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Historical funding: Varies; aims to attract venture capital investment and position technologies for broader market adoption.
Prior eligibility: Teams conducting research and early-stage technology development. The initiative aims to unite cross-sector partnerships.
NSF Tech Accelerators is sponsored by U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF). The NSF Tech Accelerators initiative is a new effort designed to help move emerging “deep-tech” research from laboratories into scalable, market-ready technologies. It aims to establish a network of NSF Tech Accelerators focused on underfunded deep-technology areas, providing support for research teams working on early-stage technology development.
EPSCoR's E-CORE program funds up to 15 awards of as much as $10M each over four years to build research infrastructure in states that have historically received the least NSF money. Here is how the program works, who is eligible, and how to build a competitive cross-institutional proposal before the July 21, 2026 deadline.
Read articleNSF's CAREER program — a minimum $400,000 over five years for pre-tenure faculty — has a single annual deadline on July 22, 2026. It rewards the integration of research and education, not research alone, and that is exactly where most proposals fail. Here is the eligibility math, the integration trap, and how to position in a tightening federal funding climate.
Read articleNSF reopened its Project Pitch portal on June 2 and posted two distinct solicitations — NSF 26-510 for general deep tech and NSF 26-511 for scientific instrumentation. The first full-proposal deadline is July 27, 2026. Here is why the split matters, who the $40M instrumentation lane is actually for, and how founders should choose a track before submitting a pitch.
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