both 2023 and 2024 for the same purpose. The foundation does not fund individuals and does not make program-related investments. Its support appears to be institutional and programmatic, with unrestricted or general operating support among its philosophy tags.
$36.2M
$454.7M
$68.1M
$52.5M
Most grants fall between $43.2M and $57.1M, with a median of $50.1M.
25th Percentile
$43.2M
Median
$50.1M
75th Percentile
$57.1M
About 100% of grants go to recipients in NM.
JEFFREY TODD
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Grantmaking is entirely local. All reported grants in the dataset went to recipients in New Mexico, and every recent grant listed was to the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque. The recipient country distribution is 100% US, with no non-US grant locations shown. The geographic pattern is narrow rather than dispersed, centered on the foundation’s home city and state.
Its stated focus areas include higher education, research, health and medical programs, scholarships, endowments, and community engagement. The recent grants also use purpose language centered on comprehensive educational, research, and service programs at the University of New Mexico.
The University of New Mexico in Albuquerque receives the recent top grants and appears as the sole recipient in the data provided. Both listed grants, in 2023 and 2024, went to that institution.
The distribution is very large: the 25th percentile is $43,159,618, the median is $50,110,680, and the 75th percentile is $57,061,743. The two largest recent grants were $64,012,806 and $36,208,555.
The geographic scope of giving is local, and 100% of grants in the data went to recipients in New Mexico. The recent grants listed were both to the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque.
No. The foundation is marked as funding individuals: false and making program-related investments: false. The available data points instead to institutional, programmatic support for the university.
2024
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2024.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO | ALBUQUERQUE, NM | $36,208,555 | 2024 | ENABLE UNIVERSITY TO ENGAGE IN COMPREHENSIVE EDUCATIONAL, RESEARCH AND SERVICE PROGRAMS. |
| UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO | ALBUQUERQUE, NM | $64,012,806 | 2023 | ENABLE UNIVERSITY TO ENGAGE IN COMPREHENSIVE EDUCATIONAL, RESEARCH AND SERVICE PROGRAMS. |
UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO
$36,208,555ENABLE UNIVERSITY TO ENGAGE IN COMPREHENSIVE EDUCATIONAL, RESEARCH AND SERVICE PROGRAMS.
UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO
$64,012,806ENABLE UNIVERSITY TO ENGAGE IN COMPREHENSIVE EDUCATIONAL, RESEARCH AND SERVICE PROGRAMS.