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Multiple EOI rounds: October 2026 round EOI deadline 08/05/2026; February 2027 round EOI deadline 31/08/2026; June 2027 round EOI deadline 11/12/2026. Deadline_found is the nearest upcoming EOI deadline (final submission dates not specified).
Mental Health Support Grant is sponsored by James Tudor Foundation. This program supports charities tackling Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and provides grants for trauma-informed mental health interventions. It also supports charities helping parents address severe mental health issues to prevent harm to their children.
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Mental Health Support Grant | James Tudor Foundation We support charities that help children, young people, and parents to overcome adversity and break the intergenerational cycle of trauma and abuse We support charities that help children and young people recovering from Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and parents affected by ACEs, mental illness, or addiction.
Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) are defined as “potentially traumatic events or chronic stressors that occur before the age of 18 and are uncontrollable to the child.
” They include the following: Physical abuse or neglect Emotional abuse or neglect Living in a household where there is domestic violence Living with a parent with substance abuse Living with a parent who has a mental illness Losing a parent through death, abandonment, or divorce.
Having a parent in prison We support evidence-based, trauma-informed interventions designed to overcome and prevent the trauma of Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs). This programme works on several levels, supporting both children and young people affected by ACEs, as well as supporting parents to help break the cycle of trauma across generations.
We seek to provide flexible funding and therefore can support only those organisations whose work is fully aligned with our stated funding priorities. All services delivered by the charity must fall entirely within one of the eligible categories listed below. Please note that we cannot consider applications in which only part of an organisation’s work fits our priorities.
The case studies at the bottom of this page illustrate examples of charities that meet our eligibility criteria in full. If you are unsure about your organisation’s eligibility, please contact us before submitting an Expression of Interest. Doing so will help save time and resources for both your organisation and ours.
In the Mental Health programme, our two areas of support are: 1) Support for children and young people Under this focus, we wish to partner with charities that solely support children and young people who have suffered one or more ACEs, and they do so through evidence-based, trauma-informed therapies.
We only support charities that have a specialist, single focus on one or more of the following: Living in a household where there is domestic violence, and/or physical and/or emotional neglect Living with a parent who has a mental illness and/or substance abuse Bereavement and complex loss, including children and young people bereaved by suicide, murder, manslaughter, substance addiction, or who have a parent in prison.
Eligibility in the Children and Young People category is limited to charities with a children first approach. This means charities that work primarily with children and young people affected by ACEs. We prioritise charities that provide recovery programmes for specific ACEs but we don't exclude charities that support children with multiple ACEs.
Further, while we understand that parents / guardians are part of the recovery journey, our aim is to fund organisations whose central focus is supporting the child or young person first, with parental / guardian involvement as an added element. In England alone, nearly half (48%) of adults have experienced at least one ACE. Around 9% of the population have experienced four or more ACEs.
While ACEs are prevalent in any socio-economic group, they are 10 times more prevalent among the 20% least privileged in our society. We know that many adults only begin to face their own ACEs when they become parents, making this a crucial time for support.
Under this focus, we wish to partner with specialist charities that solely focus on supporting parents and complex family challenges by delivering: Evidence-based, whole-family, trauma-informed programmes that help parents to confront their own ACEs and help to break the intergenerational cycle of trauma and abuse.
Evidence-based, whole-family, trauma-informed programmes for families where a parent or caregiver has a mental illness or substance addiction and is at risk of harming their children. Eligibility under the Parents category is limited to charities whose central focus is delivering dedicated programmes to help prevent ACEs affected parents from harming to their own children.
Please note that, in this category, we only consider charities with a focus on parents. We do not support charities that help adults with ACEs, mental illness, substance addiction, etc., but who are not parents. For instance, charities supporting adult survivors of domestic abuse or women’s aid type charities are not eligible if their services are open to all adults, not exclusively to parents.
The exclusions listed below relate specifically to the Mental Health programme. section on this page as it also contains Before applying, please also consult our What we don't fund page for information on our more general exclusions which apply to all our funding programmes. The focus of this programme is addressing and preventing Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs).
If your charity is one of the following, you are not eligible to apply if: Your charity provides some support for children and young people who have experienced ACEs, but this is not your sole focus Your charity's sole focus is supporting children and young people who have experienced ACEs, but you do so solely through the provision of one or more of the following: sport and leisure activities, nature based activities, mentoring, befriending, peer support, employment skills, etc. Your charity supports adults who have experienced ACEs but you do not have a specialist programme for parents to help break the intergenerational cycle of trauma and abuse You are an adoption and fostering support charity You are a general counselling charity You are a general youth support and wellbeing charity Your charity's main focus is on helping people into employment through mentoring, coaching, and skills development, etc., (even if you also provide mental health support) You are a charity primarily supporting carers (this exclusion applies to all ages / all needs - physical and / or mental) You are a homelessness charity You are a hospice ( hospices can only apply for our Hospice Care You are a refugee / asylum seeker / human trafficking / modern slavery charity (even if you run mental health programmes to overcome trauma and abuse) You are a school (including SEN schools) You are a volunteer-run charity You are a women's aid charity If your charity is eligible to apply, the following services or project types are not eligible for support: General mental wellbeing support Why your application might fail Before applying, please take some time to review the following sections on this page: Further information on how we assess applications can be found on the Our assessment process Below are some common reasons why we wouldn’t be able to progress your Expression of Interest: Your application “packages” the part of your organisation’s work that matches our funding criteria, but the rest of your work does not: We seek to provide flexible funding and can therefore support only those organisations whose work is fully aligned with our stated funding priorities.
