McKnight Foundation

OVERVIEW: The McKnight Foundation mainly supports nonprofits in Minnesota, but also funds organizations elsewhere in the Midwest and, occasionally, in other parts of the U.S., as well as a handful of global grants. The foundation’s current program areas include climate change, arts and culture, neuroscience, housing and community development, and economic development, though priorities can shift quickly here.

IP TAKE: Separate from the 3M Foundation, the McKnight Foundation is a major funder in its areas of giving. It provides place-based funding in Minnesota, but is also a considerable national funder. A handful of grants are international. Overally, McKnight is an accessible and transparent funder tends to fund established nonprofits, but leaves room for investing in a broad range of organizations, including smaller and grassroots groups.

Some reviews of McKnight encourage grant seekers to reach out to program officers prior to applying in order to greatly improve their chances of receiving a grant, while other reviewers describe McKnight as “culturally sensitive” and “extremely helpful and forthcoming” in their approach. Despite this funder’s large size, reviewers believe the foundation’s officers are “trained to be responsive,” so don’t hesitate in reaching out to McKnight’s staff to further hone your application. Grantseekers should make sure their work aligns very closely with McKnight’s goals, visiting their site often since the foundation adjusts its funding priorities frequently.

PROFILE: Established in 1953, the McKnight Foundation is an independent family foundation based in Minneapolis, Minnesota. This is the foundation of William McKnight, one of the early leaders of the 3M company, and his wife, Maude McKnight. Today, fourth-generation family members actively serve on its board of trustees. According to its mission statement, the McKnight Foundation “advances a more just, creative, and abundant future where people and the planet thrive.”

In McKnight’s latest strategic framework for grantmaking, the foundation places “equity, stewardship, respect and curiosity” at the center of its approach. McKnight describes itself as acting “as a funder, convener, thought leader, and as an employer, economic entity, and institutional investor” using all of its “resources and leverage all forms of capital, including social investment and philanthropic risk capital” to facilitate its mission. To this end, McKnight leverages a “robust toolkit that includes grantmaking, collaboration, policy reform, research, strategic communications, and investments,” which implies that this foundation is hands-on in its aims to provide support beyond funding.

Current programmatic areas of interest include Global Collaboration for Resilient Food Systems, Midwest Climate & Energy, Arts and Culture, Neuroscience and Vibrant and Equitable Communities, with grantmaking focuses on projects in the U.S., Africa, Southeast Asia and Latin America. The foundation also runs a grantmaking program to support regional foundations in home state of Minnesota.

Grants for Global Development and Sustainable Agriculture

One of its largest areas of giving, the McKnight Foundation’s international grantmaking program, Global Collaboration for Resilient Food Systems, focuses on cultivating “resilient food systems globally by bridging farmer-centered agroecological research, action, and influence.” McKnight’s previous international grantmaking focused on natural resource management and community resource rights, mainly in Southeast Asia, Africa and South America, but McKnight’s programs evolve quickly, so make sure to check back bi-annually. The foundation’s news article introducing the program can offer more insights into the foundation’s thinking in this area. McKnight has also previously explained to IP why they chose this new direction.

Global Collaboration for Resilient Food Systems program has a clear giving approach is complex, necessitating close alignment with the program’s Communities of Practice (CoP) model to receive funding. The CoP model pairs funding with efforts to “facilitate collaboration, knowledge co-creation, and innovation/information exchange, as well as helping to strengthen capacity at regional, institutional, project, and individual levels.” The program is divided into several regions, each with their own strategies, and include:

McKnight’s global food program runs “a closed application process with occasional targeted calls.” Only invited proposals will be reviewed by the foundation.

Among this programs grantee partners are the Center for the Analysis of Sustainable Agricultural Systems, Ecuador’s Fundación Aliados, Burkina Faso’s Institut de l’Environnement et de Recherches Agricoles and the University of Eldoret in Kenya, which received funding for its “[c]ommunity-driven interventions for sustainable food systems and soil water conservation in the Drylands, West Pokot.”

Grants for Climate Change and Clean Energy

In 2013, the McKnight Foundation reimagined its larger environment program to create a more targeted Midwest Climate & Energy program. This program seeks to take “bold and urgent action on the climate crisis by dramatically cutting greenhouse gas emissions and advancing an equitable clean energy transition.”

