The Weeks Bridge and The River Houses along the Charles River are framed by Autumn foliage. The towers of Dunster House (from right foreground to background), Leverett House, Lowell House Eliot House, and the Weld Boat House appear beneath blue sky and clouds. This panoramic overview is seen from Peabody Terrace.
The Weeks Bridge and The River Houses along the Charles River are framed by Autumn foliage. The towers of Dunster House (from right foreground to background), Leverett House, Lowell House Eliot House, and the Weld Boat House appear beneath blue sky and clouds. This panoramic overview is seen from Peabody Terrace.
Kris Snibbe/Harvard University

Why U.S. Colleges and Universities Hold Billions in Endowments, Explained by a Higher Ed Finance Expert

Share
The Weeks Bridge and The River Houses along the Charles River are framed by Autumn foliage. The towers of Dunster House (from right foreground to background), Leverett House, Lowell House Eliot House, and the Weld Boat House appear beneath blue sky and clouds. This panoramic overview is seen from Peabody Terrace.
The Weeks Bridge and The River Houses along the Charles River are framed by Autumn foliage. The towers of Dunster House (from right foreground to background), Leverett House, Lowell House Eliot House, and the Weld Boat House appear beneath blue sky and clouds. This panoramic overview is seen from Peabody Terrace.
Kris Snibbe/Harvard University
Why U.S. Colleges and Universities Hold Billions in Endowments, Explained by a Higher Ed Finance Expert
Copy

With the Trump administration seeking to cut federal funding for colleges and universities, you might be wondering whether the endowments of these institutions of higher education might be able to fill those gaps. Todd L. Ely, a professor of public administration at the University of Colorado Denver, explains what endowments are and the constraints placed on them.

What’s an endowment?

Endowments are pools of financial investments that belong to a nonprofit. These assets produce a revenue stream, typically from dividends, interest and realized capital gains. The funds endowments hold usually originate as charitable donations made to support an institution’s mission.

In most cases with higher education endowments, this wealth, which helps buoy a nonprofit’s budget, is supposed to last forever.

Contributions to endowments are tax-deductible for donors who itemize their tax returns. Once these funds are invested, they grow generally tax-free. But beginning in 2018, the federal government imposed a 1.4% excise tax on dozens of higher education institutions with relatively large endowments.

Few colleges or universities have a single endowment fund.

That’s because the donors who provide gifts large and small to the school over the years direct their donations to different funds reserved for specific purposes.

Harvard University’s endowment, worth $53.2 billion at the end of its 2024 fiscal year, for example, consists of roughly 14,600 distinct funds.

All told, money distributed from endowments covered more than 15%, on average, of college and university operating expenses in 2024. Some of America’s institutions of higher education, however, lean much more heavily than that on their endowments to pay their bills.

How do endowments influence higher education?

Endowments can serve multiple purposes.

In 2024, nearly half of all higher education spending paid for with endowment revenue funded scholarships and other kinds of aid for students, while almost 18% supported academic programs. Just under 11% paid for professors’ compensation, and almost 7% helped pay for running and maintaining campus facilities.

More broadly, endowments can help shield schools from financial hardships and maintain their long-term reputations.

When they’re set up to carry on in perpetuity, endowments must benefit both current and future generations. So when donors give to an endowment, they are arguably investing in the long-term viability of the institution.

This long-term focus suggests that endowments aren’t just rainy-day funds or financial reserves.

Read more on The Conversation.

Despite new taxes and fees on drivers, property owners, and nicotine pouches, the fiscal 2026 budget passed with minimal opposition and includes boosts for health care and schools — but RIPTA funding still falls short
With more than 100 bridges rated in poor condition and urgent repairs lagging, new reporting by Rhode Island PBS and The Public’s Radio reveals the deeper infrastructure risks across the state — and the lack of clear accountability for fixing them
From Senate President Val Lawson’s dual roles to stalled ethics reforms and lobbying imbalances, Common Cause RI’s John Marion joins ‘Political Roundtable’ to assess where democracy stands—and how everyday Rhode Islanders can still make a difference
Every year, the James Beard Foundation recognizes exceptional restaurants and chefs throughout the country, one of the highest honors in the culinary field. Earlier this week, they announced this year’s winners. Sky Haneul Kim, the chef at Gift Horse in Providence, won ‘Best Chef Northeast’
Rhode Islanders and others nationwide are urged to take precautions as high heat and humidity raise the risk of illness, especially for children, seniors, and outdoor workers
2 high-profile environmental bills get taken down a notch, or two, or three