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    Center for Election Innovation & Research

    ActivePublic CharityCivil Rights & Advocacy
    Washington, DCWebsiteEIN: 81-38151371 filings on record

    About Center for Election Innovation & Research

    CEIR is a nonprofit working with election officials to build confidence in elections that voters should trust and do trust; it pursues a nonpartisan approach to restore trust in the American election system and promote procedures that encourage voter participation while ensuring integrity and security.

    Focus Areas

    Election administrationElection security & cybersecurityVoter registration & turnoutElection data & researchLegal defense for election officials (EOLDN)Communications to combat disinformation

    Who They Fund

    professional election officials and administratorselection administration bodies/agenciesvoters requiring accessible/convenient voting (including underserved or accessibility-needing voters)

    Funding Style

    About Center for Election Innovation & Research

    The Center for Election Innovation & Research made its largest recent grant to the Pennsylvania Department of State, a $13,024,512 award in 2023 that anchors its role as a funder of election administration. The public charity supports nonpartisan work aimed at building confidence in elections, with a clear emphasis on procedures that encourage voter participation while supporting integrity and security. In the latest grants on file, its awards also reached the Office of the Minnesota Secretary of State, the Iowa Office of the Secretary of State, and the South Carolina State Election Commission, showing repeated support for state election systems. The foundation’s giving profile points to large-scale, institutional grants rather than small awards, and the recipient list is concentrated in public agencies and election-related bodies. A smaller grant to Temple University adds a research and higher-education dimension to the portfolio. Across the recent record, the foundation appears focused on election officials and the systems they manage, rather than direct service grants to individuals or broad program support. Its work is aligned with election integrity, modernization, data, and communication efforts that support trust in democratic processes.

    What Center for Election Innovation & Research Funds

    Election administration is central to the foundation’s grantmaking. It gave $13,024,512 to the Pennsylvania Department of State for election administration support, indicating a large commitment to state-level systems. Election security also appears in the recent record through $1,216,296 to the Office of the Minnesota Secretary of State for election-related work that fits the foundation’s nonpartisan integrity focus. Voter registration and turnout are reflected in a $1,074,880 grant to the Iowa Office of the Secretary of State for election administration and related voter-access work. The portfolio also includes research-oriented support: $50,000 to Temple University, linking the foundation’s priorities with election data and research. These grants show a mix of administrative support, system security, and research capacity rather than a narrow single-program approach.

    How Center for Election Innovation & Research Gives

    Typical grants are large: the p25 amount is $838,015, the median is $1,073,338, and the p75 is $1,180,942. The recent record suggests institutional, multi-hundred-thousand-to-multimillion-dollar awards, with one very large outlier at the top end. The grantee list is dominated by public election agencies, and every recent grant in the dataset went to a U.S. recipient. The foundation is a public charity and does not fund individuals or make program-related investments. The available grant list is from 2023, so recurring giving cannot be assessed from multiple years here.

    Financial Snapshot

    Annual Giving

    $17.2M

    Total Assets

    $13.4M

    Total Revenue

    $23.4M

    Total Expenses

    $18.6M

    Typical Grant Size

    Most grants fall between $838K and $1.2M, with a median of $1.1M.

    25th Percentile

    $838K

    Median

    $1.1M

    75th Percentile

    $1.2M

    Geographic Reach

    National5 states funded

    About 0% of grants go to recipients in PA.

    Funding intensity
    Low
    High
    Headquarters

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    Topics

    election integrity & securityelection technology modernizationelection data & researchvoter convenience & accessibilitycountering disinformationstrengthening democratic institutions and processes

    Where Center for Election Innovation & Research Makes Grants

    Giving is national, with all recent grants going to U.S. recipients. Pennsylvania appears most often in the grant list, led by Harrisburg and Philadelphia recipients. Other recipient cities include Saint Paul, Des Moines, Columbia, and Santa Fe, showing a spread across state election offices in different regions of the country. The dataset shows 0% of grants to recipients in the HQ state of DC, even though the foundation is headquartered there. No non-U.S. recipient countries appear in the recent grants file.

    Frequently Asked Questions About Center for Election Innovation & Research

    What kinds of organizations does The Center for Election Innovation & Research fund?

    Its recent grants go mainly to state election offices and related public institutions, including the Pennsylvania Department of State, the Office of the Minnesota Secretary of State, the Iowa Office of the Secretary of State, and the South Carolina State Election Commission. The foundation’s stated focus areas center on election administration, election security, voter registration and turnout, election data and research, and communications to combat disinformation.

    What is the typical grant size?

    The typical grant profile is high-dollar institutional support. The p25 grant size is $838,015, the median is $1,073,338, and the p75 is $1,180,942. The recent record also includes one grant above $13 million, which sits well above the rest of the distribution.

    Does The Center for Election Innovation & Research fund individuals?

    No. The foundation is listed as not funding individuals, and the recent grants shown are all made to organizations such as state departments, election commissions, and a university.

    Where does the foundation give most often?

    Pennsylvania is the top state by grant count in the data. Recent recipients there include the Pennsylvania Department of State in Harrisburg and Temple University in Philadelphia, while other grants went to state agencies in Minnesota, Iowa, South Carolina, and New Mexico.

    What is the geographic scope of its giving?

    Its giving scope is national. All six recent grants in the dataset went to U.S. recipients, with no grants shown to non-U.S. countries.

    Latest 990 Filing

    2023

    Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2023.

    Recent Grants

    Most recent grants reported to the IRS.

    RecipientLocationAmountYearPurpose
    Pennsylvania Department of StateHarrisburg, PA$13,024,5122023—
    Office of the Minnesota Secretary oSaint Paul, MN$1,216,2962023—
    Iowa Office of the Secretary of StaDes Moines, IA$1,074,8802023—
    South Carolina State Election CommiColumbia, SC$1,071,7972023—
    New Mexico Office of the SecretarySanta Fe, NM$760,0882023—
    The Temple UniversityPhiladelphia, PA$50,0002023—

    Pennsylvania Department of State

    $13,024,512
    Harrisburg, PA2023

    Office of the Minnesota Secretary o

    $1,216,296
    Saint Paul, MN2023

    Iowa Office of the Secretary of Sta

    $1,074,880
    Des Moines, IA2023

    South Carolina State Election Commi

    $1,071,797
    Columbia, SC2023

    New Mexico Office of the Secretary

    $760,088
    Santa Fe, NM2023

    The Temple University

    $50,000
    Philadelphia, PA2023