Harvard's Endowment

Harvard’s endowment, the University’s largest financial asset, is a perpetual source of support for the University and its mission of teaching and research. The endowment is made up of more than 14,000 funds; the two largest categories of funds support faculty and students, including professorships and financial aid for undergraduates, graduate fellowships, and student life and activities.


What is Harvard's endowment? 

Harvard’s endowment is a dedicated and permanent source of funding that maintains the teaching and research mission of the University. Made up of more than 14,000 individual funds invested as a single entity, the endowment’s returns have enabled leading financial aid programs, groundbreaking discoveries in scientific research, and hundreds of professorships across a wide range of academic fields.

Each year, a portion of the endowment is paid out as an annual distribution to support the University’s budget, while any appreciation in excess of this annual distribution is retained in the endowment so it can grow and support future generations. As a result, the endowment can provide the financial foundation for the University for generations to come.

Distributions from Harvard’s endowment provide a critical source of funding for the University. The endowment distributed $2.2 billion in the fiscal year ending June 30, 2023 contributing over a third of Harvard’s total operating revenue in that year. The overwhelming majority of the funds that make up Harvard’s endowment are donor directed to specific programs, departments, or purposes (dedicated scholarships, named professorships, etc.), and must be spent in accordance with terms set forth by the donor. Payout from these funds can only be spent in support of the fund’s designated purpose. Unrestricted funds, which account for approximately 20 percent of Harvard’s endowment, are more flexible in nature and are critical in supporting structural operating expenses and transformative, strategic initiatives.

Each of Harvard’s twelve Schools “owns” its share of the endowment. Over 80 percent of the funds that make up the endowment are dedicated by the donor to a specific School. School revenue profiles vary widely, and each draws a different proportion of its budget from its endowment.

A line chart showing the endowment payout rate overlaid on a bar chart showing the endowment distribution in millions of dollars between 2007 and 2023.


What does Harvard's endowment support? 

The endowment remains the largest source of revenue supporting the University budget. In fiscal year 2023, endowment distributions for operations represented 37 percent of the University’s revenue—ranging from 83 percent of Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study revenue down to 20 percent for Harvard Business School and Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

Endowment funds support nearly every aspect of University operations. The two largest categories of funds cover faculty salaries, including professorships, and financial aid for undergrads, graduate fellowships, and student life and activities. Harvard also has endowments that support academic programs, libraries, art museums, facilities, and a wide variety of other activities.

Even with endowment support, Harvard must fund nearly two-thirds of its operating expenses ($5.9 billion in fiscal year 2023) from other sources, such as federal and non-federal research grants, student tuition and fees, and gifts from alumni, parents, and friends.

Who manages Harvard's endowment? 

Harvard Management Company (HMC)—a nonprofit, wholly owned subsidiary of Harvard University—has managed the University’s endowment portfolio since 1974. HMC has a singular mission of producing strong investment results to support the educational and research goals of the University. Governed by a board of directors appointed by the President and Fellows of Harvard College, HMC works to manage the endowment in a sustainable way so that it can provide capital to support the long-term goals of the University.

How does Harvard determine its endowment payout? 

The University’s spending practice must balance two competing goals: the need to fund the operating budget with a stable and predictable distribution, and the obligation to maintain the long-term value of endowment assets after accounting for inflation.

The University determines the annual endowment distribution after considering a variety of factors, including guidance from a payout formula that provides a steady stream of income to support current needs while preserving the endowment’s future purchasing power. This process is similar to those of many other colleges and universities.

As a general rule, Harvard targets an annual endowment payout rate of 5.0 to 5.5% of market value. The actual payout rate varies each year based on endowment returns. For example, following extraordinary endowment returns in FY21 of 33.6% that served to boost the endowment’s market value, the payout rate (i.e., the annual distribution as a percent of market value) fell, despite the fact that the annual distribution increased. Each year the Harvard Corporation approves the final distribution amount.

A line chart showing the endowment payout rate overlaid on a bar chart showing the endowment distribution in millions of dollars


Why can't Harvard use more of its endowment in order to cover additional expenses or reduce tuition costs? 

Returns from the endowment foster leading financial aid programs, scientific research discoveries, and hundreds of professorships.

However, there is a common misconception that endowments, including Harvard’s, can be accessed like bank accounts, used for anything at any time as long as funds are available. In reality, Harvard’s flexibility in spending from the endowment is limited by the fact that it must be maintained in perpetuity and that it is largely restricted.

Endowment gifts are intended by their donors to benefit both current and future generations of students and scholars. As a result, Harvard is obligated to preserve the purchasing power of these gifts by spending only a small fraction of their value each year. Spending significantly more than that over time, for whatever reason, would privilege the present over the future in a manner inconsistent with an endowment’s fundamental purpose of maintaining intergenerational equity.

In addition, many donors also designate a specific purpose for which their fund can be spent. For Harvard, over 80 percent of endowed funds are subject to these restrictions. Contributions may be given in support of a specific School, program, or activity, and can only be used for those purposes.

Each Annual Financial Report includes a press release about the endowment’s performance for that fiscal year.