
First Alaskans Institute primarily funds Alaska Native communities and institutions, emphasizing cultural preservation, tribal heritage, and Indigenous-led civic leadership across rural villages and regional organizations. Their portfolio mixes a few large strategic grants (to statewide advocacy and marine stewardship groups) with many smaller culture and community grants to village councils, heritage foundations, and culture camps. They also support Indigenous marine conservation, voter engagement and legal/community defense efforts that sustain Indigenous lifeways and political power. Overall, the foundation prioritizes place-based, Indigenous-led work in Alaska rather than generic national programs.
A $235,000 Indigenous grant to Ocean Conservancy in 2025 stands out in First Alaskans Institute’s recent giving, but the broader pattern is equally clear: the foundation backs Alaska Native cultural preservation, tribal heritage, and Indigenous-led civic power across Alaska. Its grants move between statewide organizations and village-level institutions, linking marine stewardship, legal defense, and community traditions to the same place-based strategy. Alaska Federation of Natives received both a $110,000 annual contribution in 2024 and a $101,545 culture grant in 2025, showing continued support for a statewide convening and advocacy hub. At the community level, grants also reached groups such as the Gwich'in Social and Cultural Institute to Alaska Inc., Chignik Lake Village Council, and Kake Tribal Heritage Foundation for culture programming. The portfolio includes way-of-life support, voter engagement, travel, and convening grants, suggesting a funder that uses flexible tools to sustain Indigenous institutions, cultural transmission, and self-determination in Alaska. All recent grants in the dataset went to Alaska recipients or Alaska-linked organizations, reinforcing a local, Alaska-specific grantmaking profile.
Cultural preservation is central. First Alaskans Institute gave $30,000 to Gwich'in Social and Cultural Institute to Alaska Inc. for a culture grant and $15,000 to Kake Tribal Heritage Foundation for a culture grant, alongside $20,000 to Craig Tribal Association and $15,000 to Chignik Lake Village Council for culture work. The foundation also supported community traditions through a $12,500 way of life fund to King Island Native Community. Civic engagement appears in the data as well: Pacific Community of Alaska received $10,000 for 2022 GOTNV, indicating support for Native voter engagement. Marine and coastal stewardship is another visible thread, including $85,000 to Aleut Community of Saint Paul for Ocean Conservancy and $235,000 to Ocean Conservancy as an Indigenous grant. These grants connect cultural continuity, political participation, and environmental stewardship within Alaska Native communities.
Typical grants cluster tightly around the $10,000 range: p25 is $9,880, median is $10,500, and p75 is $16,250. The distribution also includes a few larger strategic awards, such as $235,000 and $110,000, alongside many smaller culture grants. Recipients recur across years, most clearly Alaska Federation of Natives, which appears in 2023, 2024, and 2025. First Alaskans Institute is a public charity and a regular funder, and the recent record shows annual contribution language alongside program-specific grants. The dataset does not show an application process, so the giving pattern is best read as relationship-based and recurring rather than open-call grantmaking.
$546K
$3.3M
$4.5M
$3.1M
Most grants fall between $10K and $16K, with a median of $11K.
25th Percentile
$10K
Median
$11K
75th Percentile
$16K
About 100% of grants go to recipients in AK.
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A mix of concentrated strategic investments and broadly distributed small grants: several large multi-thousand-dollar grants to statewide or national partners (repeat grantee relationships) alongside numerous smaller, one-off culture grants to village councils and local heritage groups. Funding is geographically concentrated in Alaska and targeted to Indigenous organizations, with repeat support for core partners and many modest awards to local community projects.
Notable grantees: Alaska Federation of Natives, Ocean Conservancy, Aleut Community of Saint Paul, Native Peoples Community Action Fund, Gwich'in Social and Cultural Institute
Grantmaking is concentrated entirely in Alaska: 100% of grants in the dataset went to recipients in the HQ state, and Alaska is also the top state by grant count. Anchorage appears often, including awards to Alaska Federation of Natives, Native Peoples Community Action Fun, and others, while Fairbanks, Juneau, Nome, Hoonah, Haines, and Bethel also show up. Grants reached village and regional organizations across the state, from Chignik Lake and Craig to Cordova and Kodiak. The recipient-country distribution is entirely U.S.-based.
