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    3. Yolles Charitable Foundation

    Yolles Charitable Foundation

    ActivePhilanthropy & VoluntarismFunds Individuals
    FORT LAUDERDALE, FLEIN: 47-35035493 filings on record

    About Yolles Charitable Foundation

    Yolles Charitable Foundation directs most of its support to a single nonprofit providing services to abused, neglected and disadvantaged youth, with repeat and sizable gifts to that local organization. It also makes occasional targeted gifts to medical research, as evidenced by a one-time grant for Merkel cell carcinoma research. Overall the foundation appears to prioritize direct service to vulnerable youth in its region while selectively funding specific health research causes.

    Focus Areas

    Direct services for abused, neglected, and at-risk youth (local/Fort Lauderdale area)Child welfare and residential/placement support programsTargeted cancer research funding (Merkel cell carcinoma)

    Who They Fund

    abused youthneglected youthdisadvantaged youthMerkel cell carcinoma patients (rare skin cancer patients)soldiers and veteransseniors and grandparentsrecipients of emergency ambulance/EMS services

    About Yolles Charitable Foundation

    A repeated pattern defines Yolles Charitable Foundation Inc: large gifts to Handy Inc in Fort Lauderdale for helping abused, neglected, and disadvantaged youth. The foundation gave Handy Inc $106,450 in 2023, followed by $75,000 in 2024 and $55,700 in 2025, showing sustained support for the same local service provider. That focus on direct help for vulnerable youth is the clearest throughline in its recent grantmaking. The foundation also makes selective grants outside youth services when a specific purpose is identified. In 2023, it gave $25,000 to Fred Hutchinson Cancer Institute in Seattle for the Merkel Cell Carcinoma Fund, pointing to disease-specific support rather than broad health funding. Smaller gifts extend to emergency ambulance services, soldiers’ wellbeing, and senior needs, but the overall pattern remains concentrated and purpose-driven. With annual grants of $265,050 and total assets of $104,013, the foundation’s giving is notable for its repeated support of a single Fort Lauderdale nonprofit alongside targeted one-off grants.

    What Yolles Charitable Foundation Funds

    In youth services, Yolles Charitable Foundation Inc gave $106,450 in 2023, $75,000 in 2024, and $55,700 in 2025 to Handy Inc in Fort Lauderdale for helping abused, neglected, and disadvantaged youth. That recurring support suggests a steady relationship with a local direct-service provider rather than a broad portfolio of youth grants. The foundation also funded disease-specific medical research with a $25,000 grant to Fred Hutchinson Cancer Institute in Seattle for the Merkel Cell Carcinoma Fund. Beyond those two main areas, it made smaller purpose-based gifts in 2024: $1,500 to Mogan David Friends of Israel for emergency ambulance services and care, $1,000 to Friends of Israel Defense Forces for soldiers’ wellbeing, and $400 to The Pantry of Broward Inc for seniors and grandparents.

    How Yolles Charitable Foundation Gives

    Yolles Charitable Foundation Inc shows a wide spread in grant sizes, with a p25 of $1,125, median of $13,250, and p75 of $62,500. The pattern includes both recurring support and one-off gifts: Handy Inc appears across three consecutive years, while the medical, ambulance, military, and senior-focused grants are single-year awards. The foundation funds individuals and operates with a regional scope of giving. Its most recent grants indicate a mix of larger program support and smaller targeted gifts rather than a uniform award structure.

    Financial Snapshot

    Annual Giving

    $265K

    Total Assets

    $104K

    Total Revenue

    $115K

    Total Expenses

    $61K

    Typical Grant Size

    Most grants fall between $1K and $63K, with a median of $13K.

    25th Percentile

    $1K

    Median

    $13K

    75th Percentile

    $63K

    Geographic Reach

    Regional3 states funded

    About 50% of grants go to recipients in FL.

