To empower nonprofits to leverage their mission to do more good.
Firespring Foundation’s recent record is defined by one unusually large operating grant: $3,625,552 in 2023 for a recipient in Lincoln, Nebraska. That single award matches the foundation’s reported annual grants total, underscoring how concentrated its giving is in the latest filing year. The foundation works through a donor-advised fund and partner-support programs, with a stated emphasis on nonprofit capacity building, giving day support and infrastructure, and donation technology through Givesource. Its role is less about broad open calls and more about sustaining a small set of organizations and platforms that help other nonprofits raise money and strengthen operations. The foundation’s support model points to infrastructure rather than project-by-project philanthropy. Through its Giving Day Support partnership, it fuels fundraising events across North America and has contributed the open-source Givesource platform for nonprofit fundraising technology. In parallel, its Foundational Partner Support and Power of 3 Program provide operating support to named nonprofit partners, reflecting a preference for multi-organization, mission-aligned backing. The latest grant record shows that substantial support can flow to a single Nebraska recipient, while the program descriptions show that the foundation also invests in tools and partner institutions that extend beyond one grant relationship.
A central theme in Firespring Foundation’s giving is nonprofit infrastructure. The foundation supports Giving Day fundraising through its donor-advised fund and the Givesource donation platform, linking its philanthropy to the tools that help public charities raise money. It also backs partner organizations with operating support, including the Power of 3 Program, which provides foundational funding to a small set of nonprofits. Capacity building shows up in both education and organizational support. The foundation lists education and training for businesses and nonprofit leaders among its focus areas, alongside nonprofit capacity building and community support. Its Foundational Partner Support program reinforces that pattern by providing ongoing support to named organizations such as Do More Good® Movement, Nonprofit Hub Foundation, and The Foundry Community. Across these programs, the emphasis is on strengthening institutions, not isolated projects. Corporate philanthropy program design is another clear thread. The foundation’s taxonomy includes corporate CSR teams and employee volunteers, plus volunteer program support, which fits a model centered on partnership, engagement, and infrastructure.
$3.6M
$62K
$3.8M
$3.8M
Most grants fall between $3.6M and $3.6M, with a median of $3.6M.
25th Percentile
$3.6M
Median
$3.6M
75th Percentile
$3.6M
About 100% of grants go to recipients in NE.
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Firespring Foundation’s latest filing shows a highly concentrated grant profile: p25, median, and p75 are all $3,625,552. That indicates a single-grant year in the data on file. The foundation is classified as a public charity and a regular funder, not a DAF sponsor that receives unsolicited applications. Its active programs are described as ongoing support for selected partners rather than an open grant competition. The program descriptions also point to repeat, relationship-based funding. Named partner support appears in both Foundational Partner Support and the Power of 3 Program, with continuing operating support to a small set of organizations. The giving model is therefore best read as sustained partner funding plus infrastructure support, rather than a broad portfolio of one-off project grants.
The foundation’s giving is local in the data on file: 100% of grants went to recipients in Nebraska. The top state by grant count is also NE, which aligns with the recipient location in Lincoln, NE for the largest recent award. Program descriptions add a wider frame for one activity area, since the Giving Day support program is described as serving North America, but the recorded grant recipient distribution remains entirely in-state.
Its stated focus areas center on nonprofit capacity building, Giving Day support and infrastructure, donation platform and fundraising technology through Givesource, education and training for business and nonprofit leaders, and community support and partner organizations. The active programs also emphasize operating support, regranting, and nonprofit infrastructure.
Very concentrated in the latest 990 year on file. The p25, median, and p75 grant size are all $3,625,552, matching the single recent grant listed in the data. That points to a one-grant year rather than a broad distribution of awards.
No. The active program descriptions identify a donor-advised fund and ongoing partner support, but they do not describe an open application process. The programs are framed around selected public charities and named partners rather than unsolicited submissions.
In the grant data on file, 100% of grants went to recipients in Nebraska. The recipient country distribution is entirely U.S.-based, and the top state by grant count is NE.
2023
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2023.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| see attached schedule | Lincoln, NE | $3,625,552 | 2023 | operational support |
see attached schedule
$3,625,552operational support