San Francisco educational service providers

There are 1,285educational service providers in the greater San Franciscometro area, including the cities of San Francisco, Berkeley, Livermore, Oakland, Pleasanton, Redwood City, San Mateo, San Rafael, San Ramon, South San Francisco, and Walnut Creek. Combined, these San Francisco metro educational service providersemploy 3,973 people, earn more than $582 million in revenue each year, and have assets of $1 billion.

Types of educational service providers in San Francisco

Nonprofit typeNumberRevenues
1,285
$581,664,984
791
$85,981,172
48
$87,434,768
Showing 3 of 3categories

Job trends for San Francisco educational service providers

Employees per organizationNumber of organizations
0
273
1-10
58
11-25
29
26-100
29
101 to 1,000
6
1,000+
0
Key takeaways for employment stats:

Sizes of educational service providers in San Francisco

Revenues per organizationNumber of organizations
< $250k
497
$250k to $1M
112
$1M to $5M
42
$5M to $25M
21
$25M to $100M
4
$100M+
0
Key takeaways for revenue stats:

Directory of educational service providers in San Francisco


Want more insights on educational service providers in San Francisco?
There's a whole lot more to Cause IQ than what you see here. Additional filters, personnel information, peer benchmarking, Salesforce integration, vendor lists, etc. Access all the information your company needs in one place, already collected.
Schedule a demo
Over 200 customers use Cause IQ to grow, maintain, and serve their nonprofit clients.
Methodology: Cause IQ mines all tax-exempt organizations that file a Form 990, Form 990-EZ, or Form 990-PF with the IRS. We collect and aggregate this information from OCR'd paper taxreturns, XML e-file taxreturns, IRS-provided extract, the Business Master File, and Cause IQ secret sauce for data cleaning, categorization, classification, analytics, etc.
This category corresponds to the "B90: Educational Services" National Taxonomy of Exempt Entities (NTEE) code. Cause IQ determines NTEEs for organizations by its own internally-developed secret-sauce algorithms.