    Funding intensity
    Low
    High
    Headquarters

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    Giving Approach

    Concentrated giving: few, relatively large grants with multiple repeat payments to a single core grantee (Handy Inc), plus occasional one-off gifts to specialized medical research.

    Funding Style

    direct service deliverydisease-specific program fundingemergency services supporttargeted beneficiary funding

    Notable grantees: Handy Inc, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Institute

    Topics

    abused/neglected/disadvantaged youth servicesMerkel cell carcinoma research and patient supportemergency ambulance / EMS servicesmilitary personnel and veterans wellbeingsenior care and grandparent support

    Where Yolles Charitable Foundation Makes Grants

    Half of the foundation’s grants go to recipients in Florida, and the recent list places most Florida dollars in Fort Lauderdale. The other recent U.S. recipients are in Seattle, New York, and Broward County-area Fort Lauderdale, showing a regional pattern with one out-of-state medical research grant. All listed grants in the recent sample went to U.S. recipients.

    Frequently Asked Questions About Yolles Charitable Foundation

    What kinds of organizations does Yolles Charitable Foundation Inc support most often?

    Its clearest pattern is repeated support for a Fort Lauderdale nonprofit serving abused, neglected, and disadvantaged youth. The foundation also makes targeted grants for Merkel cell carcinoma research, emergency ambulance services, soldiers’ wellbeing, and senior and grandparent support.

    Does the foundation make repeat grants to the same recipient?

    Yes. Handy Inc received three grants in consecutive years: $106,450 in 2023, $75,000 in 2024, and $55,700 in 2025. That makes it the most consistent recipient in the recent grant record.

    What is the typical grant size?

    The grant-size distribution shows a p25 of $1,125, a median of $13,250, and a p75 of $62,500. Recent awards range from $400 to $106,450, so the foundation combines small targeted gifts with much larger operating-style support.

    Where do most grants go geographically?

    Florida is the top state by grant count, and 50% of grants go to recipients in the foundation’s HQ state. Recent recipients also include Seattle and New York, but the strongest concentration is in Florida, especially Fort Lauderdale.

    Latest 990 Filing

    2025

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

    Recent Grants

    Most recent grants reported to the IRS.

    RecipientLocationAmountYearPurpose
    HANDY INCFort Lauderdale, FL$55,7002025Helping abused neglected disadvantaged youth
    HANDY INCFort Lauderdale, FL$75,0002024Helping abused neglected disadvantaged youth
    MOGAN DAVID FRIENDS OF ISRAELNew York, NY$1,5002024Provides emergency ambulance services andcare
    FRIENDS OF ISRAEL DEFENSE FORCESNew York, NY$1,0002024Supports the wellbeing of soldiers
    THE PANTRY OF BROWARD INCFort Lauderdale, FL$4002024Addresses the needs of seniors and grandparents
    HANDY INCFort Lauderdale, FL$106,4502023Helping abused neglected disadvantaged youth
    FRED HUTCHINSON CANCER INSTITUTESeattle, WA$25,0002023Merkel Cell Carcinoma Fund

    HANDY INC

    $55,700
    Fort Lauderdale, FL2025

    Helping abused neglected disadvantaged youth

    HANDY INC

    $75,000
    Fort Lauderdale, FL2024

    Helping abused neglected disadvantaged youth

    MOGAN DAVID FRIENDS OF ISRAEL

    $1,500
    New York, NY2024

    Provides emergency ambulance services andcare

    FRIENDS OF ISRAEL DEFENSE FORCES

    $1,000
    New York, NY2024

    Supports the wellbeing of soldiers

    THE PANTRY OF BROWARD INC

    $400
    Fort Lauderdale, FL2024

    Addresses the needs of seniors and grandparents

    HANDY INC

    $106,450
    Fort Lauderdale, FL2023

    Helping abused neglected disadvantaged youth

    FRED HUTCHINSON CANCER INSTITUTE

    $25,000
    Seattle, WA2023

    Merkel Cell Carcinoma Fund