Updated April 2026
EducationEducation Charities in Pennsylvania
36 education nonprofits headquartered in Pennsylvania report combined revenue of $26.5B on their most recent IRS Form 990 filings, with an average Efficiency Score of 74/100.
The Education category covers universities, K-12 systems, scholarship funds, and education-research organizations. 496 entities report $313.9B in combined revenue.
Average efficiency in the Education category sits at 74/100. Education organizations often hold meaningful endowments, which affects how the reserves component of the efficiency rubric reads. This view filters the category down to Pennsylvania only. State-level subsets are useful for donors and grant-makers who want to focus support on local organizations.
What the Education × Pennsylvania Numbers Show
Pennsylvania is a major center for education nonprofits, with 36 organizations filing under both the Education NTEE category and a Pennsylvania principal office. Combined revenue across the group runs into hundreds of millions or more.
Education in Pennsylvania narrows 36 organizations down to the intersection of one IRS NTEE category and one state of principal office. The combined view gives a workable head-to-head comparison set for donors focused on a specific region and cause area.
The 36 education nonprofits in Pennsylvania in this view together report $26.5B in combined annual revenue on their most recent IRS Form 990 filings. Median revenue is $241.8M, and the simple average is $735.0M — a gap that reflects the long-tail distribution typical of the nonprofit sector, where a handful of large organizations account for most aggregate dollars.
Across the 36 education nonprofits in Pennsylvania we track, 10 earn an A and 21 earn a B on the Efficiency Score (combined 86% in the top two tiers, with A-grade organizations alone at 28%). Another 5 land at C, 0 at D, and 0 at F — a combined 0% in the bottom two tiers based on program ratio, reserves, growth consistency, and CEO-comp ratio drawn from each organization's most recent Form 990.
Executive compensation detail is reported on Schedule J of the Form 990 and is not always present for every organization in this list — particularly the smaller filers using Form 990-EZ.
Trustees Of The University Of Pennsylvania
University Of Pittsburgh
Thomas Jefferson University
Temple University Of The Commonwealth System Of Higher Educ
Drexel University
Milton Hershey School & School Trust
Lehigh University
Saint Josephs University
Duquesne University Of The Holy Spirit
Jefferson University Physicians
Commonwealth Charter Academy Charter School
Bucknell University
Swarthmore College
Temple University Health System Inc
Lafayette College
University Of Scranton
Widener University
Bryn Mawr College
Community Services For Children Inc
Gettysburg College
Dickinson College
Pennsylvania Cyber Charter School
Corporation Of Haverford College
Lake Erie College Of Osteopathic Medicine Inc
Franklin & Marshall College
Philadelphia College Of Osteopathic Medicine
Gannon University
Philadelphia University
Susquehanna University
Arcadia University
Wilkes University
Muhlenberg College
Mercyhurst University
Messiah University
York College Of Pennsylvania
Desales University
How to Use This Cross-Section
Pages that intersect a single NTEE category and a single state are the most apples-to-apples comparison NonprofitTruth offers. The donor question they answer is narrow: among the education charities operating from a Pennsylvania office, how does Organization X compare on financial structure to Organization Y? Sort by revenue first to keep scale roughly constant, then sort by Efficiency Score within a tier.
The NonprofitTruth Efficiency Score is a 0–100 composite that summarizes four signals from the Form 990: program-spending ratio (50% of the score), revenue-growth consistency over multiple years (20%), months of fund reserves on the balance sheet (20%), and CEO compensation as a share of revenue (10%). The grade A–F mapping is purely descriptive — it summarizes the financial structure that the 990 reveals, not the social impact, program quality, or outcomes of the work the organization does. Donors evaluating impact should pair these financial signals with program-level evaluations from sources like Charity Navigator, GiveWell, or the organization's own audited reports.
For a broader view of education nationwide, see the all-states Education page; for every nonprofit in Pennsylvania, see the Pennsylvania state page. Both views are linked at the bottom of this page.
Source Data and Verification
All financials on this page come from each organization's IRS Form 990 — the federal information return that 501(c)(3) public charities, private foundations, and most other tax-exempt organizations must file annually. The Form 990 is a public document. We ingest it primarily through the ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer feed, which mirrors the IRS Tax-Exempt Organization Search dataset. Original e-file XML and PDF copies of any return can be looked up directly at the IRS, ProPublica, or the Candid (formerly GuideStar) directory.
Every nonprofit in this list links to a profile page that cites the source filing year. The original Form 990 is available free at the IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search, the ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer, and the Candid (GuideStar) directory.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many education nonprofits are based in Pennsylvania?
36 organizations are categorized as Education on the IRS Form 990 and list a Pennsylvania principal office address. Combined annual revenue is $26.5B; average Efficiency Score across the group is 74/100.
Are these all the education charities operating in Pennsylvania?
Not necessarily. The list reflects organizations whose Form 990 lists Pennsylvania as the principal office. National education charities that operate programs in Pennsylvania but headquarter elsewhere appear in their home state’s page instead.
What does the average Efficiency Score of 74/100 represent?
It is the simple average of the NonprofitTruth Efficiency Score across the 36 organizations on this page. The Score weights program-spending ratio (50%), revenue-growth consistency (20%), reserves (20%), and CEO-comp ratio (10%). It is descriptive of financial structure, not of program impact.
Why might two education nonprofits in Pennsylvania score very differently?
Common drivers: a difference in revenue scale (which affects fixed-cost ratios), a capital-campaign year on one side that distorts the program ratio, a reliance on professional fundraisers (counted outside program services on Form 990), or a different mix of program-vs-administrative classification by the organization’s auditor. The 990’s Schedule O narrative usually explains unusual movements.
Where can I see the original Form 990 for these education charities?
Each organization links to a profile that cites the source filing year. From the profile, the original return is one click away on the IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search and on the ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer.
36 education nonprofits headquartered in Pennsylvania report combined revenue of $26.5B on their most recent IRS Form 990 filings, with an average Efficiency Score of 74/100.