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Find similar grantsLetters of Interest due July 1, 2026; stored deadline is null. Page covers Seed Grants specifically, which matches the stored grant name. Dissertation grants may be on a separate page.
Brain Injury Research Fund Grants (Dissertation Grants and Seed Grants) is sponsored by Brain Injury Association of America (BIAA). The Brain Injury Research Fund supports research aimed at finding cures for chronic brain injury.
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Seed Grants - Brain Injury Association of America Skip to Content Seed Grants BIAA's seeks to foster innovation and determination in research through two types of Seed Grants.
Select Profile I Want to Help I Have a Brain Injury Change Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) What to Expect After Brain Injury Guide I Am a Professional Change Essential Brain Injury Guide Register for an Upcoming Webinar Caregiver Resource Center What to Expect - Children Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) What to Expect After Brain Injury Guide Young Investigator Seed Grants support the background work needed to establish a line of research for a new investigator.
The applicant must identify a mentor to assist them with the study. Applicants are expected to use the seed grant to prepare for larger funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Institute on Disability, Independent Living and Rehabilitation Research (NIDILRR), or other public or private sources.
Brain Injury Scholar Seed Grants support experienced principal investigators who wish to supplement an existing project by testing a new hypothesis, adding an additional cohort, or conducting secondary analysis of existing data. Please note that BIAA Scholar Grants are not intended to be a bridge between other grant funding.
For the 2026 competition, BIAA is emphasizing its interest in both animal and human projects and that secondary data analysis is welcome. Young Investigators must be situated in a research institution, corporate, or non-profit environment where sufficient guidance from experienced brain injury researchers is available.
Brain Injury Scholars must be principal investigators on at least one project valued at $300,000 or more, or have a record of published articles in peer-reviewed journals or other demonstrated credentials in scientific inquiry. Applicants must have adequate infrastructure to support the proposed project.
All grantees must be willing to cooperate with the Brain Injury Association of America in promoting the Association’s research program. Seed grants are funded up to $25,000 total for a period not to exceed two years, with 80 percent of funds issued upon notice of grant award (or other flexible start date as noted below) and 20 percent issued upon receipt of a final report.
Grant funds will be awarded to the applicant’s U.S. institution, regardless of the applicant’s citizenship status. Travel expenses are not allowed unless for conferences at which the funded research is presented. The allowable indirect cost rate is limited to 10 percent.
The total amount funded with direct and indirect costs combined shall not exceed $25,000. BIAA uses cloud-based grants management software for all aspects of the application process, including materials submission, reviews, and communication with applicants. There is a two-stage process for seed grant applications: Stage 1.
Letter of Interest Applicants submit contact information and upload a Letter of Interest not to exceed 2 single-spaced pages (not including references) in PDF format. The Letter of Interest should include a concise description of research ambitions that explains how the proposal addresses BIAA priorities and the way(s) funding will result in a larger opportunity.
In addition, BIAA Young Investigator applicants must submit contact information for a study mentor and a letter of recommendation from that individual. Letters of Interest are reviewed to determine if the applicant should be invited to submit a full proposal.
Invited applicants upload a proposal that describes the problem, how it relates to BIAA’s priorities, scientific method, key personnel, and the resources in the environment to be utilized. The narrative should also describe how the results of the plan will be used (such as for a larger grant submission or dissemination through publication). The budget and work plan should be uploaded as separate documents.
Please follow the full instructions as described in the application portal . The Letter of Interest (LOI) will be evaluated based on the proposed project’s relevance to BIAA’s research priorities and the qualifications of the key personnel involved in the project. If invited, proposals will be evaluated using the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Criteria for Non-Clinical Trials.
May 18 – Submission Portal Open for Letters of Interest July 1 – Last day to submit Letters of Interest August 5 – Full Proposals Invited September 16 – Invited Proposals Due November 27 – Reviews Completed; Recommendations Submitted to BIAA Board for Approval January 11 (2027) – Applicants Notified; Award Letters & Grant Agreements Sent Projects are expected to be completed within a 24-month period, beginning with the receipt of funding, the start of a post-doc or faculty position, or the issuance of Internal Review Board (IRB) approval, if applicable.
Application Format for Invited Proposals The maximum length of the narrative is six pages, not including references, biosketch(s), budget, and letters of support from mentors (if applicable). Biosketches (preferred) or CVs should be limited to a maximum of 5 pages. Proposals must follow these guidelines for page restrictions: Font size: Must be 11 points or larger.
Smaller text in figures, graphs, diagrams, and charts is acceptable, as long as it is legible when the page is viewed at 100%. Type density: Must be no more than 15 characters per linear inch (including characters and spaces). Line spacing: Must be no more than six lines per vertical inch.
Text color: No restriction. Use paper size no larger than standard letter paper size (8 ½” x 11”). Provide at least one-half inch margins (½”) – top, bottom, left, and right – for all pages.
No applicant-supplied information can appear in the margins. Grantees are required to submit interim reports every six months comparing actual progress to the proposed work plan and a plan of action to correct significant deficiencies, if any exist. A final report is due at the completion of the study.
Publications resulting in whole or in part from a BIAA Seed Grant must acknowledge the Association and special donor fund, if applicable. For example: “This research was supported in part by the Brain Injury Association of America/Smith Family Fund. ” BIAA is unable to answer individual inquiries concerning its seed grant award program.
Interested applicants may submit questions through the online portal. As appropriate, responses will appear here.
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Young Investigators must be at research/non-profit institutions with mentor access; Brain Injury Scholars must be PIs on $300K+ projects or have peer-reviewed publications in brain injury. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows up to $25,000. Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
Applications for Brain Injury Research Fund Grants (Dissertation Grants and Seed Grants) are due July 1, 2026. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, and final submission checks.
Brain Injury Research Fund Grants (Dissertation Grants and Seed Grants) is funded by Brain Injury Association of America (BIAA). Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
Yes — this listing is flagged as national in scope, so applicants across the U.S. may apply, subject to the sponsor's other eligibility criteria.
Applications go through the funder's official portal — the Apply Now link on this page goes there directly.
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