To create economic vitality in communities by encouraging small business growth.
Tulsa Economic Development Corporation’s recent grantmaking centers on financing for small businesses, with loan products that range from microloans to SBA 504 fixed-asset financing and retail revitalization capital. The organization’s active programs show a lender-style approach: business capital, technical assistance, and specialized financing for entrepreneurs, developers, and corridor-based retail projects. A distinctive feature is the reBUILD Tulsa Developer Academy, where winning teams compete for a $50,000 zero-interest loan tied to residential development training. The foundation’s largest recent grant was $2,243,309 to Young Mens Christian Association of Greater Tulsa for its organizational purpose. Beyond that single grant, Tulsa Economic Development Corporation’s program portfolio points to a broad local development mandate. It offers a Tulsa Business Loan for local small-business capital, a City of Tulsa Small Business Loan for businesses within city limits, and a Disaster Relief Loans for Businesses option for Oklahoma firms facing disruption. The organization also supports entrepreneurs through technical and management assistance alongside lending. Its stated purpose is to create economic vitality in communities by encouraging small business growth.
Small business financing is the clearest through line in Tulsa Economic Development Corporation’s work. The Tulsa Business Loan supports Tulsa-area businesses with local capital, while the Tulsa Small Business Loan, administered with the City of Tulsa, is designed for start-up and growing businesses within city limits and prioritizes job creation or retention. Technical assistance is paired with lending in the microloan program, which serves startups and growing small businesses in Oklahoma and can cover working capital, furniture, inventory, supplies, and payroll. For larger capital needs, the SBA 504 Loan supports commercial real estate and major equipment purchases through fixed-asset financing. The organization also funds development capacity building. Through reBUILD Tulsa Developer Academy, teams completing residential development training can compete for a $50,000 zero-interest loan.
Tulsa Economic Development Corporation’s typical grant size is listed at $2,243,309 for the 25th percentile, median, and 75th percentile, reflecting a very concentrated grant pattern in the available data. The recent-grants record shows one disclosed grant in 2024, and the same recipient type does not appear across multiple years in the provided material. The organization functions as a loan-focused economic development corporation rather than a traditional grantmaker. Its active programs are structured as lending products, revolving capital, and loan participation vehicles. Unsolicited applications are accepted for the listed programs, including local business loans, microloans, SBA 504 lending, and disaster relief financing.
$2.2M
$30.3M
$5M
$5M
Most grants fall between $2.2M and $2.2M, with a median of $2.2M.
25th Percentile
$2.2M
Median
$2.2M
75th Percentile
$2.2M
About 100% of grants go to recipients in OK.
ROSE WASHINGTON
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Grant activity is local and entirely in Oklahoma in the available data, with 100% of grants going to recipients in the HQ state. The single recent grant went to a Tulsa recipient, Young Mens Christian Association of Greater Tulsa. Program geography is similarly concentrated: Tulsa, the Tulsa MSA, and Oklahoma appear across the organization’s lending products, with the City of Tulsa loan program limited to city boundaries and the disaster-relief and business lending programs serving Oklahoma businesses.
Its active programs include a Tulsa Business Loan, SBA 504 fixed-asset financing, a microloan program, a retail revitalization revolving loan fund, a City of Tulsa Small Business Loan, disaster relief loans for businesses, and an SSBCI-backed Oklahoma Business Lending Partnership. The portfolio is built around business capital rather than general charitable grants.
Yes. The microloan program includes technical and management assistance, and the organization also offers entrepreneurial training and education. The reBUILD Tulsa Developer Academy adds residential development training before a $50,000 zero-interest loan is awarded to winning teams.
The organization’s programs are local to Tulsa and Oklahoma. Listed geographies include Tulsa, the Tulsa MSA, the City of Tulsa, and Oklahoma statewide. In the grant data provided, 100% of grants went to recipients in Oklahoma.
The provided distribution shows $2,243,309 at the 25th percentile, median, and 75th percentile. That indicates the available grant record is highly concentrated around a single disclosed amount.
Yes. The active programs listed all accept unsolicited applications, including the Tulsa Business Loan, SBA 504 Loan, reBUILD Tulsa Developer Academy capstone loan, Microloan, Retail Revitalization Revolving Loan Fund, Tulsa Small Business Loan, Disaster Relief Loans for Businesses, SSBCI OBLP, and the Oklahoma Business Lending Partnership.
2024
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2024.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| YOUNG MENS CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION OF GREATER TULSA | TULSA, OK | $2,243,309 | 2024 | TO SUPPORT ORGANIZATION'S PURPOSE |
YOUNG MENS CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION OF GREATER TULSA
$2,243,309TO SUPPORT ORGANIZATION'S PURPOSE