Zeffy Grant Finder

Find Grants for Research Institutions

Find grants for research institutions to fund equipment, lab operations, studies, fellowships, and collaborative scientific projects. Refine this list with the filters below, or explore all categories from the homepage.

24,917 results found
GENERAL OPERATING SUPPORT
SMITH RICHARDSON FOUNDATION INC
$83,139 on average
864grants

Last awarded in 2024

Political Action Gro...Research Institution...
Matching gifts for general operating sup...
The Commonwealth Fund
$3,173 on average
621grants

Last awarded in 2024

Health CharitiesRacial Justice Organ...Research Institution...+1
FOR GENERAL SUPPORT OF CHARITABLE PURPOS...
WM KECK FOUNDATION
$28,239 on average
597grants

Last awarded in 2024

Cancer Research Cent...Education NonprofitsHospitals and Clinic...+2
Technical Assistance
Public Health Institute
$122,612 on average
566grants

Last awarded in 2024

Health CharitiesResearch Institution...
Research
Public Health Institute
$120,093 on average
501grants

Last awarded in 2024

Health CharitiesResearch Institution...
IN SUPPORT OF GENERAL OPERATIONS.
GORDON E AND BETTY I MOORE FOUNDATION
$8,717 on average
497grants

Last awarded in 2024

Conservation GroupsEnvironmental Conser...Ocean Conservation O...+2
SUPPORT CHARITABLE PROGRAMS
MAYO CLINIC
$3,931,481 on average
432grants

Last awarded in 2024

Cancer Research Cent...Health CharitiesHospitals and Clinic...+1
General operating support
Charles Koch Foundation
$531,878 on average
378grants

Last awarded in 2024

Education NonprofitsResearch Institution...Universities and Col...
CANCER RESEARCH
ALLIANCE FOR CLINICAL TRIALS IN ONCOLOGY
$107,362 on average
296grants

Last awarded in 2024

Cancer Research Cent...Disease Research Ins...Research Institution...
Capacity Building
Public Health Institute
$215,044 on average
270grants

Last awarded in 2024

Health CharitiesResearch Institution...
EMPLOYEE OR TRUSTEE RECOMMENDED GIFT FOR...
GORDON E AND BETTY I MOORE FOUNDATION
$6,919 on average
253grants

Last awarded in 2024

Conservation GroupsEnvironmental Conser...Ocean Conservation O...+2
GENERAL OPERATING SUPPORT
SARAH SCAIFE FOUNDATION INCORPORATED
$261,605 on average
243grants

Last awarded in 2024

Educational Foundati...Political Action Com...Political Action Gro...+1
RESEARCH PROJECT
THE G HAROLD & LEILA Y MATHERS
$207,467 on average
243grants

Last awarded in 2024

Cancer Research Cent...Disease Research Ins...Research Institution...
RESEARCH
NINETWELVE INSTITUTE INC
$108,893 on average
242grants

Last awarded in 2024

Research Institution...Science and Technolo...
SUPPORT RESEARCH PROGRAM
MAYO CLINIC
$272,014 on average
228grants

Last awarded in 2024

Cancer Research Cent...Health CharitiesHospitals and Clinic...+1
To provide general support (charitable)
The Chase Foundation of Virginia
$11,979 on average
206grants

Last awarded in 2024

Civil Rights Organiz...Political Action Gro...Research Institution...
EDUCATION GRANT
FOUNDATION FOR ORTHOPEDIC TRAUMA
$920 on average
193grants

Last awarded in 2024

Education NonprofitsResearch Institution...
LUPUS RESEARCH
LUPUS RESEARCH ALLIANCE INC
$263,891 on average
192grants

Last awarded in 2024

Disease Research Ins...Health CharitiesResearch Institution...
FELLOWSHIP
AO NORTH AMERICA INC
$51,199 on average
187grants

Last awarded in 2024

Education NonprofitsHealth CharitiesHospitals and Clinic...+1
DONATION
WARREN ALPERT FOUNDATION
$94,977 on average
173grants

Last awarded in 2024

Cancer Research Cent...Education NonprofitsHealth Charities+2

Finding and Winning Grants for Research Institutions: A Practical Guide

Why Grant Discovery Is Especially Challenging for Research Institutions

If you're leading grant efforts at a research institution nonprofit, you already know the frustration: funding opportunities are scattered across government portals, private foundation databases, and niche academic networks. Unlike larger universities with dedicated grant offices, smaller research-focused nonprofits often operate with lean teams juggling discovery, writing, and compliance—all while trying to advance your mission.