The recent grants support Alaska Native communities and institutions, including cultural organizations, tribal associations, village councils, legal defense funds, and marine stewardship groups. Examples in the record include Alaska Federation of Natives, Native Peoples Community Action Fun, and Ocean Conservancy, each tied to Indigenous-led work in Alaska.
The typical grant size is tightly centered near $10,000: p25 is $9,880, median is $10,500, and p75 is $16,250. The recent list also includes a few much larger awards, including $235,000 and $110,000, which sit above the main cluster.
Yes. Alaska Federation of Natives appears in 2023, 2024, and 2025, with awards labeled annual contribution and culture grant. That pattern suggests sustained, multi-year support for some organizations rather than isolated one-off gifts.
Every grant in the provided dataset went to a recipient in Alaska, and Alaska is the top state by grant count. Anchorage appears frequently, but the list also includes recipients in Fairbanks, Juneau, Nome, Hoonah, Haines, Bethel, Kodiak, Cordova, and other Alaska communities.
Three strong themes are visible: cultural preservation, Indigenous civic engagement, and marine/coastal stewardship. The dataset includes culture grants for groups such as Gwich'in Social and Cultural Institute to Alaska Inc., a GOTNV grant to Pacific Community of Alaska, and ocean-related support to Aleut Community of Saint Paul and Ocean Conservancy.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OCEAN CONSERVANCY | WASHINGTON, DC | $235,000 | 2025 | INDIGENOUS GRANT |
| ALASKA FEDERATION OF NATIVES | ANCHORAGE, AK | $101,545 | 2025 | CULTURE GRANT |
| NATIVE PEOPLES COMMUNITY ACTION FUN | ANCHORAGE, AK | $50,000 | 2025 | LEGAL DEFENCE FUNDS |
| GWICH'IN SOCIAL AND CULTURAL INSTITUTE TO ALASKA INC | FAIRBANKS, AK | $30,000 | 2025 | CULTURE GRANT |
| NUDLAGHI LEADERSHP INSTITUTE | ANCHORAGE, AK | $25,000 | 2025 | AK FUNDERS TOUR |
| THE MOBILIZATION CENTER LLC | ANCHORAGE, AK | $20,000 | 2025 | TRAVEL GRANT |
| KAKE TRIBAL HERITAGE FOUNDATION | KAKE, AK | $15,000 | 2025 | CULTURE GRANT |
| FRIENDS OF ANCCS INC | ANCHORAGE, AK | $11,800 | 2025 | CULTURE GRANT |
| CHILKOOT INDIAN ASSOCIATION | HAINES, AK | $10,000 | 2025 | CULTURE GRANT |
| TKC FISH WHEEL | ANCHORAGE, AK | $8,000 | 2025 | CULTURE GRANT |
| CENTRAL COUNCIL TLINGIT & HAIDA | JUNEAU, AK | $8,000 | 2025 | CULTURE GRANT |
| HAA TOO YEI YATEE | HOONAH, AK | $8,000 | 2025 | CULTURE GRANT |
| BIG SISTER HELPLING LITTLE SISTER | FAIRBANKS, AK | $7,000 | 2025 | CULTURE GRANT |
| VILLAGE OF SOLOMON | NOME, AK | $6,000 | 2025 | CULTURE GRANT |
| ALASKA ARTS SOUTHEAST INC | SITKA, AK | $5,445 | 2025 | CULTURE GRANT |
| ALASKA NATIVE HERITAGE CENTER | ANCHORAGE, AK | $5,010 | 2025 | GARDEN PARTY GRANT |
