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Granting Impact
All numbers as of December 31, 2025
The potential for greater impact is what fuels us every day. Together with donors and community we’re working to fund and inspire a more community-centred future. To do that we’re disrupting traditional philanthropic practices by using an action-oriented and equity-focused research agenda and flowing more money to smaller, local and equity-focused organizations.
Below we list our 2025 annual granting results and share some annual metrics that are keeping us accountable and motivated.
Grants are made in two key ways:
Fundholders grant from funds they've established with us
Toronto Foundation grants from our discretionary funds guided by community needs and opportunities, and Toronto's Vital Signs Report research
In 2025, we made 2,616 grants to 1,189

organizations totaling$37.7M
Since inception, we’ve granted
$400M+
Our Impact: What the Numbers Tell Us
 GRANTS BY REGION Â
$0M
Toronto
$0M
Rest of Ontario
$0M
National Organizations
$0M
Rest of Canada
$0M
International
 GRANTS BY TYPEÂ
DONOR-LED
$36.1M
FOUNDATION-LED
$1.6M
$37.7M
IN TOTAL GRANTS*
*each year Toronto Foundation’s grants fluctuate based on gifts to the organization as well as federal funds that we may be asked to disburse.
 GRANTS & DISTRIBUTIONS Â
$37.7M
in total grants
$20.8M
in total distributions*
$58.5M
in total grants & distributions
2,616 GRANTS to 1,189 ORGANIZATIONS
14% of eligible assets disbursed**
*Funds that go to TO2015 Legacy and Equality Fund Initiative. See Financial summary for more.
**As of January 1, 2023, the Government of Canada increased the disbursement quota from 3.5% to 5%. We exceeded this disbursement quota by 180%.
Years ago our research underscored the wide gaps between the haves and the have nots in our city. Since then, we’ve applied an equity lens to our granting, most notably through our annual, discretionary grant stream: Toronto’s Vital Signs Grants.
The grants are intended to support the smaller organizations doing the heaviest lift in community. We aim to be responsive while looking ahead to where we, as a community foundation, can best influence future outcomes.
In 2020 that meant further refining our giving around historically and persistently underserved groups. We acknowledge the systemic inequality and in particular, racism that permeates all aspects of society, including philanthropy. In response, we introduced the Black and Indigenous Futures Fund.
The Fund recognized that racial injustice has particularly affected Black and Indigenous communities and warranted actionable and meaningful responses. From 2021-2024, we supported organizations through multi-year grants. We’ve reflected on the Fund, our pilot granting to non-qualified donees and the collective impact we realized with our fundholders.
We want to be more transparent about our goal to consistently increase the flow of money to Indigenous and Black communities. Below we’re sharing the percentage of total and discretionary funding that went to these groups in 2025. While these numbers are above the norm in philanthropy, we know they are low and are actively working to increase them.
Flowing funding to Indigeous-led and/or serving organizations in 2025
134
number of grants
$521k
granted
43
organizations supported
1.4%
of total funding*
11.6%
of total discretionary funding
Flowing funding to Black-led and/or serving organizations in 2025
70
number of grants
$637k
granted
37
organizations supported
1.7%
of total funding*
13.8%
of total discretionary funding
*donor-and foundation-led funding combined
In 2023 we were inspired to create a pooled fund to enable more fundholders to give to organizations without official charitable status, in keeping with the direction from the Government of Canada. We repeated this offering in 2024. Read more about how fundholders have pooled their donations to maximize impact.
In 2025, we joined the New Power Labs Network and signed the Fund Canada pledge, a national campaign aimed at unlocking grants and investments for diverse and under-resourced groups by 2030.
We’ll continue to apply this lens as we built out a work plan that delivers on our vision of transforming Toronto from a city of neighbourhoods to a city of neighbours.
Equity and Accountability