1,000+ Opportunities
Find the right grant
Search federal, foundation, and corporate grants with AI — or browse by agency, topic, and state.
This listing may be outdated. Verify details at the official source before applying.
Find similar grantsRed Letter Grants (Wisconsin) is sponsored by Red Letter Grant, Inc. (funded by WEDC). This program funds grants for women-owned businesses in Red Letter Grant's two service regions in Western Wisconsin. Grant funds can be used for various purposes, with businesses needing to explain their planned use in applications.
Get alerted about grants like this
Save a search for “Red Letter Grant, Inc. (funded by WEDC)” or related topics and get emailed when new opportunities appear.
Search similar grants →According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Women-owned businesses in Red Letter Grant's service regions in Western Wisconsin. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows $2,000 and $4,000. Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
Red Letter Grants (Wisconsin) is funded by Red Letter Grant, Inc. (funded by WEDC). Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in Wisconsin. 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.
On June 2, 2026, the Department of Energy's Office of Critical Minerals and Energy Innovation selected two demonstration-scale facilities — Phoenix Tailings (with MIT and the University of Minnesota) for $66 million, and the Colorado School of Mines (with ElementUSA, PNNL, Principal Mineral, and Rare Earth Technologies Inc.) for the balance — under the Rare Earth Elements Demonstration Facility Program. Both projects pull rare earths from industrial waste — red mud at the Gramercy refinery in Louisiana, and a mix of mine and refining tailings elsewhere. Here is what the selections tell researchers, small businesses, and downstream magnet customers about where DOE thinks the chokepoint actually is, and what to do before the next demonstration-scale solicitation opens.
Read articleNIH 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 articleFNS will award up to $5M with individual requests of $20K to $2M. Past FY24 and FY25 PTIG winners are ineligible as lead applicants, opening the field substantially. The state SNAP letter of commitment is the operational bottleneck — not the proposal itself.
Read article