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Find similar grantsHawaii Small Business Innovation Research (HSBIR) Program is sponsored by Hawaii Technology Development Corporation (HTDC). The HSBIR Program provides matching funds and reimbursement for grant writing services to small businesses in Hawaii that are pursuing or have received federal SBIR/STTR awards. This supports the development and commercialization of technology.
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Hawaiʻi Small Business Innovation Research (HSBIR) Program – Hawaiʻi Technology Development Corporation Hawaiʻi Small Business Innovation Research (HSBIR) Program HSBIR provides matching grants to help companies further develop new products that solve critical issues for the nation.
Applicants must have received Federal Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) /Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) grants or contracts to qualify for the state matching grant program. The HSBIR program provides up to 50% match for companies receiving SBIR/STTR awards. Companies may apply also for reimbursement for grant writing costs for their initial Federal grant application (Phase 0).
The Hawaiʻi SBIR matching grant program is the longest state funded SBIR matching program in the United States. Initially the grant program only funded companies that received Phase I grants but in 2016, the program was expanded to help companies who are moving their advanced technology products from research into the market. Hawaiʻi’s SBIR Phase II and Phase III winners are creating the best technology solutions in the nation.
HTDC provides Hawaiʻi SBIR funds in various phases. Available funding for the Phase II/III portion of the grant program is approved on a yearly basis. Phase 0: up to $3,000 reimbursement for grant writing services.
Phase I: up to 50% match or up to $75,000 of the Federal Phase I award, whichever is less. Phase II/III (when available): up to 50% match or up to $500,000 of the Federal Phase II/III, whichever is less. Learn everything you need to know about applying for an HSBIR grant including eligibility, application deadlines, and how applicants are scored.
Business Support & Services Offered Conferences and workshops Market research, market intelligence analysis Commercialization support SBIR basics is a series of workshops to help local researchers and companies take advantage of the SBIR program. Watch a preview below, then visit our full video series if you’d like to learn more. Watch the Full Video Series If you have questions, please email sbir@htdc.
org . Funded in part by the U.S. Small Business Administration FAST grant
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Small businesses in Hawaii that have received or are applying for federal SBIR/STTR awards. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows up to $3,000 for grant writing (Phase 0); up to 50% match or $75,000 for Phase I; up to 50% match or $500,000 for Phase II/III. Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
Hawaii Small Business Innovation Research (HSBIR) Program is funded by Hawaii Technology Development Corporation (HTDC). Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in Hawaii. If your organization operates elsewhere, check the official notice for location requirements.
Applications go through the funder's official portal — the Apply Now link on this page goes there directly.
Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) / Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) Programs (Phase I) is sponsored by U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA). The USDA SBIR/STTR programs focus on transforming scientific discovery into products and services with commercial potential and/or societal benefit in agriculturally-related areas. This can include app development for agricultural technology, rural development, and smart farming. Phase I aims to demonstrate technical feasibility.
Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program is sponsored by NOAA. This program provides seed funding to small businesses for research and development of innovative technologies across NOAA's mission areas, including climate change adaptation and mitigation, coastal resilience, and extreme weather events. Phase I awards fund a six-month period for conducting feasibility and proof of concept research.
SBIR/STTR Phase I Programs is sponsored by National Science Foundation (NSF). The NSF SBIR/STTR programs provide non-dilutive funding for cutting-edge technology innovations that address societal challenges. The Space (SP) topic seeks transformative technologies for sustainable space exploration, habitation, or industrialization, which could include in-space research or manufacturing systems, microgravity applications, and photonic devices and materials.
FNS will award up to $5M with individual requests of $20K to $2M. Past FY24 and FY25 PTIG winners are ineligible as lead applicants, opening the field substantially. The state SNAP letter of commitment is the operational bottleneck — not the proposal itself.
Read articleThe Legal Services Corporation's Technology Initiative Grant cycle for calendar-year 2026 closed pre-applications on April 10 and opened a new $75K Planning Grant category. Full applications for the General TIG and SEA categories are due June 30. The 2024 award list — 32 grants, $5M+, dominated by AI chatbots, document automation, and Copilot deployments — is the clearest signal of what LSC is buying with TIG money and how legal-aid organizations should position their 2026 submissions.
Read articleDARPA MTO opened six FY26 SBIR topics on May 27 with a June 24 deadline — nanopore proteomics, compact RF filters, 800°C ICs, passive thermal spreaders, radiation-hardened codesign, and low-resource computing. The topics read like a wishlist for the next decade of contested-environment microelectronics. Here is what each one is actually asking for, and how small businesses should triage the four-week window.
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