Ia Ga Pine Level Foundation Non-direct

Open & Accessible
Private Foundation
ORLANDO, FloridaSmallEIN: 586163477
Education NonprofitsCommunity and Economic Development ProgramsFood BanksArts and Culture Nonprofits

The GA Pine Level Foundation is a private foundation dedicated to supporting educational initiatives, community development, and cultural projects. It primarily funds organizations that address local needs, including universities, food banks, and arts institutions, with a significant focus on the Macon area. The foundation's mission reflects a commitment to enhancing the quality of life in its community through strategic grants aimed at fostering education, economic development, and cultural enrichment.

Source: Zeffy Agent · Mar 2026

Ideal Applicant

A Mid‑sized, Macon/Bibb County–focused nonprofit (education, arts/culture, community development, or food security) able to submit a written request and provide IRS tax‑exempt documentation.

Good Fit

  • Located in Macon/Bibb County or clearly serving central Georgia.
  • Work in education, community/economic development, arts, or food security.
  • Experience receiving mid-sized grants (typical awards range from about $5k to $100k).
  • Willingness to apply by letter of request and provide IRS tax-exempt documentation.
  • Existing local credibility or relationships with regional funders/community foundations.

Geography

Restrictive

Giving is heavily local: roughly 97% of 2024 dollars went to Georgia (primarily Macon/Bibb County), with only a very small out‑of‑state remainder.

Recipient Variety

Moderate

The latest year funded 15 distinct recipients across education, arts, community and food organizations, and 13 of those were repeat grantees across the observed years, indicating a moderate but consistent portfolio of independent local recipients.

New Applicants

Moderate

Direct evidence of turnover is limited but present (two new recipients in 2024) and a formal letter‑of‑request process with submission instructions is listed; however most dollars go to repeat local grantees, so new entrants appear possible but not widely prioritized.

Source: Zeffy Agent · Mar 2026