1,000+ Opportunities
Find the right grant
Search federal, foundation, and corporate grants with AI — or browse by agency, topic, and state.
Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning Open Topic (Army SBIR|STTR Program) is sponsored by U.S. Army. This open topic focuses on bringing potentially valuable small business innovators to the Army by accepting proposals on any technical challenge requiring an AI/ML application, including automated detection and prevention of threats, and securing supply chain resilience.
Get alerted about grants like this
Save a search for “U.S. Army” or related topics and get emailed when new opportunities appear.
Search similar grants →Extracted from the official opportunity page/RFP to help you evaluate fit faster.
Artificial Intelligence/ Machine Learning (AI/ML) Focused Open Topic – Army SBIR|STTR Program Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning, Army SBIR, Direct to Phase II | Phase I Artificial Intelligence/ Machine Learning (AI/ML) Focused Open Topic Application Due Date: 09/17/2024 Amount Up To: $250,000-$2 million The purpose of the AI/ML Focused Open Topic is to bring potentially valuable small business innovations to the Army and create an opportunity to expand the relevance of the Army Small Business Innovation Research program to firms who do not normally compete for SBIR awards.
This open topic accepts both Phase I and Direct to Phase II submissions. Phase I proposals are accepted for a cost up to $250,000 for a 6-month period of performance and Direct to Phase II proposals are accepted for a cost up to $2,000,000 for a 24-month period of performance.
All submissions must address the following 6 AI sub-fields: Synthetic data generation in a format applicable to a given situation that is not obtained by direct measurement. This includes visual, textual, video, geospatial, and sensor data.
Data Validation and Verification : Develop novel techniques for data validation and verification in a contested space where the adversary can tamper with, deny, or otherwise manipulate collected data that will ultimately be used for training or fine-tuning machine learning models. This functionality would serve to predict the next attack for better future prevention.
Methodologies to identify and mitigate AI risk (operational and supply chain) by quantifying and adjusting the level or human vs. automation in model development, training, testing, and deployment phases. Including authentication techniques as a form of model provenance and access control.
Develop new ways of implementing, constructing, and testing Large Language Models (LLM) or Radio Frequency (RF) signal detection models, their prompts, and system design that make use of these models in less time by standardizing Application Programming Interfaces (API), evaluation pipelines, prompt discovery and tuning and implementing diverse performance constraints.
Retrieval augmented generation (RAG) proof of concept techniques and early prototypes to enhance the accuracy and reliability of generative AI models. Specific areas of focus can include techniques for model optimization and reducing compute resources, methods to mitigate model bias with RAG, and scalable techniques for adoption of RAG.
Collaborative AI technologies or algorithms that enable communication between autonomous and/or semi-autonomous systems at extended ranges. Specific focus areas could include terrain shaping obstacles, ML algorithms to adapt to changing environments throughout a mission, and multi-node communication and system integration technologies. Phase I Submission Materials 5-page technical volume for down-select.
8-slide commercialization plan; template provided in announcement. “Statement of Work” outlining intermediate and final anticipated deliverables during the Phase I award period. Post-Phase I Deliverables: Small Business: A feasibility study to demonstrate the technical and commercial practicality of the concept to include an assessment of its technical readiness and potential applicability to military and commercial markets.
Direct to Phase II Submission Materials 10-page technical volume for down-select to include a maximum of 2 pages showing how technical feasibility has already been achieved. 8-slide commercialization plan; template provided in announcement. “Statement of Work” outlining intermediate and final anticipated deliverables during the Phase II award period.
During Phase II, firms must produce prototype solutions that will be practical and feasible to operate in edge and austere environments. Companies will provide a technology transition and commercialization plan for DOD and commercial markets. The Army will evaluate each product in a realistic field environment and provide solutions to stakeholders for further evaluation.
Based on Soldier field evaluations, companies will be requested to update the previously delivered prototypes to meet final design configuration. Complete the maturation of the company’s technology developed in Phase II to TRL 6/7 and produce prototype to support further development and commercialization.
The Army will evaluate each product in a realistic field environment and provide small solutions to stakeholders for further evaluation. Based on soldier evaluations in the field, companies will be requested to update the previously delivered prototypes to meet final design configuration. For more information, and to submit your full proposal package, visit the DSIP Portal .
SBIR|STTR Help Desk: usarmy. sbirsttr@army. mil An Analysis of RF Transfer Learning Behavior Using Synthetic Data.
