Which nonprofit organizations publicly linked to 'antifa' received the most funding in 2024 and what are their IRS-reported revenues?

Checked on January 19, 2026
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Executive summary

A definitive, sourced ranking of “nonprofit organizations publicly linked to ‘antifa’ that received the most funding in 2024” cannot be produced from the materials provided, because the supplied reporting does not contain a compiled list of such organizations nor their 2024 IRS Form 990 revenues; the IRS’s public tools and Form 990 filings are the authoritative path to that data [1] [2] [3]. Investigative reporting and partisan pieces make contested claims about funding networks and political targeting, and observers warn that 501(c) categories — especially 501(c) “social welfare” groups — can obscure donors and political activity, complicating simple assertions about who funded whom in 2024 [4].

1. What the user is really asking and why the available reporting falls short

The question requests two concrete things — which nonprofits tied publicly to “antifa” got the most funding in 2024, and what their IRS-reported revenues were — but the documents provided do not supply a vetted list of nonprofits tied to Antifa nor a table of their 2024 Form 990 numbers, and therefore cannot support definitive named-and-numbered claims about 2024 revenues [1] [3]. The IRS maintains Form 990 records and a searchable database for tax-exempt organizations where annual revenue and balance-sheet figures are reported, but extracting and verifying a list of organizations “linked to ‘antifa’” requires independent sourcing and clear criteria for what “publicly linked” means — which the supplied sources do not establish [1] [2].

2. The institutional tools that would answer the question — and their limits

The Internal Revenue Service provides the Tax Exempt Organization Search and Form 990 filings that report organizations’ gross receipts, revenue, and program expenses; those filings are the primary, authoritative source for IRS-reported revenues and are available via the IRS website and apps [1] [2] [3]. However, 501(c) organizations and certain donor-advised structures can conceal donor identities and the provenance of funds, and ProPublica’s reporting documents longstanding enforcement gaps that make it difficult to trace political funding or label organizations’ activities unambiguously using tax returns alone [4].

3. What the supplied investigative and opinion reporting asserts — and the reliability question

Several supplied pieces advance narratives tying progressive nonprofits, grant networks, or philanthropy intermediaries to protest movements or “antifa”-aligned actions, with outlets like Public Dispatch alleging funding pipelines and others making sensational claims that verge on conspiracy [5] [6]. These sources contain assertions about indirect funding and ideological affinity, but they do not present a transparent, IRS-verified roster of organizations and 2024 revenue figures; furthermore, partisan context and editorial agendas are evident in outlets pushing broad claims about “collusion” or hidden transfers, so such assertions require corroboration with primary tax records [6] [5].

4. Political and congressional pressure that affects public discourse about funding

Political actors have pushed the IRS and congressional committees to investigate nonprofits alleged to be tied to political violence; the House Ways and Means Committee in late 2025 (cited in the supplied file) said it had sent letters in September 2024 requesting IRS probes of several tax-exempt groups for alleged ties to foreign terrorist organizations and political violence — a reminder that allegations have moved into formal oversight channels even if public evidence remains contested [7]. Critics warn that such enforcement efforts can be politicized and that labeling groups “antifa”-linked depends on varying standards and political aims [8].

5. How to get the actual answer with verifiable evidence

To produce the requested ranking with IRS-reported revenues, one must (a) define which organizations meet the criterion “publicly linked to ‘antifa’” using explicit, documentary links; (b) pull each organization’s 2024 Form 990 (or most recent return) from the IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search or the IRS apps and read the gross receipts and revenue lines; and (c) disclose uncertainty where organizations are not required to disclose donors or where Form 990 reporting lags or aggregates funds — steps that are feasible but not completed in the materials supplied here [1] [2] [3] [4].

Want to dive deeper?
Which U.S. nonprofits have Form 990s showing the largest gross receipts in 2024, and how to search IRS records for those filings?
What standards and evidence have congressional committees used when alleging ties between specific nonprofits and political violence since 2024?
How do 501(c)(4) disclosure rules and IRS enforcement gaps complicate efforts to trace political funding to protest networks?