Build a Better World through Sport.
The International Olympic Committee’s largest recent grants go to support the Olympic movement itself, with three major awards to the USOPC in Colorado Springs and Los Angeles-based LA 2028. That pattern places Olympic movement support at the center of its giving, alongside the organization’s stated focus on sport development, athlete support, integrity and anti-doping, Olympic Games organisation, and international sports collaboration. The recent record also shows that this is not a small-grant funder: one grant in 2025 to the USOPC reached $321,188,216, while another in 2023 totaled $237,015,493. Those awards sit within a broader grantmaking profile defined by programmatic support, organizational support, and direct service. The foundation’s beneficiary list points to Olympic athletes, National Olympic Committees, and sports federations and associations, which fits the way its grants are used to strengthen institutions tied to the Olympic movement. Its leadership is listed as Christophe De Kepper, and the latest 990 year on file is 2025.
In Olympic movement support, the International Olympic Committee gave $24,154,644 in 2025 to LA 2028 for support Olympic movement, linking its grantmaking to preparations for the Los Angeles Games. The same theme appears in its support of the USOPC, including a $110,005,563 grant in 2024 and a $321,188,216 grant in 2025. The funder also aligns its giving with organizational support for entities that help manage Olympic participation and coordination. Its stated focus areas include sport development, athlete support, integrity and anti-doping, Olympic Games organisation, and international sports collaboration, showing a grant portfolio built around both competition delivery and the institutions that sustain it.
Typical grant size is large: the grant-size distribution shows a p25 of $77,378, a median of $55,043,224, and a p75 of $141,758,046. The recent record suggests repeated support to the same recipients across multiple years rather than one-off awards, especially for the USOPC and LA 2028. The International Olympic Committee is classified as a regular funder, does not fund individuals, and makes program-related investments. The grant history provided is dominated by organizational support rather than individual aid.
$345.3M
$4.7B
$4.4B
$3.4B
Most grants fall between $77K and $141.8M, with a median of $55M.
25th Percentile
$77K
Median
$55M
75th Percentile
$141.8M
CHRISTOPHE DE KEPPER
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All recent grants in the data went to recipients in the United States, for 6 grants and 100% of the listed total. Colorado Springs appears repeatedly through the USOPC, while Los Angeles appears through LA 2028. No other recipient countries are shown in the recent-grants set, so the visible geography is concentrated in U.S. Olympic institutions and the host-city structure around Los Angeles 2028.
The listed beneficiary types are Olympic athletes, National Olympic Committees, sports federations and associations. The recent grants also show support for the USOPC and LA 2028, which fits a pattern of organizational and programmatic support tied to the Olympic movement.
The foundation’s stated focus areas are sport development, athlete support, integrity and anti-doping, Olympic Games organisation, and international sports collaboration. The recent grants connect especially to Olympic movement support and Games-related organization.
The grant-size distribution is very large: p25 is $77,378, median is $55,043,224, and p75 is $141,758,046. Recent awards include a $321,188,216 grant in 2025 and a $237,015,493 grant in 2023.
Yes. The recent record shows multiple awards to the same organizations across years, including the USOPC in 2023, 2024, and 2025, and LA 2028 in 2023, 2024, and 2025. That points to recurring support rather than isolated grants.
No. The funder is marked as funds individuals: False, and the recent grants shown are all to organizations rather than people.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| USOPC | Colorado Springs, CO | $321,188,216 | 2025 | SUPPORT OLYMPIC MOVEMENT |
| LA 2028 | Los Angeles, CA | $24,154,644 | 2025 | SUPPORT OLYMPIC MOVEMENT |
| USOPC | COLORADO SPRINGS, CO | $110,005,563 | 2024 | — |
| LA 2028 | LOS ANGELES, CA | $66,859 | 2024 | — |
| usopc | COLORADO SPRINGS, CO | $237,015,493 | 2023 | SUPPORT OLYMPIC MOVEMENT |
| LA 2028 | LOS ANGELES, CA | $80,885 | 2023 | — |
USOPC
$321,188,216SUPPORT OLYMPIC MOVEMENT
LA 2028
$24,154,644SUPPORT OLYMPIC MOVEMENT
USOPC
$110,005,563LA 2028
$66,859usopc
$237,015,493SUPPORT OLYMPIC MOVEMENT
LA 2028
$80,885