
Our mission is to get to zero new HIV transmissions in Tennessee and Kentucky. Our goal is to provide PrEP or HIV Care to each patient at no cost or at the lowest cost possible regardless of income or insurance status.
Music City Prep Clinic’s largest recent grant went to Oasis Center for emergency shelter for runaway youth tied to HIV services, a strong signal that the foundation’s giving is built around direct, local health and safety support. The public charity says its mission is to get to zero new HIV transmissions in Tennessee and Kentucky, and its recent grants reflect that goal through PrEP access, HIV care, testing, and related community support. In 2023, the clinic also backed Our Pride Encompasses Nashville for the Nashville Pride event and Kentuckiana Pride for the Kentucky Pride event, showing support for LGBTQ+ community spaces alongside public health work. Its funding is centered on services that reach people where they are: clinic-based care, event support, local health departments, and partner organizations serving vulnerable populations. The pattern suggests a funder that uses grants as a practical extension of its own service model, with a strong emphasis on Tennessee and nearby communities.
In HIV prevention and care, Music City Prep Clinic funded Metro Public Health with $10,000 to support the local health department, aligning with its stated focus on HIV prevention, testing, and treatment access. For youth services, it gave $104,990 to Oasis Center for emergency shelter for runaway youth HIV, linking housing support with HIV-related service delivery. The clinic also supports community-based visibility and access through event funding: it granted $67,550 to Our Pride Encompasses Nashville for the Nashville Pride event and $20,000 to Kentuckiana Pride for the Kentucky Pride event. A separate grant of $15,600 to Aids Life Cycle supported an AIDS organizations fundraiser, adding another public-facing channel to its health-related giving.
Music City Prep Clinic’s typical grants cluster in the low-to-mid five figures, with a p25 of $8,000, a median of $12,000, and a p75 of $20,000. The 2023 list includes one much larger award at $104,990, but most grants fall near the clinic’s stated median. The funder is a public charity, not a private foundation, and it does not fund individuals or make program-related investments. Recent grants are all from 2023, so the pattern here shows one-year activity rather than a multi-year recurrence in the provided data.
$250K
$24.3M
$46.3M
$45.2M
Most grants fall between $8K and $20K, with a median of $12K.
25th Percentile
$8K
Median
$12K
75th Percentile
$20K
About 75% of grants go to recipients in TN.
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Giving is heavily concentrated in Tennessee, which accounts for 75% of grants in the data and is also the top state by grant count. Nashville appears most often, with grants to Oasis Center, Our Pride Encompasses Nashville, Street Works, and Metro Public Health. Outside Tennessee, the clinic gave to Louisville, Kentucky through Kentuckiana Pride and to Phoenix, Arizona through Ebony House. All listed recipients are in the US.
The foundation’s stated focus areas are HIV prevention, PrEP provision and access, HIV testing, STI testing and treatment, sexual health and wellness, and telemedicine services. Its recent grants also show support for emergency shelter tied to HIV services, Pride events, and a local health department.
Typical awards are in the low-to-mid five-figure range. The provided distribution shows a p25 of $8,000, a median of $12,000, and a p75 of $20,000.
Yes. Tennessee is the top state by grant count, and 75% of grants in the data went to recipients in Tennessee. Nashville is the most frequent recipient city in the recent grants list.
Recent recipients included Oasis Center, Our Pride Encompasses Nashville, Kentuckiana Pride, Aids Life Cycle, Street Works, Metro Public Health, Mahogany Honors, Franklin Pride Tn, and Ebony House. The grants supported shelter, Pride events, fundraising, reconstruction after tornado damage, local public health, and residential mental health services.
2023
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2023.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| OASIS CENTER | Nashville, TN | $104,990 | 2023 | Emergency shelter for runaway youth HIV |
| OUR PRIDE ENCOMPASSES NASHVILLE | Nashville, TN | $67,550 | 2023 | Support Nashville Pride Event |
| KENTUCKIANA PRIDE | Louisville, KY | $20,000 | 2023 | Support Kentucky Pride Event |
| AIDS LIFE CYCLE | — | $15,600 | 2023 | Support AIDS organizations fundraiser |
| STREET WORKS | Nashville, TN | $12,000 | 2023 | Help reconstruction after tornado damage |
| METRO PUBLIC HEALTH | Nashville, TN | $10,000 | 2023 | Support local health department |
| MAHOGANY HONORS | Nashville, TN | $8,000 | 2023 | — |
| FRANKLIN PRIDE TN | Franklin, TN | $7,000 | 2023 | Support Franklin Pride Event |
| EBONY HOUSE | Phoenix, AZ | $5,000 | 2023 | Residential mental health facility |
OASIS CENTER
$104,990Emergency shelter for runaway youth HIV
OUR PRIDE ENCOMPASSES NASHVILLE
$67,550Support Nashville Pride Event
KENTUCKIANA PRIDE
$20,000Support Kentucky Pride Event
AIDS LIFE CYCLE
$15,600Support AIDS organizations fundraiser
STREET WORKS
$12,000Help reconstruction after tornado damage
METRO PUBLIC HEALTH
$10,000Support local health department
MAHOGANY HONORS
$8,000FRANKLIN PRIDE TN
$7,000Support Franklin Pride Event
EBONY HOUSE
$5,000Residential mental health facility