About Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s recent giving is anchored by a large cluster of contributions to Technology Review Inc in Cambridge, including a $5,569,447 grant in 2025, a $4,211,734 grant in 2024, and a $3,713,169 grant in 2023. That repeated support sits alongside programmatic grants tied to innovation and problem-solving, including Solve grants to Stem From Dance Inc in Brooklyn, Womens Audio Mission in San Francisco, and Ada Developers Academy in Seattle. The foundation also uses contributions, IRDF grants, prizes, and donor-advised fund distributions, which points to a mix of institutional support and targeted program funding rather than a single grantmaking channel. Much of the giving stays close to MIT’s ecosystem, but the recipient list also includes organizations outside Cambridge and beyond Massachusetts. Recent awards reach into technology commercialization, education, health, and social impact work, with amounts ranging from five- and six-figure grants up to multimillion-dollar contributions. The pattern suggests a funder that supports MIT-affiliated activity while also backing external organizations working on innovation, translation, and applied solutions.
What Massachusetts Institute of Technology Funds
In innovation and social impact, the foundation gave $250,000 to Stem From Dance Inc for a Solve Grant, $200,000 to Womens Audio Mission for a Solve Grant, and $200,000 to Ada Developers Academy for a Solve Grant. Those awards show a recurring emphasis on technology-enabled solutions and problem-solving through MIT Solve. In health and research-oriented work, it awarded $150,000 to EB Research Partnership Inc as a grant, while also making a $205,000 prize to Helix Carbon Inc in Dover, DE. Education is another clear thread: MIT International Inc received $973,000 in 2024 and $749,258 in 2023, and the foundation also supported Jewish Community Day School Inc with a $306,000 distribution from a donor-advised fund or charitable contribution. The recent record also includes support for technological translation through Landmark Bio PBLLC in Watertown, MA.
How Massachusetts Institute of Technology Gives
Typical awards cluster in the five-figure range, with a p25 of $10,000, a median of $25,516, and a p75 of $50,000. At the same time, the recent record includes much larger institutional contributions, showing a wide spread between routine grants and major support. The foundation’s grants are transactional and often one-time in nature, but some recipients appear in multiple years, including Technology Review Inc, Landmark Bio PBLLC, MIT International Inc, Beta Nu House Corporation, and Impact Assets Inc. The foundation is a regular funder with donor-advised fund distributions as part of its activity, and it does not fund individuals or make program-related investments. Unsolicited applications are accepted for several active programs, including MIT Solve, MIT Solve’s Solv[ED] Youth Innovation Challenge, Education Innovation Funds for Teaching and Learning, and Deshpande Center proof-of-concept funding.