The challenge isn't just volume—it's relevance. You might find 100 potential grants, but only 10 accept independent research institutions, and maybe 1 actually funds your specific research area. Government sites like Grants.gov can feel frozen in time, with outdated listings or vague eligibility criteria. Meanwhile, paid databases overwhelm you with irrelevant results, and you're left manually cross-referencing funder priorities, past recipients, and application requirements just to determine if you should even apply.

You need a smarter starting point—one that understands your constraints and helps you focus on grants you can actually win.

Quick Stats About Grants for Research Institutions

Research institution nonprofits face a uniquely competitive funding landscape. According to federal data, thousands of independent research organizations compete annually for a limited pool of grants from agencies like the National Science Foundation (NSF), National Institutes of Health (NIH), and private foundations focused on scientific advancement.

What's known: Most research grants require institutional infrastructure (like IRB approval, fiscal sponsorship, or 501(c)(3) status), which can disqualify newer or smaller organizations. Additionally, success rates for federal research grants often hover around 20%, meaning even strong applications face steep odds. Private foundation funding for research has grown, but these grants tend to favor established institutions with track records—making discovery and positioning critical for emerging research nonprofits.

How to Find Grants for Research Institutions

Start with Zeffy's Grant Finder Tool

Zeffy's Grant Finder is the best free starting point for research institution nonprofits. Unlike generic databases, it's designed to surface relevant opportunities quickly—filtered by your mission, location, and organizational profile. You can search by research focus area (e.g., medical research, environmental science, policy research) and see eligibility criteria upfront, saving you hours of digging through PDFs.

Compare Free vs. Paid Grant Databases

Free options include:

  • Grants.gov: Comprehensive federal grants, but the interface is clunky and results can be outdated
  • Foundation Directory Online (limited free access): Good for exploring private funders, but full access requires a subscription
  • Google searches: Useful for discovering niche opportunities, but time-consuming and inconsistent

Paid options include:

  • GrantStation ($89+/month): Broad coverage, but recent UX changes have frustrated users who don't have time to relearn the platform
  • Candid/Foundation Directory ($149+/month): Excellent for researching private foundations, but incomplete for smaller or newer funders
  • GrantWatch ($22/week): High volume, but often too many irrelevant results—9,000+ grants with only a handful applicable

The reality: Paid tools can be worth it if you're applying to 10+ grants per year and have capacity to filter aggressively. For smaller teams, start free and upgrade only when you're consistently hitting capacity limits.

Filter Strategically

When searching any database, prioritize these filters:

  • Eligibility requirements: Does the funder accept independent research institutions? Do you need a physical location, specific IRS status, or institutional review board (IRB) approval?
  • Mission alignment: Look for funders whose past grantees match your research focus—not just broad keywords
  • Geographic fit: Many funders restrict by state, region, or even zip code
  • Deadlines: Focus on grants with realistic timelines given your team's bandwidth
  • Funding amount vs. effort: A $5,000 grant requiring 40 hours of work may not be worth it compared to a $50,000 grant with a streamlined application

Pro tip: Use past recipients as your best eligibility filter. If the funder's recent grantees look nothing like your organization, move on—no matter what the official guidelines say.

Tips to Win More Grants as a Research Institution Nonprofit

1. Build Institutional Credibility Early

Funders want to see that you have the infrastructure to manage research responsibly. Even if you're small, establish an advisory board with recognized experts, secure fiscal sponsorship if needed, and document your research protocols clearly. This signals legitimacy.

2. Demonstrate Measurable Impact

Research funders increasingly want to see real-world outcomes, not just academic outputs. Include metrics like: publications in peer-reviewed journals, policy changes influenced by your work, community partnerships formed, or populations served. Quantify whenever possible.

