To create loving, supportive communities where people belong and thrive.
Juliette Fowler Foundation’s recent grantmaking is defined by sustained general program support for Juliette Fowler Communities Inc., including a $9,753,437 grant in 2025 and a $2,252,090 grant in 2024. That pattern points to a funder built around long-term support for its connected communities rather than a wide dispersal of small awards. The foundation’s stated purpose is to create loving, supportive communities where people belong and thrive, and its active programs show how that mission is carried into practice through planned giving, in-kind support for The Ebby House, and the One Heart Fund for vulnerable children, youth, and older adults. The work touches senior living and elder care, memory support and dementia care, children and youth services, foster care and adoption, transitional housing for young women, benevolent care, and early childhood education partnerships. Its philosophy tags emphasize unrestricted and flexible support, which aligns with the repeated use of general program funding in the recent grants list. The recipient profile is concentrated within the foundation’s own community-serving network, with Dallas as the recurring location in the grant record.
A central theme is support for seniors and people living with dementia. The One Heart Fund is described as covering benevolent care, senior services, youth services, dementia care, life enrichment, and spiritual care for people served by Juliette Fowler Communities. Another visible area is transitional housing and support for young women: The Ebby House Wish List provides in-kind items for a residential program for young women aging out of foster care or at risk of homelessness. The foundation also supports long-term organizational sustainability through its Create a Legacy planned giving program, which uses bequests, life insurance, and other planned gift arrangements to strengthen future mission support. Those programs sit alongside broad children and youth services and foster care and adoption work in the foundation’s stated focus areas.
The grant-size distribution is high and clustered: p25 is $1,273,735, median is $1,599,854, and p75 is $1,925,972. Recent awards also show a clear recurring pattern, with the same recipient appearing in each of the three latest grants and all three classified as general program support. That points to a relationship-based funding model centered on ongoing organizational support rather than a one-time project cycle. The foundation is structured as a philanthropic institution with active planned giving and legacy-gift programming, and it also accepts unsolicited support for its active programs. Philosophy tags indicate a preference for unrestricted, core operating, and flexible funding.
$9.8M
$57.8M
$14.2M
$10.2M
Most grants fall between $1.3M and $1.9M, with a median of $1.6M.
25th Percentile
$1.3M
Median
$1.6M
75th Percentile
$1.9M
About 100% of grants go to recipients in TX.
JAMES T JAHNKE
Sign up for a free Kindora account to access AI-generated insights into this funder's giving patterns, decision-makers, and fit signals.
Get Started FreeFree Kindora accounts unlock side-by-side comparisons with foundations that share this funder's focus areas and giving profile.
Get Started FreeSign up free to see how well your nonprofit fits this funder, get an AI-generated pitch, and unlock similar foundations.
Giving is local and entirely concentrated in Texas. Every grant in the dataset went to a recipient in the HQ state, and the recipient-country distribution is 100% US. The recent-grant record places the awards in Dallas, with the foundation’s active programs also tied to Dallas and East Dallas. That makes the geography tightly linked to the foundation’s own community-serving network rather than a multi-state or national grantmaking pattern.
Its stated focus areas include senior living and elder care, memory support and dementia care, children and youth services, foster care and adoption, transitional housing for young women, benevolent care and emergency assistance, and early childhood education partnerships. The active programs also show planned giving, in-kind household support, and benevolent support for vulnerable children, youth, and older adults.
The grant-size distribution is substantial and fairly tight: p25 is $1,273,735, median is $1,599,854, and p75 is $1,925,972. The recent grants table also shows awards of $9,753,437, $2,252,090, and $947,617 to the same recipient across 2025, 2024, and 2023.
No. The grant record shows 100% of grants to recipients in the HQ state, Texas, and the recipient-country distribution is 100% US. The recent grants are all to Dallas, TX, and the active programs are also centered in Dallas and East Dallas.
Yes. The three latest grants on file all went to Juliette Fowler Communities Inc. in Dallas, TX, across 2023, 2024, and 2025, and each was for general program support. That suggests a recurring relationship rather than isolated awards.
Yes. The active programs include Create a Legacy, which offers planned giving and legacy/estate gift options; Ebby House Wish List, which accepts in-kind support through an Amazon wish list; and the One Heart Fund, an annual benevolent fund that accepts unsolicited support.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| JULIETTE FOWLER COMMUNITIES INC | DALLAS, TX | $9,753,437 | 2025 | GENERAL PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| JULIETTE FOWLER COMMUNITIES INC | DALLAS, TX | $2,252,090 | 2024 | GENERAL PROGRAM SUPPORT |
| JULIETTE FOWLER COMMUNITIES INC | DALLAS, TX | $947,617 | 2023 | GENERAL PROGRAM SUPPORT |
JULIETTE FOWLER COMMUNITIES INC
$9,753,437GENERAL PROGRAM SUPPORT
JULIETTE FOWLER COMMUNITIES INC
$2,252,090GENERAL PROGRAM SUPPORT
JULIETTE FOWLER COMMUNITIES INC
$947,617GENERAL PROGRAM SUPPORT