1,000+ Opportunities
Find the right grant
Search federal, foundation, and corporate grants with AI — or browse by agency, topic, and state.
Application deadline: December 15, 2025. Four-year federal program ending FY 2025.
Local Government Cybersecurity Grant Program (Florida) is sponsored by Florida Digital Service. This program is designed to enhance cybersecurity resilience in local governments within Florida, with a priority focus on fiscally constrained rural areas of opportunity.
Rather than issuing direct funding, the Florida Digital Service will procure cybersecurity solutions directly on behalf of awarded applicants, supporting the delivery of new or expanded capabilities.
Get alerted about grants like this
Save a search for “Florida Digital Service” or related topics and get emailed when new opportunities appear.
Search similar grants →According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Florida local governments may apply, with priority focus on fiscally constrained within rural areas of opportunity. Year 1 and Year 2 recipients are eligible. No local match is required. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows $15 million (total program funding for FY 2025-26). Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
The most recent published deadline was August 31, 2025, which has passed. This is an annual program, so a new cycle should follow. Check the funder's website for the next application window.
Local Government Cybersecurity Grant Program (Florida) is funded by Florida Digital Service. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in Florida. 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.
The solicitation lists 2 required documents: Grant application form (PDF) and Budget description. Check the official notice for formatting and page-limit rules.
Past winners and funding trends for this program
NVIDIA Graduate Fellowship Program is a grant from NVIDIA providing up to $60,000 per award to PhD students conducting research that advances accelerated computing and its applications. Now in its 25th year, the program invites nominations from doctoral students pushing the boundaries of artificial intelligence, robotics, autonomous vehicles, and related fields. Recipients receive not only research funding but also access to NVIDIA technology, products, and engineering expertise, along with a mandatory in-person summer internship. Students are nominated by their faculty advisors and selected based on academic achievement and research area alignment.
CalSEED Concept Award is a grant from the California Energy Commission that provides $150,000 in funding to early-stage clean energy innovators in California. The program targets individuals, businesses, and nonprofits developing hardware, software, or integrated solutions at Technology Readiness Levels 2-4. Eligible technology areas rotate each cycle and have included battery recycling and reuse, long-duration energy storage, medium- and heavy-duty vehicle electrification, industrial electrification, and advanced EV charging. Applicants must be located in California, have under $1 million in private funding, and propose innovations that benefit California ratepayers. Concept Award winners also receive professional development resources and access to accelerator programs, and may compete for a subsequent $450,000 Prototype Award.
NASA STRIDE (Science Transport and Robotic Innovation for Deployment and Exploration) is a grant program from NASA that solicits proposals from U.S. industry to conduct design studies of advanced robotic surface and aerial mobility systems with payload transportation and deployment capability for Mars surface operations. The program supports innovation in robotic mobility systems that could enable future Mars science missions. U.S.-based universities and nonprofit research organizations may also be eligible per the grant record. The application deadline for this cycle was March 31, 2026.
DARPA-PS-26-04, published February 25, 2026 by the Tactical Technology Office, restructures the contract around three phases — Phase 0 Backbone (6 months), Phase 1 Base (12 months), Phase 2 Option (18 months) — and culminates in an instrumented flight-test campaign. The solicitation is not really about T&E. It is about the digital-twin and uncertainty-quantification middleware DoD needs for any AI-enabled combat system.
Read article52 of 56 BEAD final proposals are approved, 52 award agreements are signed, and construction on the first BEAD-funded networks begins this summer. The next 12 months are the subcontracting and digital-equity-partnership window — not the application window most nonprofits are still waiting for.
Read articleData & Society's AI Civics, the largest single grant inside Humanity AI's inaugural $18M round, treats AI governance as a civic act rather than a literacy problem — and quietly tells the field where the next $10M will land.
Read article