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Find similar grantsNIH Mentored Quantitative Research Career Development Award (K25) is sponsored by National Institutes of Health (NIH). Provides support and protected time to individuals with quantitative science backgrounds who have the potential to develop into productive, independent researchers.
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Individual Career Development | Grants & Funding U.S. Department of Health and Human Services National Institutes of Health Individual Career Development NIH career development awards (often referred to as the "K" series) provide support for mentored research career development experiences.
Career development (K) awards are intended for investigators at earlier phases of their research career to enhance skills development and provide time for research and training activities in the biomedical, behavioral, or clinical sciences. These awards typically provide three to five years of salary, mentored research support, and protected time under the guidance of an experienced mentor.
To find the criteria reviewers will use to evaluate your application, see Section V of your funding opportunity. Use the Explore NIH Grant Opportunities tool to search Grants. gov. Ready to develop your application?
Learn from a step-by-step guide. NIH Institute, Center, and Office (ICO) Funding Considerations for Individual Career Development Postdoctoral refers to a temporary and defined period of mentored advanced training for those who have received a doctoral degree (or equivalent) to enhance the professional skills and research independence needed to pursue their chosen career path.
Residency refers to a graduate medical education program that provides physicians with hands-on experience and training in a specific medical specialty after they graduate from medical school.
Research Scientist Development Award - Research and Training (K01) Academic/Teacher Award (ATA) Clinical Investigator Award (K08) Career Transition Award (K22) Mentored Patient-Oriented Research Career Development Award (K23) Mentored Quantitative Research Career Development Award (K25) Academic Career Excellence (ACE) Award (K32) International Research Career Emerging Leaders Career Development Career Transition Award (Pathway to Independence Award) Stage during which early career researchers are about to transition - or have recently moved - to fully independent positions as investigators, faculty members, clinician scientists, or scientific team leaders in industry.
Research Scientist Development Award - Research and Training Research Scientist Development Award - Research (K02) Academic/Teacher Award (K07) Clinical Investigator Award (K08) Career Transition Award (K22) Mentored Patient-Oriented Research Career Development Mentored Quantitative Research Career Development Award International Research Career Development Award (K43) Emerging Leaders Career Development Award (K76) Career Transition Award (K99/R00) Stage at which investigator leads research programs in an academic, industry, or government setting with independent (often peer-reviewed) research funding and have delivered significant research outputs due to their experience and scientific quality.
Senior Research Scientist Award (K05) Academic/Teacher Award (K07) The Career Enhancement Award (K18) Midcareer Investigator Award in Patient-Oriented Research Mentored Quantitative Research Career Development Award Midcareer Investigator Award in Biomedical and Behavioral Stephen I.
Katz Early Stage Investigator Research Project Grant Maximizing Investigators Research Award (MIRA) for Early Stage Investigators (R35) NIH Director's New Innovator Award (DP2) Administrative Supplements Research Supplements to Promote Re-entry and Re-integration into Health-Related Research Careers Research Continuity Supplements Full List of Activity Codes What Early Career Researchers Should Know (Part 1) – the Hidden Curriculum What Early Career Researchers Should Know (Part 2) – Discovering Strengths to Advance Your Research Career Understanding NIH Programs Developing and Optimizing Your Mentor Relationships Research Training and Career Development funding category Early Stage Investigator (ESI) Policies Family-Friendly Initiatives NOT-OD-24-129: Updates to NIH Institutional Training Grant Applications for Due Dates on or After January 25, 2025 NOT-OD-24-116: Childcare Costs for Ruth L.
Kirschstein National Research Service Award (NRSA) Individual Fellows and Institutional Research Training Awards NOT-OD-24-107: Implementation of Revisions to the NIH and AHRQ Fellowship Application and Review Process NOT-OD-24-084: Overview of Grant Application and Review Changes for Due Dates on or after January 25, 2025 This page last updated on: April 13, 2026 For technical issues E-mail OER Webmaster
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Individuals with quantitative science backgrounds who have the potential to develop into productive, independent researchers. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
NIH Mentored Quantitative Research Career Development Award (K25) is funded by National Institutes of Health (NIH). Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
Smart Health and Biomedical Research in the Era of Artificial Intelligence and Advanced Data Science (SCH) is sponsored by National Science Foundation (NSF) and National Institutes of Health (NIH). This interagency program supports transformative, high-risk/high-reward advances in computer and information science, engineering, mathematics, statistics, behavioral, and/or cognitive research to address pressing questions in biomedical and public health. It encourages scientific and engineering innovations by interdisciplinary teams to develop novel methods to collect, sense, connect, analyze, and interpret data from individuals, devices, and systems, enabling discovery and optimizing health. This includes applying AI in healthcare.
NIH NCI Pathway to Independence Award for Early-Stage Postdoctoral Researchers (K99/R00) is a grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) / National Cancer Institute (NCI) that funds early-stage postdoctoral researchers in cancer-related fields to transition to independent research careers. The award provides a mentored phase (K99) followed by an independent phase (R00), supporting investigators who do not require an extended period of supervised training beyond their doctoral degrees. Eligible applicants must hold a research or clinical doctoral degree and be postdoctoral fellows who have not yet established independent research careers. The March 11, 2026 due date applies; award amounts vary by project.
NIH R25 Summer Research Education Experience Program is a grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) that funds universities and institutions of higher education to provide summer research experiences in environmental health sciences to high school students, college undergraduates, and science teachers. Administered through the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), the program aims to attract young people to scientific careers and help teachers communicate about the scientific process more effectively. Eligible applicants are U.S. institutions eligible for NIH grants. The application deadline was March 17, 2026.
NIH committed $402 million across 601 multiyear-funded grants in the first eight months of FY 2026 — more than four times the pace of two years ago. The mechanism front-loads obligations into a single fiscal year, leaving less budget for new project starts and squeezing FY 2026 success rates. What researchers and institutions should be doing now.
Read articlePAR-26-042 funds NLM-priority clinical informatics R01 grants up to $250,000 in direct costs per year through March 6, 2029, with standard NIH cycles on October 5, February 5, and June 5. The notice explicitly defines non-responsive applications: incremental tool improvements, projects primarily focused on social determinants of health, and projects primarily focused on ethical/legal/social issues. With NIH SBIR/STTR just reopened and the OMB Uniform Grants Regulation rewrite reshaping discretionary awards, the NLM clinical informatics line is one of the few stable, well-defined biomedical funding streams left at the agency. Here is how to read it.
Read articleNOT-OD-26-006 closed all 23 NIH SBIR/STTR opportunities on Nov 17, 2025. The Small Business Innovation and Economic Security Act (S. 3971) was signed April 13, 2026, reauthorizing the program through 2031. NIH posted no active SBIR/STTR NOFOs through early June 2026 while it rebuilt its solicitation suite around new statutory requirements. The September 5 standard receipt date is the first real test of the post-freeze pipeline — here is what the unwind looks like and how to position for it.
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