The McKnight Foundation’s Midwest Climate & Energy approach, through a systems change lens, uses “its philanthropic funding to support efforts that build power through partnership, aligning climate and equity goals” across five, specific strategies: transform the energy system, decarbonize transportation, decarbonize buildings, support working lands, and strengthen democratic participation.

  • Climate and energy-related grants are laser-focused on Minnesota and the upper Midwest, which includes Wisconsin and Iowa.

  • Grantmaking for the above areas remains accessible, but other Midwest-states are by invite-only.

  • This program has a useful FAQ page to reference prior to reaching out to McKnight.

Recent grants have gone to Minneapolis’s Center for Energy and Environment, the Minneapolis Bicycle Coalition and the St. Paul Transportation Management Association.

Grants for Mental Health, Brain and Cell Research

McKnight’s Neuroscience initiative aims to “bring science closer to the day when diseases of the brain and behavior can be accurately diagnosed, prevented, and treated.” The foundation runs two awards programs to this end:

  • The Neurobiology of Brain Disorders Award encourages “research aimed at translating laboratory discoveries about the brain and nervous system into diagnoses and therapies to improve human health” with grants of $100,000 per year for three years.

  • McKnight’s Scholar Awards support neuroscientists in the early stages of their careers whose work focuses clinically relevant issues of disorders of learning and memory with grants of $75,000 per year for three years. Recent grantmaking and awards have prioritized collaborative, interdisciplinary work in the areas of Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis and spinal cord injuries, to name a few.

Both programs have individual guidelines, deadlines and profiles of past awardees linked to their program pages.

Grants for Housing, Community and Economic Development

McKnight’s grantmaking for housing stems from its Vibrant and Equitable Communities program which aims to achieve “a vibrant future for all Minnesotans with shared power, prosperity, and participation.”

  • This program has a distinct grantmaking approach, FAQ page and accessible grant guidelines; however, the foundation encourages to contact them first prior to sending a proposal.

  • Grantmaking strategies here focus on accelerating economic mobility, building community wealth, cultivating a fair and just housing system, and strengthening democratic participation.

Recent grants have focused on financing and maintaining affordable housing projects throughout Minnesota, as well as initiatives to ensure housing equity and the rights of renters. McKnight has also given to several organizations that provide emergency and transitional housing and services to homeless and vulnerable people in Minnesota. Grantees include Minneapolis’s Urban Homeworks, the Neighborhood Development Alliance of St. Paul and the Minnesota Housing Finance Agency.

Grants for Arts and Culture

McKnight’s Arts and Culture program works to “(c)atalyze the creativity, power, and leadership of Minnesota working artists and culture bearers.” To this end, McKnight’s vision supports arts and culture through a variety of ways with a clear grantmaking approach.

Note that the McKnight Arts program has grant guidelines that are distinct from other focus areas. Arts grants can support either individual artists or arts organizations.

Past arts and culture grantees include the Duluth Art Institute, Minnesota’s Full Circle Theater Company, the MacPhail Center for Music in Minneapolis and the Minneapolis American Indian Center.

Important Grant Details:

The McKnight Foundation’s grants mainly range from $10,000 to $500,000, with a few partner organizations receiving much more.

  • Grantmaking tends to prioritize community and economic development, as well as the environment; however, grant history shows a healthy amount of giving across all focus areas.

  • The foundation makes about 500 grants a year.

  • McKnight provides general operating (unrestricted) and specific program/project (restricted) grants to organizations, groups and Tribal Nations primarily in Minnesota.

  • This funder makes grants all over the U.S. and in specific areas abroad, but U.S. based-grants appear to prioritize Minnesota and, to a lesser extent, also cluster in New York and California.

  • McKnight accepts applications for some of its grant and award programs. Guidelines and due dates vary by program.

  • Interested grantseekers should visit the foundation’s individual program pages for specific information and updates about funding.

  • Information about past grantmaking is available at the foundation’s Grants Database .

Inquiries may be submitted via the foundation’s contact form or to specific staff members, whose emails are available at McKnight’s staff page. 

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