This is STAGING. For front-end user testing and QA.
The Chronicle of Philanthropy logo

Fundraising

Giving in the 50 Largest Metropolitan Areas

October 3, 2017 | Read Time: 2 minutes

The Chronicle used 2015 Internal Revenue Service data on itemized charitable giving to create a snapshot of giving in every county and metropolitan area in the country. (Only donations of taxpayers who took a deduction are included.) Here are figures for the nation’s 50 largest metro areas.

The last column points to each area’s “giving opportunity” — the dollars that would have been raised if giving rates in each of four income groups had matched national averages. The full methodology for the report is here.

Metro Area Population Average Giving per Itemizer Average % of Income to Charity Total in Itemized Contributions Giving Opportunity
New York 20 million $6,410 2.8% $20.1 billion $2.1 billion
Los Angeles 13.2 million $6,098 2.9% $9.8 billion $726 million
Chicago 9.5 million $5,289 2.7% $6.8 billion $907 million
Dallas-Fort Worth 6.8 million $7,626 3.8% $5.2 billion
Houston 6.3 million $7,949 3.7% $5.0 billion
Philadelphia 6.0 million $4,430 2.5% $4.0 billion $966 million
Washington 5.9 million $5,290 2.9% $6.3 billion $548 million
Miami-Fort Lauderdale 5.9 million $8,460 3.4% $4.3 billion
Atlanta 5.5 million $8,044 4.6% $5.7 billion
Boston 4.7 million $5,885 2.5% $4.6 billion $1.0 billion
San Francisco 4.5 million $7,275 2.7% $6.1 billion $909 million
Phoenix 4.4 million $5,168 3.1% $2.3 billion $126 million
Riverside, Calif. 4.4 million $3,846 3.0% $1.8 billion $69 million
Detroit 4.3 million $4,700 2.8% $2.3 billion $211 million
Seattle 3.6 million $5,825 3.0% $3.1 billion $150 million
Minneapolis-St. Paul 3.5 million $4,532 2.6% $2.7 billion $438 million
San Diego 3.2 million $4,709 2.5% $2.0 billion $422 million
Tampa-St. Petersburg, Fla. 2.9 million $5,965 3.2% $1.3 billion $49 million
St. Louis 2.8 million $5,250 3.0% $1.8 billion $10 million
Baltimore 2.8 million $4,675 3.0% $2.3 billion $87 million
Denver 2.7 million $4,863 2.7% $2.0 billion $270 million
Pittsburgh 2.4 million $4,510 2.5% $1.1 billion $231 million
Charlotte, N.C. 2.3 million $6,457 3.6% $1.9 billion
Portland, Ore. 2.3 million $4,169 2.6% $1.5 billion $257 million
San Antonio 2.3 million $6,576 3.8% $1.2 billion
Orlando, Fla. 2.3 million $5,520 3.2% $900 million $57 million
Sacramento 2.2 million $3,689 2.4% $1.1 billion $278 million
Cincinnati 2.1 million $4,580 2.7% $1.2 billion $137 million
Cleveland 2.1 million $4,437 2.8% $1.1 billion $113 million
Kansas City, Mo. 2.1 million $5,259 3.2% $1.4 billion
Las Vegas 2.0 million $6,097 3.3% $1.0 billion $1 million
San Jose, Calif. 1.9 million $14,046 4.6% $5.1 billion $217 million
Austin, Tex. 1.9 million $6,249 3.0% $1.4 billion $52 million
Nashville 1.8 million $7,641 4.0% $1.2 billion
Virginia Beach 1.7 million $4,722 3.4% $1.0 billion
Providence, R.I. 1.6 million $2,748 1.8% $600 million $376 million
Milwaukee 1.6 million $4,629 2.8% $1.0 billion $101 million
Jacksonville, Fla. 1.4 million $7,434 4.2% $900 million
Memphis 1.3 million $9,329 5.6% $1.0 billion
Oklahoma City 1.3 million $7,256 4.0% $900 million
Louisville, Ky. 1.3 million $4,836 3.1% $700 million $4 million
Richmond, Va. 1.2 million $4,892 3.1% $900 million $37 million
New Orleans 1.2 million $5,570 3.1% $600 million $35 million
Raleigh, N.C. 1.2 million $5,511 3.3% $1.0 billion
Hartford, Conn. 1.2 million $2,994 1.9% $600 million $393 million
Salt Lake City 1.1 million $8,412 5.5% $1.2 billion
Birmingham, Ala. 1.1 million $9,388 5.4% $1.1 billion
Buffalo-Niagara Falls, N.Y. 1.1 million $3,411 2.3% $400 million $125 million
Columbus, Ohio 1.0 million $4,189 2.7% $1.1 billion $133 million
Indianapolis 1.0 million $5,413 3.2% $1.2 billion $14 million


About the Author

Senior Editor, Special Projects

Drew is a longtime magazine writer and editor who joined the Chronicle of Philanthropy in 2014. He previously worked at Washingtonian magazine and was a principal editor for Teacher and MHQ, which were both selected as finalists for a National Magazine Award for general excellence. In 2005. he was one of 18 journalists selected for a yearlong Knight-Wallace Fellowship at the University of Michigan.