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Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation Youth Mental Health & Well-Being Grants is a grant from the Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation that has committed $25 million to support nonprofits across the United States working to improve youth mental health and well-being.
The ten-year grantmaking strategy focuses on three critical developmental periods: infancy, childhood, and adolescence. The three funding pillars address helping parents establish secure emotional bonds with infants, building protective factors during childhood, and supporting adolescent mental health. This initiative builds on more than $31 million committed since 2022 and emphasizes prevention-oriented approaches.
Eligible applicants are U.S.-based nonprofits focused on youth mental health programming. Grants are awarded on a rolling basis with no fixed deadline.
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| Blank Foundation Invests $25M in Youth Mental Health Mental Health & Well-Being Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation Invests $25 Million in Youth Mental Health and Well-Being Grants support nonprofits across the U.S., cultivating flourishing mental health for young people ATLANTA – Dec. 10, 2025 – This year, the Arthur M.
Blank Family Foundation has committed $25 million in support of a new national Mental Health & Well-Being grantmaking strategy. The grants support the foundation’s goal of helping young people flourish by focusing on three critical periods: infancy, childhood and adolescence.
“These grants reflect our commitment to supporting young people’s mental health and well-being at pivotal moments in their development,” said Beth Brown, managing director of Mental Health and Well-Being at the Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation. “Our strategy is ambitious and hopeful, focused on prevention.
We’re pleased to invest in solutions that support the vision that every baby born today will have a stronger path toward flourishing mental well-being than any generation that came before. ” The grants build upon a learning portfolio of more than $31 million committed since 2022 to support youth mental health.
For the next ten years, the foundation’s Mental Health and Well-Being grantmaking will focus on three pillars: Parents Establish Secure Emotional Bonds With Their Infants A young person’s mental health is shaped in the earliest years of life through the bond with their parents and experiences during infancy.
Early interventions address risk factors by supporting parents, infants and families during the critical ages of zero to three before mental health issues arise. Research shows that nearly half of childhood-onset mental health conditions can be prevented through strong maternal mental health, positive parenting skills and healthy family functioning.
When parents, especially mothers, have the support and resources to maintain good mental health, they create nurturing and responsive environments that strengthen their children’s emotional development, build resilience and lay the foundation for lifelong well-being. Children Develop Resilience and a Sense of Belonging Schools play a vital role in supporting the well-being of young people.
While trained school psychologists, social workers and nurses deliver mental health support, prevention can be strengthened by teachers, coaches, volunteers and community organizations that help young people develop their social and emotional skills and cultivate a positive school climate and a strong sense of belonging.
The foundation is interested in investing in two types of programs that support elementary and middle school students in this way—mindfulness programs and peer-to-peer support focused on belonging. Teenagers Have a Healthy Relationship with Digital Technology Select nonprofits receiving Mental Health and Well-Being grants from the foundation in 2025 are highlighted below. Sandy Hook Promise: $3 million.
Sandy Hook Promise aims to reduce social isolation and create cultures of belonging in schools nationwide through peer support programs. The foundation’s grant will support the scaling of student-led programs, including a nationally recognized program, No One Eats Alone, that combats loneliness in middle school lunchrooms.
Funding will also support the development of a unified K-12 model to help schools build stronger cultures of belonging. Common Sense Media: $3 million. Common Sense Media advances public awareness of how technology impacts youth mental health and develops practical tools for families and educators to increase digital literacy and well-being.
Through its Healthy Tech, Healthy Minds initiative, it will expand its K-12 Digital Literacy & Well-Being Curriculum, deepen research on digital life and AI, and provide guidance that helps schools navigate issues like AI and cellphone use. Mindful Philanthropy: $2. 7 million.
Mindful Philanthropy guides the philanthropic sector with a bold vision to dramatically increase both the quantity and quality of philanthropic investment in mental health and well-being. This grant will support Mindful Philanthropy’s work as a field catalyst, strengthening the effectiveness of mental health philanthropy and advancing increased giving among funders in the relatively new field. The Together Project: $2.
5 million. Founded by former U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy, The Together Project is an initiative to strengthen belonging, connection and community in America. This grant will support the launch and early days of the new nonprofit, which aims to mobilize coordinated efforts that advance social connection as a foundation for individual and collective well-being.
The foundation has provided an additional $2. 5 million to The Together Project through its Founder Initiatives portfolio. Ad Council: $2.
4 million. The Ad Council uses communications and storytelling to reduce stigma, increase awareness and catalyze behavior change related to significant societal issues. This grant provides funding to launch a national public education campaign on maternal and infant mental health.
This campaign will raise awareness of symptoms, reduce stigma, connect mothers to trusted resources and promote early relational health during the prenatal and perinatal periods. Young Futures : $1 million. Young Futures works at the intersection of technology and youth mental health.
The foundation’s investment will support two innovation challenges, including its latest “Oops! …AI Did It Again,” to surface promising solutions that help young people navigate AI, build healthy relationships with technology, and strengthen connection and belonging in online environments. A Commitment to Crisis Response The foundation’s Mental Health and Well-Being strategy takes a long-term view.
At the same time, many young people are currently in crisis, and the foundation will support organizations that provide access to treatment for young people in crisis as needed.
Recent examples are a $3 million grant to Crisis Text Line to increase support for those seeking help via the national text line and another $2 million to Inseparable to support its efforts to strengthen systems of care for young people experiencing mental health crises. To learn more about the Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation’s Mental Health and Well-Being giving, visit https://ambff.
org/MHWB . About the Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation The Arthur M.
Blank Family Foundation is a philanthropy founded to help transform lives and communities by uniting people across differences to find common cause. Started in 1995 by Arthur M. Blank, co-founder of The Home Depot, the foundation has granted more than $1.
5 billion to charitable causes. Our collective giving areas are Atlanta’s Westside, Democracy, Environment, Mental Health and Well-Being, and Youth Development. Across these areas, we take on tough challenges by uniting the courage and compassion of our communities so we can all thrive together.
& Well Being December 17, 2025 Blank Foundation gives $25 million to support youth mental health The funds will advance a new national strategy serving nonprofits across the country. Organizations have... & Well Being November 13, 2025 Young Futures: Empowering Youth Through AI Young Futures is a nonprofit organization seeking to make the digital world an easier place...
& Well Being July 14, 2025 Improving Mental Health for America’s Rural Youth The Rural Behavioral Health Institute (RBHI) is an organization dedicated to reducing youth suicide in... Stay up to date with stories of impact, grants in your neighborhood and other interesting foundation news. Constant Contact Use.
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Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Nonprofits across U. S. ; small nonprofit businesses eligible. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates $25,000,000 Always verify allowable costs, matching requirements, and funding caps directly in the sponsor documentation.
The current target date is rolling deadlines or periodic funding windows. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, attachments, and final submission checks.
Federal grant success rates typically range from 10-30%, varying by agency and program. Build a strong proposal with clear objectives, measurable outcomes, and a well-justified budget to improve your chances.
Requirements vary by sponsor, but typically include a project narrative, budget justification, organizational capability statement, and key personnel CVs. Check the official notice for the complete list of required attachments.
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Many federal programs offer multi-year funding or allow competitive renewals. Check the official solicitation for continuation and renewal policies. Non-competing continuation applications are common for multi-year awards.