The Steele Foundation for Hope concentrates its capital on a small number of high-impact projects that advance global health, humanitarian relief, and community-level health interventions, while also supporting a substantial local hospice initiative. Grants are large and strategic—often multi-million-dollar awards—and sometimes repeated to the same organization, indicating an emphasis on scaling proven solutions rather than making many small awards. The foundation favors technology and programmatic approaches that improve healthcare delivery in low-resource settings as well as direct service and infrastructure projects addressing palliative care and basic health determinants.
Highly concentrated giving: very few, large grants (multi-million-dollar scale), occasional repeat grants to the same grantee, strategic investments in scalable global health and humanitarian programs alongside major one-off local capital support.
Steele Foundation for Hope directs large, program-support grants toward a small set of health and humanitarian initiatives, including a $3,059,415 award to Hospice House Project in Merrimack and a $2,914,718 grant to Simprint Technology Limited in Cambridge. That pattern points to a funder that backs scale-up efforts rather than broad, dispersed giving. Recent awards also show repeated support for the same organizations, such as Simprint Technology Limited and Gardens for Health International, suggesting sustained engagement with selected partners. The foundation’s work reaches across health-system technology, relief services, nutrition, water access, and palliative care, with grants often structured around specific projects or program support. It also uses program-related investments in addition to grants, which extends its capital to social enterprises working in healthcare, water, food, and education. While much of its giving is national in scope, the recent grant list also includes organizations in New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and East Africa, reflecting both local and global priorities. Overall, the foundation’s profile is defined by concentrated, invitation-based support for organizations pursuing sustainable access to essential services.
In health technology, Steele Foundation for Hope gave $2,500,000 to Simprint Technology Limited in 2024 and $2,914,718 in 2023, showing repeated backing for biometric and health information tools. In nutrition and agricultural-health work, it awarded $528,000 and $496,340 to Gardens for Health International in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The foundation also funded water-access and infrastructure efforts, including $488,346 to Water Access Rwanda in Kigali and $450,000 to Building Tomorrow in Indianapolis. Humanitarian response is another clear thread: it provided $1,000,000 to Alight in Minneapolis and $500,000 to Community Organized Relief Effort in Los Angeles. Across these areas, the common feature is program support for organizations already operating in low-resource or crisis-affected settings.
Typical grants are large: the p25 is $250,000, the median is $488,346, and the p75 is $528,000. That distribution fits a foundation that makes a limited number of substantial, project-based awards rather than many small ones. The recent grants list also shows repeat funding to the same organizations across years, including Simprint Technology Limited, Gardens for Health International, Kickstart International, Project Life International, Building Tomorrow, and Village Hopecore International. The foundation is a regular funder and also makes program-related investments. Funding is proactive and invitation-only for grants, while PRIs are described as open to requests from for-profit social enterprises.
$9.1M
$243.3M
$5M
$10.1M
Most grants fall between $250K and $528K, with a median of $488K.
25th Percentile
$250K
Median
$488K
75th Percentile
$528K
About 19% of grants go to recipients in MA.
Top 5 recipient countries by grant volume for Steele Foundation for Hope.
| Rank | Country | Grants | Total | Share |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | United StatesDomestic | 23 | $87.9M | 69.7% |
| 2 | Kenya | 3 | $13.2M |
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Notable grantees: Simprint Technology Limited, Hospice House Project, EarthEnable, Alight, Gardens for Health International
Most grants go to recipients in the United States, which account for 23 awards, or 69.7% of the listed recent grants. Among named recipient cities, Cambridge appears more than once through Simprint Technology Limited and Gardens for Health International, while Merrimack appears through Hospice House Project and Home Health & Hospice Care. Outside the U.S., grants in the recent list reach Kigali, Nairobi, and Jinja, and the country distribution also includes the United Kingdom and Uganda. The foundation gives nationally, but the recipient mix shows a clear concentration in U.S.-based organizations alongside a smaller set of East African and U.K. grantees.
It supports organizations working on healthcare, water, food, education, and technology for development. The recent grants list includes nonprofits and social enterprises involved in hospice care, biometric health technology, humanitarian relief, nutrition, water access, and school-related or community infrastructure work.
For grants, no. The foundation’s grant programs are described as proactive or invitation-only. It does, however, accept funding requests for program-related investments from for-profit social enterprises developing sustainable solutions in healthcare, water, food, and education.
The recent-grant distribution is large: p25 is $250,000, median grant size is $488,346, and p75 is $528,000. Several awards also exceed $1 million, including grants to Hospice House Project, Simprint Technology Limited, Earthenable, and Alight.
Yes. The recent list shows repeat support for multiple organizations across years, including Simprint Technology Limited, Gardens for Health International, Kickstart International, Project Life International, Building Tomorrow, and Village Hopecore International. That pattern suggests ongoing support for selected partners rather than one-time funding only.
