UGARF serves as the named party on sponsored research agreements for projects performed at the University of Georgia, owns patents and other intellectual property developed at UGA, and protects, markets and licenses that IP through Innovation Gateway; funds acquired are reinvested in the UGA research enterprise.
A defining feature of University of Georgia Research Foundation Inc is that it sits behind sponsored research and technology transfer for the University of Georgia, with funds from patents, licensing, and sponsored projects reinvested into the UGA research enterprise. The foundation’s recent activity centers on very large support to the University of Georgia in Athens, including a 2024 grant of $297,627,557 and two 2023 grants above $253 million each. That scale points to an organization that functions as an internal research and commercialization vehicle rather than a conventional external grantmaker. Its work is tied to research administration, intellectual property management, and the commercialization of faculty-developed inventions. The recent grant record also shows continuity in support for the same university recipient across multiple years, which fits its role in managing research agreements and reinvesting proceeds from UGA intellectual property. Within that structure, the foundation serves faculty researchers, graduate and postdoctoral researchers, and the broader research enterprise at the university.
The foundation’s grantmaking is closely aligned with research infrastructure and commercialization at the University of Georgia. In sponsored projects support, it awarded $297,627,557 to the University of Georgia in 2024 for a statement-listed purpose. In a separate 2023 award, it granted $253,379,463 to the University of Georgia, also tied to a statement-listed purpose, reflecting the scale of internal research administration it supports. Its technology transfer work appears alongside intellectual property management: another 2023 grant of $253,067,100 went to the University of Georgia under the same statement format. Across these awards, the foundation appears to function as the named party on sponsored research agreements and as the organization that protects, markets, and licenses UGA-developed intellectual property through Innovation Gateway.
The grant-size profile is extremely concentrated: p25 is $253,223,282, the median is $253,379,463, and p75 is $275,503,510. That pattern shows a narrow band of very large awards rather than a wide spread of small grants. The recent record also shows continuity across years, with the University of Georgia appearing in 2023 and 2024. The foundation is a regular funder, makes program-related investments, and does not fund individuals. Its grantmaking is local, with all grants going to recipients in Georgia.
$804.1M
$140.6M
$321M
$317.3M
Most grants fall between $253.2M and $275.5M, with a median of $253.4M.
25th Percentile
$253.2M
Median
$253.4M
75th Percentile
$275.5M
About 100% of grants go to recipients in GA.
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Grantmaking is entirely concentrated in Georgia, and the recent grants all go to Athens. The University of Georgia appears three times in the recent-grants list, each as a recipient in Athens, GA. The grant recipient country distribution is 100% US. With all recorded grants staying in the state, the geographic pattern matches the foundation’s role inside the University of Georgia research system.
The recent grant record shows grants to the University of Georgia in Athens, GA. The beneficiary types listed include University of Georgia faculty researchers, graduate and postdoctoral researchers, and the broader UGA research enterprise.
Its grant sizes are very large and tightly clustered. The typical grant-size distribution is p25 at $253,223,282, median at $253,379,463, and p75 at $275,503,510.
The geographic scope is local, and 100% of grants in the recipient country distribution go to US recipients. The top state by grant count is Georgia, and the recent grants all go to Athens, GA.
Yes. The foundation is marked as making program-related investments, alongside its grantmaking role in research administration and technology transfer.
2024
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2024.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| University of Georgia | Athens, GA | $297,627,557 | 2024 | See Statement |
| University of Georgia | Athens, GA | $253,379,463 | 2023 | SEE STATEMENT |
| University of Georgia | Athens, GA | $253,067,100 | 2023 | See Statement |
University of Georgia
$297,627,557See Statement
University of Georgia
$253,379,463SEE STATEMENT
University of Georgia
$253,067,100See Statement