To help kids grow smarter, stronger, and kinder through research-driven educational media and learning resources for children, families, and communities.
Sesame Workshop’s recent giving is dominated by large program-implementation grants for international early childhood work and learning resources, including a $16,469,152 grant to the International Rescue Committee in 2023 and a $3,724,018 grant in 2024. Those grants sit alongside six- and seven-figure support for internal Sesame Workshop entities, showing a funder that uses philanthropy to run its own educational mission rather than to distribute small external awards. The organization’s stated purpose is to help children grow smarter, stronger, and kinder through research-driven educational media and learning resources for children, families, and communities. Its grantmaking aligns with that mission across early childhood education, language and literacy, social-emotional skills, health and hygiene, family support, autism and special needs resources, and digital well-being. Recent awards also show support for university-based program work, media partnerships, and general operating support within the Sesame Workshop network. The largest grants point to crisis-response and humanitarian education, while smaller awards extend the same child-centered agenda into media, research, and convening work. The foundation’s latest filings show substantial assets and annual grant volume, but the pattern of giving is more important than breadth: the grants are concentrated around a small set of mission-aligned organizations and long-running program partnerships.
A major thread in Sesame Workshop’s giving is humanitarian early childhood education. It awarded $16,469,152 to the International Rescue Committee in 2023 and $3,724,018 in 2024 for program implementation, reflecting sustained support for crisis-affected children. The foundation also backed New York University with $4,211,308 in 2023 and $3,125,853 in 2024 for program implementation, pointing to research- or education-linked work tied to its learning mission. Smaller grants extend into media and convening activities. WNET - Thirteen received $127,345 in 2023 for program implementation, while Concordia Summit Inc received $10,000 in both 2023 and 2024 for general support. Sesame Workshop also made general support grants to Sesame Workshop International Inc, indicating funding that supports organizational infrastructure as well as program delivery. Across these awards, the common thread is child development content, educational reach, and mission execution.
$8.9M
$558.5M
$186.9M
$192.3M
Most grants fall between $25K and $3.1M, with a median of $127K.
25th Percentile
$25K
Median
$127K
75th Percentile
$3.1M
About 77% of grants go to recipients in NY.
SHERRI ROLLINS WESTIN
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Sesame Workshop’s grant sizes are highly skewed: the 25th percentile is $24,800, the median is $127,345, and the 75th percentile is $3,125,853. That spread shows a mix of smaller general-support awards and very large program-implementation grants. The recent record also shows repeat recipients across years, including the International Rescue Committee, New York University, Sesame Workshop International Inc, WNET - Thirteen, Center for US Global Leadership, and Concordia Summit Inc. Sesame Workshop is a regular funder rather than a DAF, does not fund individuals, and does not make program-related investments. Its public materials indicate that it does not operate public grant programs accepting unsolicited applications from external organizations.
Giving is heavily concentrated in New York: 77% of grants go to recipients in the HQ state, and New York is also the top state by grant count. Recent awards land mostly in New York City, including multiple grants to organizations in NEW YORK, NY. Outside New York, recipients include Washington, DC; Princeton, NJ; and Washington, NY. The grant recipient country distribution is entirely domestic, with 13 grants in the United States.
No. The foundation’s public program descriptions indicate that it does not operate public grant programs that accept applications from external organizations or individuals. Its funding is organized around its own educational and humanitarian initiatives and partnership programs.
The grant distribution is wide, with a 25th percentile of $24,800, a median of $127,345, and a 75th percentile of $3,125,853. That pattern shows both smaller operating or general-support awards and much larger program-implementation grants.
Recent and active grant activity centers on early childhood education, language and literacy, social-emotional skills, health and hygiene, family support, autism and special needs resources, digital well-being, and crisis-response education. The largest grants also connect to humanitarian early childhood learning.
Several recipients appear in multiple years, which suggests recurring relationships. The International Rescue Committee, New York University, Sesame Workshop International Inc, WNET - Thirteen, Center for US Global Leadership, and Concordia Summit Inc each appear more than once in the recent grants list.
New York is the top state by grant count, and 77% of grants go to recipients in the HQ state. Recent recipients in the state include multiple organizations in New York City, along with recipients in Princeton, Washington, and Washington, DC.
2024
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2024.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| INTERNATIONAL RESCUE COMMITTEE | NEW YORK, NY | $3,724,018 | 2024 | PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION |
| NEW YORK UNIVERSITY | NEW YORK, NY | $3,125,853 | 2024 | PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION |
| SESAME WORKSHOP INTERNATIONAL INC | NEW YORK, NY | $2,007,852 | 2024 | GENERAL SUPPORT |
| CENTER FOR US GLOBAL LEADERSHIP | NEW YORK, DC | $30,000 | 2024 | GENERAL SUPPORT |
| WSJ COUNCIL | PRINCETON, NJ | $24,800 | 2024 | GENERAL SUPPORT |
| CONCORDIA SUMMIT INC | WASHINGTON, NY | $10,000 | 2024 | GENERAL SUPPORT |
| INTERNATIONAL RESCUE COMMITTEE | NEW YORK, NY | $16,469,152 | 2023 | PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION |
| NEW YORK UNIVERSITY | NEW YORK, NY | $4,211,308 | 2023 | PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION |
| SESAME WORKSHOP INTERNATIONAL INC | NEW YORK, NY | $1,778,450 | 2023 | GENERAL SUPPORT |
| WNET - THIRTEEN | NEW YORK, NY | $127,345 | 2023 | PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION |
| CENTER FOR US GLOBAL LEADERSHIP | WASHINGTON, DC | $44,000 | 2023 | GENERAL SUPPORT |
| CONCORDIA SUMMIT INC | NEW YORK, NY | $10,000 | 2023 | GENERAL SUPPORT |
| HERE ART CENTER | NEW YORK, NY | $6,000 | 2023 | GENERAL SUPPORT |
INTERNATIONAL RESCUE COMMITTEE
$3,724,018PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
$3,125,853PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION
SESAME WORKSHOP INTERNATIONAL INC
$2,007,852GENERAL SUPPORT
CENTER FOR US GLOBAL LEADERSHIP
$30,000GENERAL SUPPORT
WSJ COUNCIL
$24,800GENERAL SUPPORT
CONCORDIA SUMMIT INC
$10,000GENERAL SUPPORT
INTERNATIONAL RESCUE COMMITTEE
$16,469,152PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
$4,211,308PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION
SESAME WORKSHOP INTERNATIONAL INC
$1,778,450GENERAL SUPPORT
WNET - THIRTEEN
$127,345PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION
CENTER FOR US GLOBAL LEADERSHIP
$44,000GENERAL SUPPORT
CONCORDIA SUMMIT INC
$10,000GENERAL SUPPORT
HERE ART CENTER
$6,000GENERAL SUPPORT