3. Align with Funder Priorities—Specifically

Don't just say you do "health research" if the funder focuses on "rare disease research in underserved communities." Study their 990 tax forms, past grantees, and mission statements. Tailor your application to show you're solving the exact problem they care about.

4. Reuse and Refine Your Core Narrative

Save your answers to common questions (organizational history, research methodology, budget justifications) in a centralized document. Each time you apply, refine rather than rewrite. This saves hours and improves quality over time.

5. Prioritize Low-Effort, High-Impact Grants

If you're a small team, you can't apply to everything. Focus on grants with shorter applications, fewer attachments, and funders who've supported similar organizations before. A 3-page letter of inquiry beats a 40-page proposal if your capacity is limited.

6. Leverage Partnerships and Collaborations

Many research funders favor collaborative projects. Partner with universities, hospitals, or community organizations to strengthen your application. This also helps if you lack certain infrastructure (like lab space or IRB approval) by borrowing credibility from established partners.

7. Follow Up and Build Relationships

Even if you don't win a grant, ask for feedback. Many program officers will tell you why you weren't selected—and what would make you competitive next cycle. Building these relationships can lead to future invitations or insider knowledge about upcoming opportunities.

How to Tell If a Grant Is a Good Fit

Before investing time in an application, run through this checklist:

Do you meet the funder's eligibility requirements?
(Check: organization type, IRS status, location, research focus, budget size, required policies)

Does the grant align with your current programs and research priorities?
(Avoid mission drift just to chase funding)

Are the reporting requirements realistic for your team?
(Quarterly reports, site visits, and detailed metrics can overwhelm small teams)

Is the deadline manageable given your current workload?
(Rushing a weak application wastes time—better to wait for the next cycle)

Can the funding be used for your type of expenses?
(Some grants restrict indirect costs, equipment purchases, or personnel salaries)

Do past grantees look like your organization?
(If all recent recipients are large universities and you're a grassroots research nonprofit, reconsider)

Is the funder credible and stable?
(Avoid private funders with unclear track records or those requiring application fees)

When searching databases like Zeffy, Grants.gov, or Foundation Directory, use these targeted keywords to surface relevant opportunities:

  • "research institution grants"
  • "independent research funding"
  • "scientific research nonprofits"
  • "policy research grants"
  • "medical research funding" (if applicable)
  • "environmental research grants" (if applicable)
  • "community-based research"
  • "research capacity building"
  • "501(c)(3) research organizations"
  • "small research institution funding"

Bonus tip: Combine these with your specific research area (e.g., "cancer research grants," "climate science funding," "education policy research") and your location (e.g., "California research grants") to narrow results further.


Ready to streamline your grant search? Start with Zeffy's Grant Finder to discover relevant opportunities faster—and spend less time searching, more time researching.

Frequently Asked Questions

Provide a clear overview of major grant categories: federal research grants (NIH, NSF), foundation grants (William T. Grant, Spencer Foundation), and discipline-specific opportunities. Keep it scannable with examples of funding amounts and focus areas.

Explain the importance of filtering by research area, institution type, and eligibility criteria. Mention key platforms (Grants.gov, NIH, NSF) and emphasize how targeted search saves time versus generic browsing.

Clarify common eligibility factors: institutional status, research focus alignment, geographic location, and compliance requirements. Keep it practical and note that requirements vary by funder.

Provide realistic funding ranges based on grant type (e.g., $25K–$35K for smaller grants, $100K–$1M+ for major research grants). Mention that amounts vary by funder and project scope.

List essential documents: research proposal, budget narrative, institutional certifications, compliance documentation, and CV/credentials. Emphasize the value of preparing these upfront to streamline applications.

Explain that geographic filters help narrow results and mention state-level funding opportunities. Encourage users to search by location to find relevant local and regional grants.

Set realistic expectations: timelines vary from weeks to months depending on grant complexity and institutional coordination. Mention that knowing effort level upfront helps with planning and prioritization.

Guide users to assess fit based on: research alignment, funding amount, deadline, application effort, and past grantees. Emphasize that fit scoring helps avoid wasted effort on low-relevance opportunities.