All services delivered by the charity must fall entirely within one of the eligible categories in the funding programme. This means we cannot consider applications in which only part of an organisation’s work fits our priorities. For instance, if your focus is not exclusively recovery from ACEs, you are not eligible to apply.
Your charity doesn’t have a children-first In the Children and Young People category, eligibility is limited to charities that work first and foremost with children and young people affected by ACEs.
While we understand that parents/guardians may be part of a child’s or young person’s recovery journey, eligible organisations must have a central focus on supporting the child or young person first, with parental/guardian involvement or whole-family support as an added element.
We only support charities with a specific focus on children and young people affected by ACEs, rather than those that also provide more general mental health support to this age group.
Your services are for all adults, not just parents: category, eligibility is limited to charities whose central focus is delivering dedicated programmes to help prevent ACEs-affected parents, or parents with a mental illness or substance addiction, from causing harm to their own children. This means we only consider charities with a specific focus on parents.
We do not support charities that also help non-parents (i.e. adults with ACEs, adult survivors of abuse, or adults with a mental illness or substance addiction who are not parents). In this category, we seek to work with charities that adopt a whole-family support approach, helping parents committed to breaking the cycle of intergenerational trauma and abuse.
We are often approached by charities supporting adult survivors of domestic abuse, women’s aid-type charities, and addiction charities. Almost all these charities provide a range of services aiding recovery in both adults and children and young people. However, these charities are not eligible for the Parents focus because their services are open to all adults recovering from abuse and trauma, not exclusively to parents.
They are also not eligible to apply under the Children and Young People focus because supporting children and young people is not their primary and sole focus. This funding programme has two key aims: 1) To support charities that help children and young people who have experienced Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) to overcome their trauma and thrive.
2) To support charities that help parents address their own severe mental health issues to prevent them from harming their children. Please note that we do not fund pilot projects / services by charities we have not previously supported. We seek to provide flexible funding and can therefore support only those organisations whose work is fully aligned with our stated funding priorities.
All services delivered by the charity must fall entirely within one of the eligible categories in the funding programme. This means we cannot consider applications in which only part of an organisation’s work fits our priorities. For instance, if your focus is not exclusively recovery from ACEs, you are not eligible to apply.
We also do not support pilot projects from charities that we have not supported before. If you are not a close match for our funding objectives, please do not apply .
We welcome applications from UK registered charities that work either regionally or nationally and: Have as their key focus preventing and/or reducing the impact of Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) – helping children and young people, and parents and caregivers – see the definition of ACEs above.
Use trauma-informed approaches and evidence-based interventions Are actively patient led in shaping, running, and improving their services Can demonstrate real impact through their own evaluations or independent research Have an annual income of less than £20m and at least 5 years’ audited or independently examined accounts Read our case studies below for examples of eligible charities.
We also encourage you to contact us before applying if you ar eunsure about your eligibility. Check your eligibility using the Eligibility Checker . If you are eligible, submit a brief Expression of Interest via our online application platform (you will be directed to the form once you have successfully completed the Eligibility Checker).
If your request matches our funding priorities, and we think you have at least a 75% chance of being awarded a grant, we will invite you to submit a Full Application. Check the When to apply section below for the timings of each grant round. You can find guidance and drafting documents below if you prefer to work offline and then submit your Expression of Interest / Full Application via our online portal.
Please note that the URL for the Expression of Interest online form changes daily. If you are not able to submit on the same day you access the form, we recommend drafting your answers offline using the document and returning to the form by completing the Eligibility Checker (guidance and drafting form) (guidance and drafting form) Our financial year starts on 1st October and we hold three Board meetings a year.
In 2025-26, these will be held in December, March, and June. From 2026-27 onwards, Board meetings will be held every four months in October, February, and June.