| ALASKA FEDERATION OF NATIVES | ANCHORAGE, AK | $110,000 | 2024 | ANNUAL CONTRIBUTION |
| CRAIG TRIBAL ASSOCIATION | CRAIG, AK | $20,000 | 2024 | CULTURE GRANT |
| ARCTIC EDUCATION FOUNDATION | ANCHORAGE, AK | $15,000 | 2024 | CULTURE GRANT |
| CHIGNIK LAKE VILLAGE COUNCIL | CHIGNIK LAKE, AK | $15,000 | 2024 | CULTURE GRANT |
| NATIVE VILLAGE OF AFOGNAK | KODIAK, AK | $11,000 | 2024 | CULTURE GRANT |
| NATIVE VILLAGE OF EYAK | CORDOVA, AK | $10,000 | 2024 | CULTURE GRANT |
| HAA TOO YEI YATEE CULTURE CAMP | HOONAH, AK | $10,000 | 2024 | CULTURE GRANT |
| GOLDBELT HERITAGE FOUNDATION | JUNEAU, AK | $10,000 | 2024 | CULTURE GRANT |
| NATIVE VILLAGE OF AKHIOK | ANCHORAGE, AK | $9,520 | 2024 | CULTURE GRANT |
| SOUTHWEST ALASKA ARTS GROUP | BETHEL, AK | $7,000 | 2024 | CULTURE GRANT |
| NATIVE VILLAGE OF NAPAIMUTE | ANIAK, AK | $7,000 | 2024 | CULTURE GRANT |
| ALASKA FEDERATION OF NATIVES | ANCHORAGE, AK | $100,000 | 2023 | ANNUAL CONTRIBUTION |
| ALEUT COMMUNITY OF SAINT PAUL | ANCHORAGE, AK | $85,000 | 2023 | OCEAN CONSERVANCY |
| KING ISLAND NATIVE COMMUNITY | NOME, AK | $12,500 | 2023 | WAY OF LIFE FUND |
| PACIFIC COMMUNITY OF ALASKA | ANCHORAGE, AK | $10,000 | 2023 | 2022 GOTNV |
| HEALTHY AK NATIVES FOUNDATION | ANCHORAGE, AK | $6,000 | 2023 | RAVENS BALL |
OCEAN CONSERVANCY
$235,000INDIGENOUS GRANT
ALASKA FEDERATION OF NATIVES
$101,545CULTURE GRANT
NATIVE PEOPLES COMMUNITY ACTION FUN
$50,000LEGAL DEFENCE FUNDS
GWICH'IN SOCIAL AND CULTURAL INSTITUTE TO ALASKA INC
$30,000CULTURE GRANT
NUDLAGHI LEADERSHP INSTITUTE
$25,000AK FUNDERS TOUR
THE MOBILIZATION CENTER LLC
$20,000TRAVEL GRANT
KAKE TRIBAL HERITAGE FOUNDATION
$15,000CULTURE GRANT
FRIENDS OF ANCCS INC
$11,800CULTURE GRANT
CHILKOOT INDIAN ASSOCIATION
$10,000CULTURE GRANT
TKC FISH WHEEL
$8,000CULTURE GRANT
CENTRAL COUNCIL TLINGIT & HAIDA
$8,000CULTURE GRANT
HAA TOO YEI YATEE
$8,000CULTURE GRANT
BIG SISTER HELPLING LITTLE SISTER
$7,000CULTURE GRANT
VILLAGE OF SOLOMON
$6,000CULTURE GRANT
ALASKA ARTS SOUTHEAST INC
$5,445CULTURE GRANT
ALASKA NATIVE HERITAGE CENTER
$5,010GARDEN PARTY GRANT
ALASKA FEDERATION OF NATIVES
$110,000ANNUAL CONTRIBUTION
CRAIG TRIBAL ASSOCIATION
$20,000CULTURE GRANT
ARCTIC EDUCATION FOUNDATION
$15,000CULTURE GRANT
CHIGNIK LAKE VILLAGE COUNCIL
$15,000CULTURE GRANT
NATIVE VILLAGE OF AFOGNAK
$11,000CULTURE GRANT
NATIVE VILLAGE OF EYAK
$10,000CULTURE GRANT
HAA TOO YEI YATEE CULTURE CAMP
$10,000CULTURE GRANT
GOLDBELT HERITAGE FOUNDATION
$10,000CULTURE GRANT
NATIVE VILLAGE OF AKHIOK
$9,520CULTURE GRANT
SOUTHWEST ALASKA ARTS GROUP
$7,000CULTURE GRANT
NATIVE VILLAGE OF NAPAIMUTE
$7,000CULTURE GRANT
ALASKA FEDERATION OF NATIVES
$100,000ANNUAL CONTRIBUTION
ALEUT COMMUNITY OF SAINT PAUL
$85,000OCEAN CONSERVANCY
KING ISLAND NATIVE COMMUNITY
$12,500WAY OF LIFE FUND
PACIFIC COMMUNITY OF ALASKA
$10,0002022 GOTNV
HEALTHY AK NATIVES FOUNDATION
$6,000RAVENS BALL