HOHME TEAM concentrates its giving on direct-service and capacity-building efforts that serve vulnerable children, justice-involved individuals, and people experiencing homelessness. The foundation favors outcome-oriented programs (e.g., a recidivism-reduction entrepreneurship curriculum) and also makes strategic infrastructure investments to help organizations scale. Grants include both local faith-based service partners in Indianapolis and national program providers, indicating a mix of place-based and national impact preferences.
Hohme Team’s recent giving is anchored by a $1.1 million infrastructure grant to The Foundation Fund in Columbus, Ohio, aimed at helping the organization grow and expand services for children and local nonprofit partners serving the needy and marginalized. That large award fits a broader pattern: the foundation backs programs that combine direct service with organizational capacity, and it also supports work designed to scale beyond a single site. One recurring example is Hustle 2.0, an entrepreneurial skill-development program for incarcerated people. Hohme Team funded that work in multiple years, including scholarships for thousands of participants across many states and facilities, showing an interest in reentry support tied to education and participation costs. The foundation also makes smaller, targeted grants for specialized service delivery, such as therapy for Spanish-speaking children with autism and developmental delays. Across the recent grant list, its giving reaches child-serving organizations, justice-involved individuals, and local homelessness response work, with both national program providers and Indianapolis-based partners appearing in the same portfolio.
In prison reentry and recidivism-reduction work, Hohme Team supported Hustle 2.0 with $356,111 in 2023, $238,125 in 2024, and $136,214 in 2025 for entrepreneurial skill development scholarships and related program costs. The foundation also funded child-focused infrastructure: The Foundation Fund received $1.1 million in 2025 to expand services for children and for local nonprofit organizations serving the needy and marginalized. For specialized direct service, Pequenos Amigos received $46,588 in 2023 to pay qualified speech, occupational, and physical therapists providing free therapy for Spanish-speaking children with autism and other developmental delays. In homelessness work, Indian Creek Community Church received grants in 2024 and 2025 to support staff serving the homeless population of Indianapolis.
Hohme Team’s recent grants range from $46,588 at the 25th percentile to a median of $79,318 and $238,125 at the 75th percentile, with one $1.1 million outlier at the top end. The pattern is not limited to one-time awards: Hustle 2.0 appears in 2023, 2024, and 2025, and Indian Creek Community Church appears in 2024 and 2025. The foundation is a pure DAF provider, so its gifts are made through donor-advised fund activity rather than program-related investments. The recent record shows a mix of large capacity grants and smaller operating or program-support awards.
$1.2M
$377K
$1.3M
$1.3M
Most grants fall between $47K and $238K, with a median of $79K.
25th Percentile
$47K
Median
$79K
75th Percentile
$238K
About 20% of grants go to recipients in CO.
Laura Gogis
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Concentrated, high-dollar giving to a small number of grantees with repeat and multi-grant relationships; emphasis on programmatic impact and capacity-building rather than many small discretionary gifts.
Notable grantees: The Foundation Fund, Hustle 2.0 / Hustle 20, SaltExchange, Pequeños Amigos, Indian Creek Community Church
Hohme Team gives regionally, with Colorado as the top state by grant count. Indiana received 20% of grants, reflecting some home-state support, but the recent list also includes recipients in Ohio, New York, Illinois, and Colorado. The clearest city concentration outside Indiana is Littleton, Colorado, where multiple grants went to Hustle 2.0. Other named recipient cities include Columbus, Brooklyn, and Chicago, showing a multi-state pattern rather than a single-city focus.
The recent grants show support for child-serving organizations, reentry and entrepreneurship programming for incarcerated people, homelessness services, and therapy services for Spanish-speaking children with autism and developmental delays. The largest recent grant also went to an organization expanding services for children and local nonprofit organizations serving the needy and marginalized.
Yes. Hustle 2.0 appears in 2023, 2024, and 2025, and Indian Creek Community Church appears in 2024 and 2025. That pattern suggests some recipients receive support across multiple years rather than only once.
The grant-size distribution is $46,588 at the 25th percentile, $79,318 at the median, and $238,125 at the 75th percentile. The recent record also includes a much larger $1.1 million infrastructure grant, indicating a wide spread between smaller program awards and major capacity support.
