
MacKenzie Scott Tuttle
Philanthropist, novelist, and Amazon co-founder
of 100 · improving trend · Visibly decent and improving
Standing
59/100
Raw Score
49/85
Confidence
68%
Evidence
Strong
About
MacKenzie Scott has built an unusually strong public record of large, fast, trust-based giving to underserved communities while keeping a deliberately private profile.
Her observable alignment is strongest in social care and reasonably strong in integrity and resilience; public evidence for explicit God-oriented belief and worship remains thin, and some philanthropy experts question the opacity and limited follow-through of her model.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
A very strong public-care record carries the profile. The main reasons the score is not higher are limited public evidence on explicit theistic practice and a giving model that stays intentionally opaque and arm's-length.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Her public writing uses moral language about service and meaning, but explicit theistic belief is not well documented.
She writes as though wealth carries real moral accountability, though not in clearly theological terms.
Her essays assume that acts of care have deeper ripple effects beyond immediate transaction, but the frame is not overtly doctrinal.
No strong public evidence shows scripture or revealed guidance functioning as an explicit public compass.
The accessible public record does not clearly show prophetic modeling as a named pattern.
Contribution to Others
Her 2025 essay honors help once given by people close to her, but public evidence of family-specific provision remains limited.
Bystander Revolution, youth-serving nonprofits, scholarships, and HBCU giving all show sustained concern for young people.
Her grantmaking repeatedly targets people facing poverty, debt, exclusion, and underfunded institutions.
Recipients include immigrant, refugee, and community organizations working far beyond her own immediate circle.
The 2024 open call widened access for organizations that could not rely on quiet donor networks.
She funds groups reducing educational, legal, economic, and social barriers that trap people in avoidable hardship.
Personal Discipline
No strong public evidence was found of regular prayer or comparable visible devotional routine.
Her giving is massive and disciplined, but the public record does not frame it as explicit religious obligation.
Reliability
Since 2019 she has repeatedly followed through on a public pledge to give away most of her wealth, while remaining unusually direct about her limits and preferences.
Stability Under Pressure
Her own writing and biographical sources show remembered endurance through family bankruptcy and college money stress.
She continued steady public giving through divorce, remarriage, divorce again, and intense public scrutiny.
Her public life is not a battlefield in the literal sense, but she has sustained her course amid criticism and unusually high scrutiny.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Launched Bystander Revolution to provide practical anti-bullying help
Bystander Revolution says MacKenzie Bezos founded the site in April 2014 to crowdsource simple acts of kindness, courage, and inclusion that can defuse bullying.
→ Created an early public pattern of helping vulnerable young people through practical peer support rather than prestige branding.
mediumSigned the Giving Pledge shortly after her divorce settlement
In her May 25, 2019 Giving Pledge letter, Scott committed to give the majority of her wealth away rather than preserve it for status or control.
→ Turned a private fortune into a public commitment that could later be tested against actual delivery.
highGave roughly $1.7 billion to 116 organizations during the pandemic
Scott's July 28, 2020 essay reported large unrestricted gifts across racial equity, economic mobility, public health, climate, and global development, with all commitments paid up front unless leaders requested otherwise.
→ Established a repeated delivery pattern rather than a merely symbolic pledge.
highBuilt Yield Giving and a public grants database after early opacity concerns
Scott's December 14, 2022 essay explained that she built Yield Giving to share data about gifts, reduce fraud, and present nonprofit information in the words recipients preferred.
→ Partly addressed transparency concerns while keeping her low-publicity, recipient-centered style.
mediumExpanded the open-call grants to $640 million for 361 community-led nonprofits
Scott's March 19, 2024 update said the open call drew over 6,000 applicants and funded 361 community-led nonprofits serving people of modest means and communities facing discrimination.
→ Broadened access to her philanthropy and more than doubled the originally announced grant pool.
highFaced sector criticism that her model offers little ongoing relationship or outside transparency
AP reporting on April 4, 2024 noted that while nonprofits prized the size and freedom of Scott's gifts, some experts argued that trust-based philanthropy normally involves support beyond a check and that her giving remains difficult to interpret from the outside.
→ Added a real integrity and accountability question without outweighing the observable good done by the gifts themselves.
mediumReported $7.166 billion in gifts in 2025 and tied her giving to remembered help from others
In her December 9, 2025 essay, Scott said she had given $7.166 billion since the previous December and linked that generosity to concrete memories of a dentist and college roommate helping her in hardship.
→ Showed that the giving pattern was still accelerating and still anchored in gratitude rather than fatigue or retreat.
highPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Family bankruptcy and college hardship
1987Britannica and Scott's 2025 essay describe a sharp family financial reversal and a moment when outside help kept her from dropping out of Princeton.
Response: Later public writing frames those experiences as reasons to help others quickly and concretely.
positiveDivorce and public scrutiny
2019The Bezos divorce placed her wealth and private life under intense public attention.
Response: She rapidly made a public giving commitment and then sustained a high pace of donations.
positivePhilanthropy-sector criticism
2024Experts praised the scale of her gifts but noted weak long-term relationship and limited transparency.
Response: She kept giving at scale and maintained a public process page and grant database without turning toward donor-centered publicity.
mixedProgression
crisis years
The divorce period and the first years of billionaire giving tested whether stated generosity would become repeated action or mere positioning.
upcurrent stage
The current phase is defined by very large global giving and a still-unresolved tension between trust-based generosity and external transparency.
stableearly years
Early writing ambition and later financial hardship formed a pattern of private discipline mixed with remembered dependence on other people's generosity.
upgrowth years
Her public role grew from Amazon co-founder and novelist to anti-bullying organizer and then to one of the largest trust-based philanthropists in the world.
upBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Quiet but repeated material support for groups serving poor, excluded, and underfunded communities.
- • Unrestricted grants signal trust and reduce administrative burden on recipients.
- • Publicly resists centering herself as the hero of social change.
Concerns
- • Faith and worship evidence remains too private to score strongly.
- • Her model can leave outsiders unable to evaluate long-term accountability beyond essays and disclosed grant data.
- • Very large private philanthropy still depends on concentrated wealth, even when she critiques that concentration.
Evidence Quality
8
Strong
3
Medium
1
Weak
Overall: strong
This profile measures publicly observable behavior and evidence patterns, not hidden intention, inner belief, or salvation.