/Directory/Florida/

Hollywood

The Nonprofit Ecosystem in Hollywood

Hollywood is home to 764 nonprofit organizations. In aggregate, these organizations account for $265m in revenue and employ 2k individuals.

How Large Are Hollywood, FL Nonprofits?

Organizations By Employee Count

23

1-5

12

6-10

4

11-25

8

26-50

1

51-100

7

101-250

0

250-1000

0

1000+

Employee Count Buckets

Number of Organizations

Organizations By Revenue Level

46

$50k-250k

44

$250k-1M

23

$1M-5M

4

$5M-10M

6

$10M-25M

1

$25M-100M

0

$100M+

Org Revenue Buckets

Number of Organizations

Where Do Hollywood, FL Nonprofits Focus?

The IRS classifies nonprofits along 25 different categories or NTEE classifications.

*Remaining NTEE categories account for 0 organizations.

Explore Nonprofits in Hollywood, FL

Oasis Congregation In The Desert

Hollywood, FL

MISSION:

The goal of this organization are the religious organizations whose form of Christian faith and practice originated with the principles of the Reformation. Use this code for Protestant churches as well as their ministries, missions or missionary activities; bible camps and schools; and bible distribution programs.

Spiritual Assembly Of The Bahais Of Cooper City

Hollywood, FL

MISSION:

The goal of this organization is to provide services relating to religion where a more specific code cannot be accurately assigned. Examples may include Unitarianism, Taoism, Sikhs, Zoroastrism, Atheism, Actualism, Theosophy, Bahaism and reference to miracles.

Miracle Temple Ministries Of Hollywood Inc

Hollywood, FL

MISSION:

The goal of this organization are the religious organizations whose form of Christian faith and practice originated with the principles of the Reformation. Use this code for Protestant churches as well as their ministries, missions or missionary activities; bible camps and schools; and bible distribution programs.

Gb Knecht Foundation

Hollywood, FL

Revenue: $65k

MISSION:

The goal of this organization are the private foundations that make grants based on charitable endowments. Because of their endowments, they are focused primarily on grantmaking and generally do not actively raise funds or seek public financial support. These are the most common type of private foundation. They are generally endowed, usually from a single individual or family. Private foundations are considered family foundations if relatives or the original donor are still active on the board of trustees or in the operation of the foundation.