Colorado is the top state by grant count. Indiana accounts for 20% of grants, and the recipient list also includes organizations in Ohio, New York, and Illinois. The pattern is regional rather than limited to the foundation’s headquarters state.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Foundation Fund | Columbus, OH | $1,100,000 | 2025 | Provide infrastructure support to allow The Foundation Fund to grow and expand its services to serve more children and more local nonprofit organizations serving the needy and marginalized. |
| Hustle 2 0 | Littleton, CO | $136,214 | 2025 | Over 2500 incarcerated individuals across 39 states and 387 facilities were granted scholarships to participate in the Hustle 2.0 entrepreneurial skill development program. Additionally, funds were used to develop additional curriculum for the program. Finally, 733 incarcerated individuals in California were able to enter the program state-specific program. All funds went to direct program support of incarcerated individuals, with a remarkable success rate of reducing recidivism from 90% to less than 10%. |
| Indian Creek Community Church | Indianapolis, IN | $10,280 | 2025 | Provide support to staff who are working to serve the homeless population of Indianapolis. |
| Hustle 20 | Littleton, CO | $238,125 | 2024 | Over 2500 incarcerated individuals across 39 states and 387 facilities were granted scholarships to participate in the Hustle 2.0 entrepreneurial skill development program. Additionally, funds were used to develop additional curriculum for the program. Finally, 733 incarcerated individuals in California were able to enter the program state-specific program. All funds went to direct program support of incarcerated individuals, with a remarkable success rate of reducing recidivism from 90% to less than 10%. |
| SaltExchange | Brooklyn, NY | $79,318 | 2024 | Building a platform to mobilize the power of collective giving. Funds were used to build a business model and plan, secure research and development capabilities and create a report on the ecosystem around child sexual exploitation to help better understand and lead to systemic change and improvement in reducing exploitation. |
| Indian Creek Community Church | Indianapolis, IN | $26,108 | 2024 | Provide support to staff who are working to serve the homeless population of Indianapolis. |
| HUSTLE 20 | LITTLETON, CO | $356,111 | 2023 | 2531 incarcerated individuals across 39 states and 387 facilities were granted scholarships to participate in the Hustle 2.0 entrepreneurial skill development program. Additionally, funds were used to develop additional curriculum for the program. Finally, 621 incarcerated individuals in California were able to enter the program state-specific program. All funds went to direct program support of incarcerated individuals, with a remarkable success rate of reducing recidivism from 90% to less than 10%. |
| PEQUENOS AMIGOS | CHICAGO, IL | $46,588 | 2023 | The grant was used to fund qualified speech, occupational, and physical therapists to provide therapy services for free to Spanish-speaking children with autism and other developmental delays. |
The Foundation Fund
$1,100,000Provide infrastructure support to allow The Foundation Fund to grow and expand its services to serve more children and more local nonprofit organizations serving the needy and marginalized.
Hustle 2 0
$136,214Over 2500 incarcerated individuals across 39 states and 387 facilities were granted scholarships to participate in the Hustle 2.0 entrepreneurial skill development program. Additionally, funds were used to develop additional curriculum for the program. Finally, 733 incarcerated individuals in California were able to enter the program state-specific program. All funds went to direct program support of incarcerated individuals, with a remarkable success rate of reducing recidivism from 90% to less than 10%.
Indian Creek Community Church
$10,280Provide support to staff who are working to serve the homeless population of Indianapolis.
Hustle 20
$238,125Over 2500 incarcerated individuals across 39 states and 387 facilities were granted scholarships to participate in the Hustle 2.0 entrepreneurial skill development program. Additionally, funds were used to develop additional curriculum for the program. Finally, 733 incarcerated individuals in California were able to enter the program state-specific program. All funds went to direct program support of incarcerated individuals, with a remarkable success rate of reducing recidivism from 90% to less than 10%.
SaltExchange
$79,318Building a platform to mobilize the power of collective giving. Funds were used to build a business model and plan, secure research and development capabilities and create a report on the ecosystem around child sexual exploitation to help better understand and lead to systemic change and improvement in reducing exploitation.
Indian Creek Community Church
$26,108Provide support to staff who are working to serve the homeless population of Indianapolis.
HUSTLE 20
$356,1112531 incarcerated individuals across 39 states and 387 facilities were granted scholarships to participate in the Hustle 2.0 entrepreneurial skill development program. Additionally, funds were used to develop additional curriculum for the program. Finally, 621 incarcerated individuals in California were able to enter the program state-specific program. All funds went to direct program support of incarcerated individuals, with a remarkable success rate of reducing recidivism from 90% to less than 10%.
PEQUENOS AMIGOS
$46,588The grant was used to fund qualified speech, occupational, and physical therapists to provide therapy services for free to Spanish-speaking children with autism and other developmental delays.