Retrieval-Augmented Generation for Knowledge-Intensive NLP Tasks. Improving the Domain Adaptation of Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG) Models for Open Domain Human–Computer Interaction Cognitive Behavior Modeling of Command-and-Control Systems. Risk-based data validation in machine learning-based software systems.
Signal Detection and Classification in Shared Spectrum: A Deep Learning Approach. The purpose of the AI/ML Focused Open Topic is to bring potentially valuable small business innovations to the Army and create an opportunity to expand the relevance of the Army Small Business Innovation Research program to firms who do not normally compete for SBIR awards. This open topic accepts both Phase I and Direct to Phase II submissions.
Phase I proposals are accepted for a cost up to $250,000 for a 6-month period of performance and Direct to Phase II proposals are accepted for a cost up to $2,000,000 for a 24-month period of performance. All submissions must address the following 6 AI sub-fields: Synthetic data generation in a format applicable to a given situation that is not obtained by direct measurement.
This includes visual, textual, video, geospatial, and sensor data. Data Validation and Verification : Develop novel techniques for data validation and verification in a contested space where the adversary can tamper with, deny, or otherwise manipulate collected data that will ultimately be used for training or fine-tuning machine learning models. This functionality would serve to predict the next attack for better future prevention.
Methodologies to identify and mitigate AI risk (operational and supply chain) by quantifying and adjusting the level or human vs. automation in model development, training, testing, and deployment phases. Including authentication techniques as a form of model provenance and access control.
Develop new ways of implementing, constructing, and testing Large Language Models (LLM) or Radio Frequency (RF) signal detection models, their prompts, and system design that make use of these models in less time by standardizing Application Programming Interfaces (API), evaluation pipelines, prompt discovery and tuning and implementing diverse performance constraints.
Retrieval augmented generation (RAG) proof of concept techniques and early prototypes to enhance the accuracy and reliability of generative AI models. Specific areas of focus can include techniques for model optimization and reducing compute resources, methods to mitigate model bias with RAG, and scalable techniques for adoption of RAG.
Collaborative AI technologies or algorithms that enable communication between autonomous and/or semi-autonomous systems at extended ranges. Specific focus areas could include terrain shaping obstacles, ML algorithms to adapt to changing environments throughout a mission, and multi-node communication and system integration technologies. Phase I Submission Materials 5-page technical volume for down-select.
8-slide commercialization plan; template provided in announcement. “Statement of Work” outlining intermediate and final anticipated deliverables during the Phase I award period. Post-Phase I Deliverables: Small Business: A feasibility study to demonstrate the technical and commercial practicality of the concept to include an assessment of its technical readiness and potential applicability to military and commercial markets.
Direct to Phase II Submission Materials 10-page technical volume for down-select to include a maximum of 2 pages showing how technical feasibility has already been achieved. 8-slide commercialization plan; template provided in announcement. “Statement of Work” outlining intermediate and final anticipated deliverables during the Phase II award period.
During Phase II, firms must produce prototype solutions that will be practical and feasible to operate in edge and austere environments. Companies will provide a technology transition and commercialization plan for DOD and commercial markets. The Army will evaluate each product in a realistic field environment and provide solutions to stakeholders for further evaluation.
Based on Soldier field evaluations, companies will be requested to update the previously delivered prototypes to meet final design configuration. Complete the maturation of the company’s technology developed in Phase II to TRL 6/7 and produce prototype to support further development and commercialization.
The Army will evaluate each product in a realistic field environment and provide small solutions to stakeholders for further evaluation. Based on soldier evaluations in the field, companies will be requested to update the previously delivered prototypes to meet final design configuration. For more information, and to submit your full proposal package, visit the DSIP Portal .
SBIR|STTR Help Desk: usarmy. sbirsttr@army. mil An Analysis of RF Transfer Learning Behavior Using Synthetic Data.
Retrieval-Augmented Generation for Knowledge-Intensive NLP Tasks. Improving the Domain Adaptation of Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG) Models for Open Domain Human–Computer Interaction Cognitive Behavior Modeling of Command-and-Control Systems. Risk-based data validation in machine learning-based software systems.
Signal Detection and Classification in Shared Spectrum: A Deep Learning Approach. Assistant Secretary of the Army for Acquisition, Logistics, and Technology ASA(ALT) releases contract opportunities on an ad-hoc basis to meet Army research and development needs.
Army Futures Command (AFC) releases topics during three specific solicitation periods throughout the fiscal year to address the Army’s current and anticipated war-fighting technology needs. Army STTR follows AFC’s topic release schedule but partners with a university, federally funded research and development center, or a qualified non-profit research institution as part of their contract.