Among listed recipients, Massachusetts is the top state by grant count. Recent Massachusetts recipients include Gardens for Health International in Cambridge and Project Life International in Boston. New Hampshire recipients also appear frequently, including Hospice House Project, Home Health & Hospice Care, and Families in Transition.
2024
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2024.
| 3 | United Kingdom | 3 | $12.4M | 9.1% |
| 4 | Rwanda | 3 | $9M | 9.1% |
| 5 | Uganda | 1 | $1.5M | 3.0% |
Recipient country reflects the grantee's headquarters per IRS 990-PF and Schedule F filings, not the program's implementation country.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HOSPICE HOUSE PROJECT | MERRIMACK, NH | $3,059,415 | 2024 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| SIMPRINT TECHNOLOGY LIMITED | CAMBRIDGE | $2,500,000 | 2024 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| EARTHENABLE | JINJA | $1,500,000 | 2024 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| GARDENS FOR HEALTH INTERNATIONAL | CAMBRIDGE, MA | $528,000 | 2024 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| PROJECT LIFE INTERNATIONAL | BOSTON, MA | $500,000 | 2024 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| BUILDING TOMORROW | INDIANAPOLIS, IN | $450,000 | 2024 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| AKIRACHIX | NAIROBI | $250,000 | 2024 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| KICKSTART INTERNATIONAL | SAN FRANCISCO, CA | $250,000 | 2024 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| VILLAGE HOPECORE INTERNATIONAL | STOCKTON, CA | $100,000 | 2024 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| SIMPRINT TECHNOLOGY LIMITED | CAMBRIDGE | $2,914,718 | 2023 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| ALIGHT | MINNEAPOLIS, MN | $1,000,000 | 2023 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| COMMUNITY ORGANIZED RELIEF EFFORT | LOS ANGELES, CA | $500,000 | 2023 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| WORLD CENTRAL KITCHEN | WASHINGTON, DC | $500,000 | 2023 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| GARDENS FOR HEALTH INTERNATIONAL | CAMBRIDGE, MA | $496,340 | 2023 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| WATER ACCESS RWANDA | KIGALI | $488,346 | 2023 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| HOME HEALTH & HOSPICE CARE | MERRIMACK, NH | $423,501 | 2023 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| BUILDING TOMORROW | INDIANAPOLIS, IN | $350,000 | 2023 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| PROJECT LIFE INTERNATIONAL | BOSTON, MA | $346,422 | 2023 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| KICKSTART INTERNATIONAL | SAN FRANCISCO, CA | $215,448 | 2023 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| FAMILIES IN TRANSITION | MANCHESTER, NH | $100,000 | 2023 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| VILLAGE HOPECORE INTERNATIONAL | STOCKTON, CA | $60,000 | 2023 | PROGRAM SUPPORT |
HOSPICE HOUSE PROJECT
$3,059,415PROGRAM SUPPORT
SIMPRINT TECHNOLOGY LIMITED
$2,500,000PROGRAM SUPPORT
EARTHENABLE
$1,500,000PROGRAM SUPPORT
GARDENS FOR HEALTH INTERNATIONAL
$528,000PROGRAM SUPPORT
PROJECT LIFE INTERNATIONAL
$500,000PROGRAM SUPPORT
BUILDING TOMORROW
$450,000PROGRAM SUPPORT
AKIRACHIX
PROGRAM SUPPORT
KICKSTART INTERNATIONAL
$250,000PROGRAM SUPPORT
VILLAGE HOPECORE INTERNATIONAL
$100,000PROGRAM SUPPORT
SIMPRINT TECHNOLOGY LIMITED
$2,914,718PROGRAM SUPPORT
ALIGHT
$1,000,000PROGRAM SUPPORT
COMMUNITY ORGANIZED RELIEF EFFORT
$500,000PROGRAM SUPPORT
WORLD CENTRAL KITCHEN
$500,000PROGRAM SUPPORT
GARDENS FOR HEALTH INTERNATIONAL
$496,340PROGRAM SUPPORT
WATER ACCESS RWANDA
$488,346PROGRAM SUPPORT
HOME HEALTH & HOSPICE CARE
$423,501PROGRAM SUPPORT
BUILDING TOMORROW
$350,000PROGRAM SUPPORT
PROJECT LIFE INTERNATIONAL
$346,422PROGRAM SUPPORT
KICKSTART INTERNATIONAL
$215,448PROGRAM SUPPORT
FAMILIES IN TRANSITION
$100,000PROGRAM SUPPORT
VILLAGE HOPECORE INTERNATIONAL
$60,000PROGRAM SUPPORT