All recorded giving (three grants totaling $606.1M) is directed to a single, redacted recipient listed as “SEE ATTACHMENT C,” so thematic priorities and beneficiary types are not specified in the data provided. The foundation’s pattern is extreme concentration — very few, very large gifts — and it is based in Seattle; grantee locations and NTEE/issue areas are not disclosed. This giving profile suggests a private family foundation that makes major, targeted commitments rather than many small grants. Unless your organization is the disclosed recipient or part of that specific initiative, the foundation appears unlikely to be a typical general-support funder for new applicants.
Very few, very large grants concentrated to a single redacted recipient (targeted, high-dollar commitments)
SEE ATTACHMENT C
Bezos Family Foundation’s recorded grantmaking is defined by a single redacted recipient: every listed award goes to "See Attachment C." The three grants on file span 2023 to 2025 and total $606.1 million, making the pattern unusually concentrated and initiative-specific. That concentration leaves the program focus, beneficiary population, and issue area undisclosed in the structured data, but it does show a foundation making very large commitments rather than a broad portfolio of smaller awards. The largest listed grant is $349,936,476 in 2025, followed by $156,961,900 in 2024 and $99,205,381 in 2023. All three awards are recorded in Washington, and the recipient is listed as Various, WA. For a nonprofit researcher, the key signal is not thematic breadth but narrowness: this foundation’s public grant record points to one ongoing funding relationship rather than a dispersed set of grantees. Because the grants are redacted, the available record is useful mainly for identifying scale, continuity, and concentration. It suggests a private family foundation structure built around major, targeted commitments.
The available record does not disclose issue areas, but it does show a sustained, multi-year funding relationship through the same redacted recipient. In 2025, Bezos Family Foundation awarded $349,936,476 to "See Attachment C". The prior year’s grant was $156,961,900 to the same recipient, and the 2023 award was $99,205,381. That three-year sequence is the clearest pattern in the data: the foundation is not spreading funds across many thematic buckets in the public record. Instead, it is directing large sums to one recipient listed in Washington, which indicates an initiative-style or relationship-based approach. For researchers, the grant list provides a view of continuity and scale, but not a disclosed set of cause areas.
The grant-size profile is highly concentrated: the 25th percentile is $113,644,511, the median is $128,083,640, and the 75th percentile is $142,522,770. That narrow band reflects very large awards rather than a mixed-size portfolio. The record also shows repeated giving to the same recipient across three consecutive years, signaling continuity rather than one-off support. Bezos Family Foundation is classified as a regular funder, not a DAF, and it does not fund individuals or make program-related investments. The publicly listed grants are all in Washington. The available data does not describe an open application process, so the record reads as targeted and relationship-driven.
$349.9M
$154.2M
$352M
$362.3M
Most grants fall between $113.6M and $142.5M, with a median of $128.1M.
25th Percentile
$113.6M
Median
$128.1M
75th Percentile
$142.5M
About 100% of grants go to recipients in WA.
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All recorded grants in the dataset are in the U.S., and every listed award is tied to Washington. The recipient location appears as Various, WA, and the top state by grant count is WA, with 100% of grants going to recipients in the HQ state. The geography is therefore fully local in the available record, with no non-U.S. recipients shown.
The listed grants are very large and tightly grouped: the 25th percentile is $113,644,511, the median is $128,083,640, and the 75th percentile is $142,522,770. That distribution suggests the foundation operates with major commitments rather than many small awards.
Not in the available record. All three recorded grants go to the same redacted recipient, "See Attachment C," across 2023, 2024, and 2025. The public data shows concentration in one ongoing relationship rather than a wide grantee base.
The visible grant record is entirely local and entirely in Washington. The dataset shows 6 grants in the U.S., 100% of grants going to recipients in the HQ state, and the recipient location listed as Various, WA.
The provided record does not show an application pathway or open solicitation. The grants listed are all directed to a single redacted recipient, which points to targeted funding rather than a publicly described application-based program.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SEE ATTACHMENT C | Various, WA | $349,936,476 | 2025 | SEE ATTACHMENT C |
| SEE ATTACHMENT C | Various, WA | $156,961,900 | 2024 | SEE ATTACHMENT C |
| SEE ATTACHMENT C | Various, WA | $99,205,381 | 2023 | SEE ATTACHMENT C |
SEE ATTACHMENT C
$349,936,476SEE ATTACHMENT C
SEE ATTACHMENT C
$156,961,900SEE ATTACHMENT C
SEE ATTACHMENT C
$99,205,381SEE ATTACHMENT C