Is the opportunity to establish the scientific, technical, commercial merit and feasibility of your proposed innovation. Is focused on the development, demonstration and delivery of your innovation from Phase I. Represents the commercialization phase of the program in which the company can market their products or services developed in Phase II, either to the government or in the commercial sector.
Allows small businesses to submit to Direct to Phase II applications if they performed the Phase I research through other funding sources. Provides funding to projects that require additional funding during their open Phase II contract. A Phase II Awardee may receive one additional, sequential Phase II award to continue the work of an initial Phase II award.
The sequential Phase II award has the same guideline amounts and limits as an initial Phase II award.
Artificial Intelligence/Machine Learning (supply chain management, logistics coordination, target identifications and simulation) Advanced Materials and Manufacturing (additive manufacturing) Autonomy (unmanned systems, drones, ground vehicle capabilities) Chemical and Biological (detection, defense) Cyber (biometric authentication, secure communications) Electronics (microelectronics, Very-Large-Scale Integration (VLSI)) Electronic Warfare (jamming, spoofing) Human Performance (wearables) Immersive (augmented reality, virtual reality, mixed reality) Network Technologies (antennas, radio frequency, communications systems) Position, Navigation, and Timing (GPS) Power (batteries, generators) Software Modernization (high performance computing, data management and visualization) Sensors (infrared sensing) Weapons Systems (hypersonics, munitions and projectiles, directed energy)
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Small businesses. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates Up to $150,000 (Phase I) 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.
Yes — AI tools like Granted can help research funders, draft proposal sections, and check compliance. However, always review and customize AI-generated content to reflect your organization's unique strengths and the specific requirements of the solicitation.
Review timelines vary by funder. Federal agencies typically take 3-6 months from submission to award notification. Foundation grants may be faster, often 1-3 months. Check the program's timeline in the official solicitation for specific dates.
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.
Software Modernization is a grant topic under the U.S. Army SBIR/STTR Program that funds small businesses developing advanced computing and cybersecurity technologies for military applications. Key areas include high-performance computing, data management and visualization, User and Entity Behavior Analysis (UEBA) for Zero Trust network security, drone swarm detection using neural networks, and AI-driven reconnaissance analytics. Army Futures Command releases solicitations during three specific periods each fiscal year. Phase I awards establish feasibility, Phase II advances development, and Phase III covers commercialization. Direct to Phase II is available for businesses with prior relevant research. Eligible applicants are U.S.-based small businesses meeting SBA size standards.
Affordable Ka-Band Metamaterial-Based Electronically Scanned Array Radar for Test and Training is sponsored by U.S. Army (Army FUZE SBIR/STTR Program). This Army SBIR topic seeks low-cost Ka-Band radar solutions through advancements in metamaterials to mimic the performance of an Active Electronically Scanned Array (AESA). This is relevant to XRComm Inc.'
SBIR/STTR Programs (Defense Health Agency) is sponsored by Department of Defense (DOD) - Defense Health Agency (DHA). The DHA SBIR/STTR Programs fund biomedical and health-focused technologies that enhance medical readiness, clinical care delivery, force health protection, operational medicine, and military healthcare modernization. Priority research domains include digital health systems, AI-enabled triage, and physiological analytics.
Broad Agency Announcement (BAA) Call N0001425SBC03 For Office of Naval Research (ONR) Global Opportunity: GlobalX Innovation Joint Challenge: AI for Advancing Maritime Security is sponsored by Office of Naval Research (ONR) Global. This BAA Call seeks proposals for the GlobalX Innovation Joint Challenge: AI for Advancing Maritime Security. It funds the development of artificial intelligence solutions for maritime security applications, focusing on innovative AI algorithms for challenging maritime scene perception scenarios using real-world or synthetic data from UxV platforms. The program aims to accelerate the traditional knowledge generation cycle, leading to revolutionary dual-use capability for the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps and the commercial marketplace. White papers are highly encouraged and due May 23, 2025, with full proposals due June 23, 2025.
Operation Stonegarden (OPSG) is a federal grant program administered by FEMA through the Office of the Governor's Public Safety Office that funds enhanced border security cooperation among Customs and Border Protection (CBP), U.S. Border Patrol, and state, local, tribal, and territorial law enforcement agencies. The program supports joint operations to secure land and water border routes, improve intelligence sharing, and expand 287(g) screening operations within correctional facilities. In 2025, the national priority is Supporting Border Crisis Response and Enforcement, covering training, operational coordination, and risk management. Eligible expenses include operational overtime costs, staffing support for screening activities, and training programs in immigration law, civil rights protections, and 287(g) procedures.