Expressions of Interest now closed Full Application invitations were sent out the w/c 16/03/2026 Full Application submission deadline: 24/04/2026 (17:00hrs) Full Applications shortlisting: w/c 11/05/2026 Full Application outcomes: w/c 22/06/2026 October 2026 Board meeting: Expressions of Interest now open Full Application invitations will be sent in the w/c 24/06/2026 Full Application submission deadline: 31/07/2026 (17:00hrs) Full Applications shortlisting: w/c 07/09/2026 Full Application outcomes: w/c 19/10/2026 February 2027 Board meeting: Expressions of Interest (EOI) open: 01/07/2026 EOI deadline: 31/08/2026 (17:00hrs) Full Application invitations will be sent in the w/c 19/10/2026 Full Application submission deadline: 27/11/2026 (17:00hrs) Full Applications shortlisting: w/c 14/12/2026 Full Application outcomes: w/c 22/02/2027 Expressions of Interest (EOI) open: 02/11/2026 EOI deadline: 11/12/2026 (17:00hrs) Full Application invitations will be sent in the w/c 15/02/2027 Full Application submission deadline: 26/03/2027 (17:00hrs) Full Applications shortlisting: w/c 19/04/2027 Full Application outcomes: w/c 21/06/2027 Application guidance and drafting documents We aim to ensure that our application process is straightforward and accessible.
The documents below provide guidance on every question in the Expression of Interest and Full Application forms. You can apply directly on our online platform, or you may find it helpful to draft your answers in the drafting documents first, then copying and pasting them into the online forms when you are ready to submit.
(guidance for applicants & drafting document) (guidance for applicants & drafting document) If you have any questions, please contact us at 0117 959 6496 or grants@jamestudor. org. uk .
Terms and Conditions of funding When we award you a grant, we ask you to sign our Terms and Conditions of funding. You can see these here . Recently supported organisations Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit.
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The Foundation is a company limited by guarantee, registered in England & Wales; no. 5178537 Website Design by Website Sorted
Based on current listing details, eligibility includes: UK-registered charities with annual income under £20m and at least 5 years of audited accounts. Focus on children/young people recovering from ACEs or parents affected by ACEs, mental illness, or addiction using trauma-informed approaches. 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 May 8, 2026. 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.
-Purpose. This Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) encourages Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) grant applications from small business concerns (SBCs) that propose to develop, standardize, and validate new and innovative assays, integrated strategies, or batteries of assays that determine or predict specific organ toxicities (e.g., ocular, dermal, hematotoxicity, cardiotoxicity, gastrointestinal toxicity, hepatotoxicity, nephrotoxicity, ototoxicity, olfactory loss, bladder toxicity, neurotoxicity, pulmonary toxicity, endocrine toxicity, and pancreatic beta cell toxicity), resulting from both acute and chronic exposures to various chemicals, environmental pollutants, biologics and therapeutic molecules or drugs. In addition, this FOA encourages the development, standardization, and validation of new models of arthritis, convulsion, infection and shock. New approaches for high throughput toxicity screening that involves the use of molecular endpoints, computer modeling, proteomics, genomics and epigenomics and the development of virtual tissues are also encouraged as are development of 3-dimensional organ models for toxicity evaluation. -Mechanism of Support. This FOA will utilize the SBIR (R43/R44) grant mechanisms for Phase I, Phase II, and Fast-Track applications and runs in parallel with a FOA of identical scientific scope, PA-09-007, which encourages applications under the Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) (R41/R42) grant mechanisms. Funding Opportunity Number: PA-09-006. Assistance Listing: 93.113,93.173,93.361,93.389,93.837,93.846,93.847,93.848,93.849,93.859,93.867. Funding Instrument: G. Category: ED,ENV,FN,HL.
Purpose. This Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA), issued by the National Cancer Institute (NCI), National Institutes of Health (NIH), invites Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) cooperative agreement applications from small business concerns (SBCs) that propose to develop new, or to improve existing application(s) of nanotechnology-based therapeutics or/and in vivo diagnostics. This FOA will specifically support pre-clinical optimization and testing of these cancer-relevant nanotechnology applications against the intended cancer type. The proposed projects must be milestone-driven and must be clearly directed toward development of an ultimate commercial product. The outcomes are expected to advance the discovery and pre-clinical optimization phase so that an Investigational New Drug (IND) or Investigational Device Exemptions (IDE) application could be submitted to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) by the end or shortly after completion of the Phase II project period. To facilitate these steps, the NCI will assist the awardees in various ways, including the support through the NCI-sponsored Nanotechnology Characterization Laboratory. This FOA will NOT support basic research projects, studies on disease mechanisms, and clinical trials. Mechanism of Support. This FOA will utilize the SBIR (U43/U44) cooperative agreement mechanisms for Phase I and Phase II applications. Funds Available and Anticipated Number of Awards. Awards issued under this FOA are contingent upon the availability of funds and the submission of a sufficient number of meritorious applications. The total amount awarded and the number of awards will depend upon the quality, duration, and costs of the applications received. Funding Opportunity Number: PAR-10-286. Assistance Listing: 93.393,93.394,93.395,93.396. Funding Instrument: CA. Category: ED,HL. Award Amount: Up to $150K per award.