In an era marked by enrollment declines, campus protests, federal funding uncertainties, and shifting political landscapes, philanthropy has emerged as a steadfast pillar for U.S. higher education institutions. Despite these headwinds, donations to colleges and universities reached a robust $78.8 billion in fiscal year 2025, reflecting a 4% increase from the previous year and signaling enduring donor confidence. This resilience underscores the critical role private giving plays in sustaining operations, scholarships, and research amid broader sector disruptions.
Higher education faces multifaceted challenges: international student numbers dropped sharply with new enrollments down 17% in fall 2025 due to stricter visa policies, while domestic enrollment stabilized unevenly after years of decline. Campus unrest over geopolitical issues led to suspensions and scrutiny, and at least 16 institutions closed in 2025 due to financial strains. Yet, donors—alumni, foundations, corporations—continued to invest, prioritizing student success and societal impact.
Record-Breaking Totals from the CASE Survey
The Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) Insights on Voluntary Support of Education survey, drawing from 670 institutions representing 17-18% of U.S. colleges, extrapolated the national figure of $78.8 billion for FY2025 (July 1, 2024, to June 30, 2025). This modest growth kept pace with inflation, a feat amid economic uncertainty. Notably, 60% of respondents reported increases in cash received, and 57% saw rises in new commitments like pledges.
Public institutions outperformed privates, with 63.7% noting gains in funds received compared to 55% for privates. Regional variations existed—the West saw declines in committed funds at privates—but overall, the trend pointed to stability. For context, this follows prior records: $61.5 billion in FY2024 (up 3% adjusted).

Donor Breakdown: Individuals and Corporations Lead Surge
Gifts from individuals climbed 12% to $17.5 billion, while corporate contributions rose 9.3% to $5.4 billion. Foundations dipped 5.1% to $13 billion, possibly redirecting to immediate needs elsewhere. Alumni accounted for 23.2% of total giving, non-alumni individuals 16%, and donor-advised funds 12.4%.
Bequests gained prominence, comprising 23.7% of personal gifts—up from 19.7% in 2020—highlighting planned giving's reliability. Concentration intensified: 89% of funds came from just 2% of donors, with median alumni gifts hitting $1,895, driven by major gifts over $1,000.
- Individuals: Focus on scholarships and programs.
- Corporations: Tied to research partnerships.
- Foundations: Selective, impact-driven.
Gifts Prioritize Student Aid and Immediate Impact
A whopping 81% of donations were restricted for specific uses, with 59.5% supporting current operations (up 2.3 points), emphasizing advising, tutoring, financial aid, and research. Endowment gifts (27.8%) favored student aid and faculty, while capital projects slipped to 10.3%. This shift reflects donors' desire for tangible, near-term outcomes amid enrollment pressures.
For details, see the full CASE Insights report, which breaks down allocations across Carnegie classifications.
Photo by Alex Shute on Unsplash
Endowments Provide Additional Buffer
U.S. higher ed endowments reported stable returns in FY2025, with spending rising to $33.4 billion, per NACUBO. This payout supports operations as tuition revenue wanes. While new endowment gifts fell 9.2% to $14 billion nationally, steady performance—despite market volatility—bolstered resilience.
Institutions like Harvard and Yale leverage massive endowments ($50B+), but smaller colleges rely more on annual giving.
Case Studies: Standout Fundraising Successes
Several universities shattered records. Vanderbilt raised $887 million—its best ever—fueling scholarships and medical research. The University of South Carolina secured $259.7 million, NC State hit new highs, and Georgia Tech neared $300 million. HBCU Huston-Tillotson received $150 million from Moody Foundation, while University of Kentucky got a matching sum.
These wins often tied to targeted campaigns: alumni networks, corporate ties, and impact stories. Even amid protests, donors at places like Denison ($61.8M) emphasized mission alignment.

Foreign Gifts: $5 Billion+ Amid Scrutiny
Foreign funding exceeded $5 billion in 2025, with Carnegie Mellon topping recipients (~$1B), followed by Harvard, MIT. Qatar led donors ($7.7B cumulative), sparking debates on influence. While not core philanthropy, it supplements domestic giving but faces transparency calls under Trump-era rules.
Explore disclosures at the U.S. Department of Education site.
Overcoming Disruptions: Protests, Enrollment, Politics
Campus protests in 2024-25 over Israel-Gaza led to donor pullbacks at Columbia, Harvard (some alumni withheld), but aggregate data shows minimal dent—giving rose overall. Enrollment: Total postsecondary up 1% fall 2025 unevenly; intl new down sharply. State funding per student dipped first time in decade; federal cuts loom.
Donors value stability, backing institutions demonstrating accountability and impact. Public confidence dipped, but high-capacity supporters endured.
Photo by Belinda Fewings on Unsplash
Expert Perspectives and Strategies
Sue Cunningham (CASE): “Donors direct giving to expand opportunity and tackle challenges.” Amid narrowing donor bases, colleges prioritize major gift cultivation, storytelling, and ROI transparency. Trends: Digital campaigns, planned giving, corporate R&D ties.
| Strategy | Impact |
|---|---|
| Major Donor Focus | 89% funds from 2% |
| Impact Reporting | Boosts retention |
| Alumni Engagement | Higher median gifts |
Looking Ahead: Sustainable Philanthropy in 2026
Projections: Steady growth if economy holds, but risks from policy shifts (e.g., endowment taxes), AI disruptions, demographic cliffs. Colleges must diversify donors, emphasize outcomes, navigate politics. Philanthropy remains vital—$78.8B proves resilience, but broadening participation key to future stability.
For career opportunities in higher ed amid funding shifts, explore resources at AcademicJobs.com higher ed jobs.


