Advance health worldwide through preeminent biomedical research, outstanding patient care, and excellence in education and training.
The University of California San Francisco Foundation’s recent grantmaking is defined by two very large awards to the Regents of the University of California in Oakland: $464,684,290 in 2024 and $435,442,110 in 2023. Those grants point to a funder that operates at major institutional scale and is closely tied to university-based health, research, and education work. The foundation’s stated purpose is to advance health worldwide through preeminent biomedical research, outstanding patient care, and excellence in education and training, and its focus areas include health, medicine, biomedical research, medical education, and public health. The foundation also supported Oakland Children’s Hospital and Research Center in consecutive years, with grants of $4,559,813 in 2024 and $1,120,938 in 2023. That pattern shows funding that is not limited to one-off awards, but instead includes repeated support for major California health institutions. With annual grants above $905 million and assets above $4.1 billion, the University of California San Francisco Foundation operates at a scale that places it among the largest institutional grantmakers in its field.
Biomedical research is central to the foundation’s grantmaking. In 2024, it awarded $464,684,290 to the Regents of the University of California in Oakland, a grant tied to university-level health and research work. The 2023 award of $435,442,110 to the same recipient shows that this area is not incidental to the foundation’s activity. Patient care is another clear theme. The foundation gave $4,559,813 in 2024 to Oakland Children’s Hospital and Research Center, and that grant sits alongside its stated commitment to outstanding patient care. Medical education and training also appear in the foundation’s overall focus. Its listed priorities include medical education and public health, linking clinical work with training and broader health outcomes. The grant record shows support for institutions that operate across those functions rather than for individuals or program-related investments.
The typical grant size is highly skewed: p25 is $3,700,094, median is $220,000,962, and p75 is $442,752,655. That distribution reflects a funder making very large institutional grants rather than many small awards. The recent record also suggests repeat support, since the Regents of the University of California received major grants in both 2023 and 2024, and Oakland Children’s Hospital and Research Center received grants in both years as well. The foundation is classified as a regular funder, does not fund individuals, and does not make program-related investments.
$469.2M
$4.1B
$1.1B
$489.4M
Most grants fall between $3.7M and $442.8M, with a median of $220M.
25th Percentile
$3.7M
Median
$220M
75th Percentile
$442.8M
About 100% of grants go to recipients in CA.
SAMUEL HAWGOOD
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The foundation gives locally, and every grant in the provided data went to recipients in California. Its grant geography is concentrated in Oakland, which appears repeatedly in the recent grants list, alongside grants to the Regents of the University of California and Oakland Children’s Hospital and Research Center. The recipient country distribution is entirely U.S.-based, with 4 grants in the United States and none outside it.
Its stated focus areas are health, medicine, biomedical research, medical education, and public health. The grant record aligns with that profile through very large awards to university and hospital recipients connected to research, patient care, and training.
The typical grant size is large: p25 is $3,700,094, median is $220,000,962, and p75 is $442,752,655. That pattern indicates a foundation that gives major institutional grants rather than small awards.
No. The foundation is listed as not funding individuals and as not making program-related investments.
Its geographic scope is local, and 100% of grants in the provided data went to recipients in California. The recipient country distribution is entirely U.S.-based.
Yes. The recent grant list shows repeat support across two years, including large awards in 2023 and 2024 to the Regents of the University of California and to Oakland Children’s Hospital and Research Center.
2024
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2024.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA | OAKLAND, CA | $464,684,290 | 2024 | see part iv |
| Oakland children's hospital and research center | oakland, CA | $4,559,813 | 2024 | see part iv |
| REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA | OAKLAND, CA | $435,442,110 | 2023 | see part iv |
| Oakland children's hospital and research center | oakland, CA | $1,120,938 | 2023 | see part iv |
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
$464,684,290see part iv
Oakland children's hospital and research center
$4,559,813see part iv
REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
$435,442,110see part iv
Oakland children's hospital and research center
$1,120,938see part iv