1,000+ Opportunities
Find the right grant
Search federal, foundation, and corporate grants with AI — or browse by agency, topic, and state.
Restaurant Business Development Grant Program is sponsored by Feed the Soul Foundation (non-profit arm of Black Restaurant Week, LLC) in partnership with Grubhub Community Fund. This program supports marginalized restaurant entrepreneurs financially and professionally through financial stipends and business development services.
It aims to help Black and Latin-owned culinary businesses navigate the post-Covid world and changing consumer dining trends.
Get alerted about grants like this
Save a search for “Feed the Soul Foundation (non-profit arm of Black Restaurant Week, LLC) in partnership with Grubhub Community Fund” or related topics and get emailed when new opportunities appear.
Search similar grants →According to the current listing, eligibility includes: Black and Latin-owned culinary businesses. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows $10,000. Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
Applications for Restaurant Business Development Grant Program are due October 1, 2026. Build your timeline backwards from this date to cover registrations, approvals, and final submission checks.
Restaurant Business Development Grant Program is funded by Feed the Soul Foundation (non-profit arm of Black Restaurant Week, LLC) in partnership with Grubhub Community Fund. 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.
Past winners and funding trends for this program
Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) / Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) Programs (Phase I) is sponsored by U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA). The USDA SBIR/STTR programs focus on transforming scientific discovery into products and services with commercial potential and/or societal benefit in agriculturally-related areas. This can include app development for agricultural technology, rural development, and smart farming. Phase I aims to demonstrate technical feasibility.
Developer Grants is sponsored by Circle. Circle's Developer Grant initiative supports projects leveraging USDC to create practical solutions. While the 2025 applications are closed for reimagining, they will place greater emphasis on Arc-specific grants and evaluate projects based on alignment with Circle products, team strength, innovation, and impact on the USDC network in 2026.
The Federal Transit Administration's Pilot Program for Transit-Oriented Development Planning is back with $28.5 million, a July 10 deadline, and an eligibility filter that locks out first-time grantees. Here is what changed, why the partnership requirement matters, and how to position a winning application.
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 articleEffective January 1, 2026, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act fundamentally restructured the charitable deduction. Individual itemizers now lose the first 0.5% of AGI before any deduction; corporations lose the first 1% of taxable income; top-bracket donors are capped at a 35% effective deduction rate; and the 86% of taxpayers who do not itemize finally have an above-the-line deduction of up to $1,000 ($2,000 joint). EY projects $4.4-4.8B in annual corporate giving losses. Fundraisers who do not segment their donor communications by floor exposure this year will lose six-figure gifts to timing arbitrage.
Read article