National Institutes of Health
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) is a US federal agency funding biomedical research grants & programs.
Get Funding for COVID-19 Research & Disease Impact Studies
NIDDK is offering grants for research into how COVID-19 affects individuals with pre-existing conditions and specific organ systems. This funding supports mechanistic studies to understand susceptibility, infection routes, and health outcomes related to metabolic, digestive, kidney, and blood-related diseases.
NIH Grants: Fund Your Heart Failure Research!
Researchers focused on advanced heart failure and palliative care are eligible for NIH funding to investigate patient burdens, symptom management, and develop new care interventions. This grant supports vital research to improve the quality of life for advanced heart failure patients and their caregivers.
NIH Grants: Fund Your Product Launch & Growth!
Small businesses that have completed NIH SBIR/STTR Phase II or IIB projects can now access funding to help bring their innovations to market. This program supports critical late-stage R&D, manufacturing, and regulatory steps needed for commercialization.
NIH Grants: Fund Biomedical Research Training
This NIH grant supports institutions partnering to train Masters students from underrepresented backgrounds for PhDs in biomedical and behavioral sciences. Secure funding to build the next generation of NIH-funded researchers.
Fund Your Health Research PhD Training
Are you a predoctoral student from an underrepresented background pursuing health-related research? This fellowship offers financial support for your mentored research training to help you become an independent scientist.
Funded Research: HIV & Tobacco Cessation in LMICs
This grant supports research to combat tobacco use among individuals living with HIV in low and middle-income countries, with a focus on developing and testing tailored cessation interventions. Funding is available for research planning, intervention implementation, and follow-up activities.
Fund Your Chemical Threat Research & Development
NIH's CounterACT program invites researchers to develop new treatments for chemical threat exposures, including chemical warfare agents and toxic industrial chemicals. This R21 grant supports early-stage research to identify and optimize potential therapeutics.
Get Funding to Improve Kidney Disease Care
Healthcare providers developing innovative treatments for kidney injury survivors can apply for funding to test their interventions. This grant supports research aimed at reducing long-term health problems and improving outcomes for AKI patients.
Get Funding to Improve Kidney Injury Patient Care
This grant is for research institutions developing and testing interventions to reduce long-term health problems in patients who have experienced acute kidney injury. Fund innovative research that leads to better patient outcomes and prevents chronic disease.
Fund Your Cancer Research: NIH Grants Available
NIH is offering grants to researchers focused on understanding the link between aging and cancer development. This funding supports studies exploring how aging impacts cellular processes and the tumor microenvironment to drive cancer initiation.
NIH Funding: Boost Your Health Research with Grants!
NIH is seeking multidisciplinary teams to develop cutting-edge metabolomics-based biomarkers for tracking dietary intake and exposure. This funding aims to validate these new methods against existing dietary assessment tools, advancing nutritional science.
NIH Grants: Fund Your Dietary Research
Are you a researcher developing dietary biomarkers? The NIH is funding a coordination center to support a study discovering and validating new dietary assessment methods. This grant will help centralize and manage critical data for this important research.
NIH Grant: Fund Type 1 Diabetes Research & Tissue Analysis
NIH seeks teams with expertise in pancreas research to collect and analyze human pancreatic tissues for Type 1 Diabetes studies. This funding supports advanced analysis and data sharing to understand and combat T1D.
Get Funding to Advance Health Information & Equity
Organizations can apply to become the Evaluation Center for the National Library of Medicine, securing funding to assess programs that improve health literacy and equity. This initiative aims to enhance access to vital biomedical information for health professionals and the public, with a focus on underserved communities.
Fund Your Substance Use Research Career!
Are you a clinician scientist focused on substance use and addiction research? This program offers intensive supervised training and career development to help you achieve research independence and secure funding for your groundbreaking work.
NIH Grants: Fund Your Dual-Degree Research Career
This NIH fellowship is for students in dual-degree programs (like MD/PhD) at institutions with NIH funding, supporting integrated research and clinical training for future physician-scientists. The grant helps promising students develop into independent researchers with a focus on health-related scientific fields.
NIH Grants for Brain Data Analysis Tools
Unlock funding from the NIH to build cutting-edge theories, models, and analytical tools for understanding complex brain data. This grant supports the development of innovative resources for the neuroscience community to drive future research and discovery.
NIH Grants: Fund Your Research Skills Development
Are you an educator or institution looking to enhance research skills? This NIH grant provides funding for innovative educational programs specifically designed to develop crucial research competencies.
Get Funding for NHP Research: Accelerate Cures!
NIH is seeking applications for a crucial resource supporting nonhuman primate research, vital for developing vaccines and treatments for diseases. This initiative will provide essential, hard-to-find reagents and a public database to accelerate breakthroughs in immune-mediated and infectious diseases.
Fund Your PhD: NIH Grants for Clinician-Scientists
This NIH grant is for promising predoctoral students pursuing dual doctoral degrees (like MD/PhD) at institutions lacking NIH-funded dual-degree programs. It aims to enhance your integrated research and clinical training, preparing you for a career as an independent physician-scientist.