The named building, the ribbon-cutting ceremony, and the press release with the donor’s picture prominently displayed above the legacy quote are examples of a specific type of philanthropy that makes a big statement. The actions of MacKenzie Scott, on the other hand, are essentially the opposite of all of that.
Thurgood Marshall, Toni Morrison, and Kamala Harris were all educated at Howard University in Washington, D.C., which received a $80 million gift in November 2025. This is one of the biggest single donations in the school’s 158-year history. Scott didn’t say anything in public. No gala took place. The university was instructed to use the funds however it saw fit after they arrived unrestricted. Howard’s College of Medicine received seventeen million dollars. The remainder was distributed where the organization determined it was most needed. In major philanthropy, that kind of giving—no conditions, no oversight, no donor’s name on a building—is less common than it ought to be, and the fact that it is uncommon raises questions about why wealthy people typically donate in the first place.
| Name | MacKenzie Scott |
|---|---|
| Age | 56 |
| Foundation | Yield Giving |
| Giving Pledge Signed | 2019 |
| Total Philanthropy (Since 2019) | Over $26.3 billion |
| 2025 Grants Awarded | $7.16 billion (260% increase over 2024) |
| Total Higher Ed Giving (Since 2020) | Over $1 billion+ annually; $1.2B+ to HBCUs alone |
| 2025 HBCU Donations | $701 million to 15+ HBCUs |
| Largest Single Gift | $80 million to Howard University (November 2025) |
| Other Major Recipients | Morgan State ($63M), Prairie View A&M ($63M), UNCF ($70M), Thurgood Marshall College Fund ($70M), Lehman College CUNY ($50M) |
| Giving Style | Unrestricted, trust-based, no reporting requirements |
| Focus Areas | HBCUs, tribal colleges, community colleges, Hispanic-serving institutions |

Since 2020, Scott has contributed over $1.2 billion to historically Black colleges and universities, making her one of the biggest individual donors in American history. When compared to the previous context, the scale becomes more striking. The average Ivy League school received 178 times more philanthropic funding than the average HBCU between 2015 and 2019. Over that time, Ivy gave more than $5.5 billion in gifts. The total amount given to HBCUs was $303 million. After examining that disparity, Scott made the decision to close it for the better part of ten years, seemingly without much public discussion.
She donated more than $700 million to HBCUs and related organizations in 2025 alone, including $50 million to Bowie State, Norfolk State, Virginia State, and Winston-Salem State University, and $63 million to Morgan State University and Prairie View A&M, the biggest gifts in their respective histories. In order to support pooled endowments for private HBCUs, she donated $70 million to the United Negro College Fund and an additional $70 million to the Thurgood Marshall College Fund. On its Founders Day in early April 2026, Elizabeth City State University was awarded $42 million. With that donation, Scott’s total HBCU earnings surpassed $1.2 billion.
Even though Scott hasn’t stated it explicitly, the timing of all of this is not coincidental. Title III funding, a federal program that supports HBCUs, tribal colleges, and under-resourced institutions in maintaining their academic programs and financial stability, would be reduced by 14.4% under the Trump administration’s proposed fiscal year 2026 budget. Days after the president assured HBCU leaders at a televised town hall that they had nothing to worry about, the White House also suggested reducing Howard University’s direct federal allocation by $64 million. Nearly 95% of non-student aid staff had been placed on furlough, and as of October 2025, the Department of Education had stopped awarding new grants. In that context, Scott’s unrestricted giving effectively communicates to institutions that she believes they are capable of understanding their own needs, according to Wayne Frederick, Howard’s acting president. That trust reads as a fairly direct statement about what Scott believes philanthropy is really for in a year when the majority of billionaires were using their influence to try to stay close to power.
Her influence goes far beyond HBCUs. She has donated tens of millions of dollars to schools that are hardly ever mentioned in philanthropy articles in recent months. The largest donation in Northern Oklahoma College’s history, $17 million, was given to a school where about 80% of students depend on financial aid. $23 million was given to Oklahoma’s Carl Albert State College. $24 million was given to Robeson Community College in rural North Carolina. Transformative gifts were given to tribal colleges like Little Priest Tribal College in Nebraska, Turtle Mountain College in North Dakota, and Bay Mills Community College in Michigan. The president of Little Priest Tribal College stated that Scott’s $5 million would aid in the construction of a completely new campus. Additionally, she donated $38 million to three Hispanic-serving institutions in Texas and California, and $50 million each to Lehman College at CUNY and Cal State East Bay.
As the magnitude of this grows, there’s a sense that something truly out of the ordinary is taking place. Harvard’s endowment is over $50 billion, Princeton’s is over $34 billion. The higher education philanthropy system was designed to help the schools that already had the most, and it has done so remarkably consistently for well over a century. That system is not being fixed by Scott. She is merely working outside of it, allocating funds to organizations that have a track record of success and real need without expecting anything in return. It’s still unclear if that model affects other significant donors’ perspectives on funding higher education. However, the schools that get the funding aren’t waiting to find out.
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