Updated April 2026
State DataNonprofits in New York
New York hosts 152 nonprofits with combined annual revenue of $134.2B on their most recent IRS Form 990 filings. The largest by revenue and the most efficient by score are listed below, drawn from the public ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer feed.
152 nonprofits · $134.2B total revenue
Across New York, 152 nonprofits report a combined $134.2B in revenue under IRS Form 990. The largest is Healthfirst Phsp Inc at $12.1B.
The dominant category by revenue in New York is Health — the same pattern holds in most U.S. states, where hospital systems and university systems dominate the top of the nonprofit revenue distribution. Each nonprofit links to its full Form 990 profile with revenue, expense, asset, and compensation breakdowns.
What the New York Numbers Show
New York has a moderate state-level nonprofit footprint on the site, with 152 organizations whose IRS Form 990 lists New York as the principal office. Combined revenue runs over $100 billion, driven primarily by large hospital systems and university-affiliated foundations. The largest single category by revenue in New York is Health.
New York hosts 152 of the nonprofits in our database. State-level totals reflect organizations whose Form 990 lists New York as the primary office address; nationally active charities may also operate here under affiliate or chapter structures.
The 152 New York nonprofits in this view together report $134.2B in combined annual revenue on their most recent IRS Form 990 filings. Median revenue is $187.3M, and the simple average is $882.9M — 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 152 New York nonprofits we track, 37 earn an A and 86 earn a B on the Efficiency Score (combined 81% in the top two tiers, with A-grade organizations alone at 24%). Another 29 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.
Largest Nonprofits
Healthfirst Phsp Inc
New York University
The New York And Presbyterian Hospital
Nyu Langone Hospitals
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
Trustees Of Columbia University
Cornell University
University Of Rochester
Metroplus Health Plan Inc
Montefiore Medical Center
Icahn School Of Medicine At Mount Sinai
Long Island Jewish Medical Center
Mount Sinai Hospital
North Shore University Hospital
Northwell Healthcare Inc
Vns Choice
Lenox Hill Hospital
Syracuse University
Elderplan Inc
Research Foundation For The State University Of New York
How New York Compares Nationally
State-level rankings are most useful when the donor cares about local economic activity or wants a charity headquartered nearby. They are less useful for evaluating a single organization’s financial structure: a New York food bank should be compared to other food banks of similar revenue scale rather than to all New York nonprofits put together. Use the category and revenue-tier filters for that finer-grained read.
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.
The data on this page reflects only organizations whose principal office is in New York. National charities active in New York but headquartered elsewhere are listed under their home state.
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 New York nonprofit listed has its underlying Form 990 available free of charge from the IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search, the ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer, or the Candid (GuideStar) directory.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many nonprofits are based in New York?
152 organizations file their IRS Form 990 from a New York principal office address according to the data we ingest from the ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer feed. Combined revenue across the state is $134.2B.
What sector dominates New York nonprofit revenue?
By aggregate revenue from Form 990 filings, the largest cause area among New York nonprofits is Health. Healthcare and higher-education systems typically dominate state-level revenue rankings because of the size of hospital and university foundations relative to other categories.
Why is the average Efficiency Score not 100?
The Efficiency Score is a 0–100 composite of four Form 990 signals (program-spending ratio 50%, revenue-growth consistency 20%, reserves 20%, CEO-comp ratio 10%). Across the full U.S. database, the average lands well below 100 because few organizations are simultaneously top-tier on all four dimensions. A high program ratio plus thin reserves can pull a score down, just as strong reserves plus a low program ratio will. New York’s state average reflects the same pattern.
Are these the only nonprofits in New York?
No. This list reflects organizations whose Form 990 lists New York as the principal office. National charities operating in New York but headquartering elsewhere appear in their home state’s page. Local affiliates that file under a parent EIN may not appear in this list at all.
Where can I see the original Form 990 for these charities?
Click any organization for its profile page, which lists the source filing year. The original 990 is available free at the IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search and at ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer.
Read the New York guide
Complete breakdown of the largest tax-exempt nonprofits in New York by IRS Form 990 revenue, with Efficiency Score grades, program-expense ratios, and CEO compensation.
Largest Nonprofits in New York 2026: Top Charities by Revenue & Efficiency →New York hosts 152 nonprofits with combined annual revenue of $134.2B on their most recent IRS Form 990 filings. The largest by revenue and the most efficient by score are listed below, drawn from the public ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer feed.