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Innovative Housing Incentive Program is sponsored by Colorado Office of Economic Development and International Trade. Supports innovative construction technologies like modular and 3D printing for housing, aligning with proptech advancements.
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Innovative Housing Incentive Program | GrantExec, a Euna Solutions® company Innovative Housing Incentive Program This program provides financial assistance to small Colorado-based housing manufacturers creating innovative prefabricated homes to help address the state's affordable housing shortage.
The Innovative Housing Incentive Program (IHIP) is a state-funded initiative established by Colorado House Bill 22-1282 in 2022, designed to address Colorado's shortage of affordable and attainable housing by supporting innovative housing manufacturers.
Managed by the Colorado Office of Economic Development and International Trade (OEDIT), the program provides financial assistance through three distinct mechanisms: an operating expense reimbursement grant, a per-unit cash incentive, and a factory loan. The program was initially funded with $40 million in state dollars and does not have a sunset date.
Its primary goal is to stimulate the production of prefabricated residential units that incorporate innovative technologies and contribute to the state's housing affordability and sustainability goals. Eligible applicants for the program include Colorado-based housing manufacturers with fewer than 500 employees who produce modular, panelized, 3D-printed, kit, or tiny homes intended for permanent installation.
All units must be prefabricated in off-site facilities that reduce on-site labor and time. Companies must have produced at least one prototype in a Colorado facility to qualify, and early-stage businesses with five or fewer employees have a dedicated funding allocation of $3 million for the program’s first five years.
Additional eligibility requirements apply to the working capital grant, including disqualifying subsidiaries of larger parent companies. IHIP’s operating expense reimbursement grant covers up to 20% of eligible operating costs—such as payroll, materials, and utilities—incurred during the grant term, with a maximum lifetime award of $350,000 per business, or $450,000 for those in Tier 1 Just Transition counties.
Grants are distributed on a monthly reimbursement basis over a three-year contract term, with up to 50% of the total reimbursed in any single year. An additional $50,000 affordability bonus is available for businesses that dedicate at least 10% of their production to deed-restricted affordable housing.
The per-unit incentive rewards businesses with $1,500–$6,000 per unit installed in Colorado, based on affordability, sustainability, and density metrics. Base incentives start at $1,500, with additional bonuses of up to $2,000 for meeting affordability or sustainability benchmarks, and an additional $500 for density.
Units must be constructed post-award and verified through supporting documents such as building plans, invoices, and certificates of occupancy. Reimbursements are processed monthly, with a maximum of 150 units eligible per business each year. The lifetime cap for the per-unit incentive is $1 million.
The factory loan program, originally part of IHIP, was combined with Proposition 123’s Factory Loan initiative and is now administered by the Colorado Housing and Finance Authority (CHFA). Loans of up to $10 million are available to finance the construction or expansion of innovative housing facilities in Colorado. Loans are low-interest, must be repaid, and are designed to be reinvested into future manufacturing ventures.
Importantly, a single business may access both a loan and a grant, provided each supports different facilities. Applications for the IHIP grants are accepted on a rolling basis. The process begins with a screener survey, followed by a full application and an in-person facility visit.
Approved applicants enter a multi-year contract with OEDIT and submit monthly documentation for reimbursement. Evaluation is conducted by an interagency panel comprising representatives from OEDIT, the Division of Housing, the Colorado Energy Office, the Governor’s Office, and CHFA. Program guidelines are subject to revision and updates are communicated through the IHIP newsletter and CHFA eNews.
The most recent updates occurred in January 2026, with the second round of the factory loan program awards announced that same month. Operating expense reimbursement grants up to 20 percent of expenses, with per-unit incentives of $1,500 to $6,000 per unit. An additional $50,000 bonus is available for committing at least 10 percent of production to affordable housing.
For profit organizations other than small businesses Businesses must be involved in housing manufacturing and commit at least 10 percent of housing production to deed-restricted affordable housing to be eligible for the affordable housing bonus.
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: Colorado organizations developing innovative housing tech. Applicants should confirm final requirements in the official notice before submission.
Current published award information indicates Not specified 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.
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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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The Fund for Women & Girls Grant Program is sponsored by The Foundation for Enhancing Communities (TFEC). The Fund for Women & Girls, an initiative of TFEC, makes grants to local nonprofit organizations in specific South Central PA counties. The grants support projects that advance the lives of women and girls by providing opportunities to address basic needs, develop economic self-sufficiency, and strengthen health and safety needs.
VGF grants will be used to develop and/or support community-based entities to recruit, manage, and support volunteers. CNCS seeks to fund effective approaches that expand volunteering, strengthen the capacity of volunteer connector organizations to recruit and retain skill-based volunteers, and develop strategies to use volunteers effectively to solve problems. Specifically, the VGF grants will support efforts that expand the capacity of volunteer connector organizations to recruit, manage, support and retain individuals to serve in high quality volunteer assignments.Applicants that receive funding under this Notice may directly carry out the activities supported under the award, or may carry out the activities by making sub-grants to community-based entities, supporting volunteer generation at these entities.). Funding Opportunity Number: AC-05-25-21. Assistance Listing: 94.021. Funding Instrument: G. Category: O. Award Amount: $6.1M total program funding.