JK Moving Services Again Named Top Corporate Philanthropist By WBJ
JK Moving Services, a moving, storage, relocation and logistics company has again been named a Top Corporate Philanthropist in the Washington Business Journal’s annual ranking of charitable giving in the greater Washington, D.C., region.
The company was recognized for contributing $716,000 in corporate donations during 2025, with much of that support directed toward hunger-relief efforts through the nonprofit JK Community Farm. The contributions placed JK Moving 26th among the region’s largest corporate donors, up from 28th the previous year.
“As a locally grown company, we are honored to again be included on this prestigious list that includes many well-known global brands. We are committed to treating customers, employees, and our community with care and respect. This brand promise shapes our philanthropic investments, which are helping reduce hunger and preserve land for future generations,” explained JK Moving Services CEO Chuck Kuhn.
One of the company’s largest philanthropic initiatives is the JK Community Farm, a nonprofit founded and supported by JK Moving. The 150-acre farm grows more than 50 varieties of vegetables, fruits, proteins and herbs and relies on volunteer support from residents, local businesses and company employees.
The farm donates all of its produce to regional food banks and pantries, including Loudoun Hunger Relief, Food for Others, Arlington Food Assistance Center and DC Central Kitchen.
Since its founding, the farm has distributed more than 1 million pounds of vegetables and protein to families experiencing food insecurity. In 2025, the farm donated more than 250,000 pounds of produce and protein. The land has also been permanently protected from future development through conservation measures.

Over the past decade, JK Land Holdings, part of the JK enterprise, has placed more than 22,000 acres into conservation easements, including nearly one-third of those acres in Northern Virginia.
Conservation projects include a 128-acre riverfront property donated to NOVA Parks, the 135-acre former Westpark golf course in Leesburg, the 87-acre JK Black Oak Wildlife Sanctuary, the 56-acre Oakland Farm riverfront property, and 42 acres in St. Louis, one of Loudoun County’s first African American communities.
The company also continued efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in 2025 by establishing enterprise-wide baseline carbon accounting. JK received a CDP SME-B rating for the second consecutive year, reflecting its participation in global climate reporting standards.
JK Moving, together with sister companies CapRelo and JK Land Holdings, employs nearly 1,200 people, most of whom live in the Washington metropolitan region. The company has previously been recognized by the Washington Business Journal as both a Best Place to Work and a Top Corporate Philanthropist.
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