Boys & Girls Clubs of San Francisco inspires and enables all young people, especially those from disadvantaged circumstances, to realize their full potential as productive, responsible, and caring citizens.
A single 2025 grant of $4,015,709 to various IRC 501(c)(3) entities sets the tone for Boys & Girls Clubs of San Francisco’s recent giving: large, local awards tied to direct service programs for young people. The foundation’s work centers on after-school academic support and tutoring, creative arts, sports and play, leadership and character development, job readiness, behavioral health services and counseling, college preparation and scholarships, and residential summer camp at Camp Mendocino. Its program descriptions point to a networked model rather than a narrow one-off approach, with support flowing through scholarship, leadership, and service programs that connect Club members to education and recognition opportunities. Youth of the Year is one example: it is a citywide leadership development and scholarship-linked program for outstanding Club members drawn from each Clubhouse, School-Based Club, and Camp Mendocino. The scholarship program is another core channel, helping graduating members connect with scholarships offered exclusively to BGCSF members, BGCA scholarships, and external scholarship partners. Together, these programs show a funder focused on youth development across academic, creative, physical, and behavioral health supports.
In college access and scholarships, Boys & Girls Clubs of San Francisco runs an annual scholarship application for graduating BGCSF members and connects eligible youth with scholarships from BGCSF, BGCA, and external partners. Youth leadership is another clear emphasis: Youth of the Year recognizes outstanding Club members and provides scholarship support linked to the award, with finalists selected from each Clubhouse, School-Based Club, and Camp Mendocino. The foundation also funds a broad mix of direct-service programming through large grants described as supporting art, suicide prevention, and other activities. Its stated focus areas include after-school academic support and tutoring, creative arts, sports, fitness and play, behavioral health services and counseling, and job readiness and workforce development.
Grant sizes are substantial: the p25 is $1,406,034, the median is $2,275,926, and the p75 is $3,145,818. The two recent grants listed are both in California and both were made in 2025 and 2023, with the same broad program description attached to each, which suggests a recurring pattern of multi-entity support rather than isolated project funding. The organization is a foundation operating through direct service and program/project support, and it does not fund individuals or make program-related investments. An annual scholarship application is also part of its giving structure for graduating BGCSF members.
$4M
$129.6M
$25M
$25.7M
Most grants fall between $1.4M and $3.1M, with a median of $2.3M.
25th Percentile
$1.4M
Median
$2.3M
75th Percentile
$3.1M
About 100% of grants go to recipients in CA.
ROB CONNOLLY
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Boys & Girls Clubs of San Francisco gives locally and all recorded grants in the data go to recipients in the United States. California is the top state by grant count, and 100% of grants are to recipients in the HQ state. The named recipients in the recent grants list are both in San Francisco, including the various IRC 501(c)(3) entities and the group of 17 various IRC 501(c)(3) entities. The footprint is city-centered rather than national or multi-state.
Its listed focus areas include after-school academic support and tutoring, creative arts, sports, fitness and play, leadership and character development, job readiness and workforce development, behavioral health services and counseling, college preparation and scholarships, and residential summer camp at Camp Mendocino.
The p25 grant size is $1,406,034, the median is $2,275,926, and the p75 is $3,145,818. The recent grants data also shows awards of $4,015,709 and $536,143.
Yes. The BGCSF Scholarship Program is an annual scholarship application for graduating BGCSF members and connects eligible youth with scholarships offered exclusively to BGCSF members, BGCA scholarships, and external scholarship partners.
Youth of the Year is a leadership development program and citywide competition that recognizes outstanding Club members. Finalists are chosen from each Clubhouse and School-Based Club as well as Camp Mendocino, and winners often receive scholarship support associated with the award.
Its grantmaking is local, and the recipient country distribution shows 2 grants, or 100%, in the US. California is the top state by grant count, and the recent grants listed are both to recipients in San Francisco.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GRANTS MADE TO VARIOUS IRC 501(C)(3) ENTITIES | SAN FRANCISCO, CA | $4,015,709 | 2025 | VARIOUS PROGRAMS INCLUDING ART, SUICIDE PREVENTION AND OTHERS |
| GRANTS WERE TO MADE 17 VARIOUS IRC 501(C)(3) ENTITIES | SAN FRANCISCO, CA | $536,143 | 2023 | VARIOUS PROGRAMS INCLUDING ART, SUICIDE PREVENTION AND OTHERS |
GRANTS MADE TO VARIOUS IRC 501(C)(3) ENTITIES
$4,015,709VARIOUS PROGRAMS INCLUDING ART, SUICIDE PREVENTION AND OTHERS
GRANTS WERE TO MADE 17 VARIOUS IRC 501(C)(3) ENTITIES
$536,143VARIOUS PROGRAMS INCLUDING ART, SUICIDE PREVENTION AND OTHERS