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Missouri Grants

Explore 335 grant opportunities available in Missouri

2025 Springfield Youth Empowerment Project Grant
$25,000
Community Foundation of the Ozarks
Private

Application Deadline

Not specified

Date Added

Sep 25, 2024

This grant provides funding to nonprofit organizations, government entities, school districts, and faith-based groups in Springfield, Missouri, to support programs that empower youth and encourage their participation in community service.

Education
City or township governments
Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation Capacity Building Grant
$250,000
Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation
Private

Application Deadline

Not specified

Date Added

Sep 24, 2024

This funding opportunity supports local nonprofit organizations in Kansas City that are focused on education, entrepreneurship, and workforce development, helping them strengthen their operations and increase their community impact.

Capacity Building
Nonprofits
Preserve Route 66 Grant Fund 2024
$10,000
National Trust for Historic Preservation
Private

Application Deadline

Not specified

Date Added

Sep 24, 2024

This grant provides financial support to public agencies, tribal governments, and nonprofit organizations for the preservation and interpretation of historic sites along the Route 66 corridor, with a focus on underrepresented communities.

Women & Girl Services
Nonprofits
Grants in Place Fellows for Rural Educators
$2,500
Rural Schools Collaborative
Private

Application Deadline

Not specified

Date Added

Sep 23, 2024

This grant provides funding for rural classroom teachers in selected states to develop and implement Place-Based Education projects in their schools.

Community Development
Individuals
2025 Targeted Fund
$75,000
United Way of Greater St. Louis
Private

Application Deadline

Not specified

Date Added

Sep 23, 2024

This funding opportunity provides financial support to nonprofits in Illinois and Missouri that are addressing critical community needs through innovative or emergent programs, with a focus on areas such as basic needs, health, and youth success.

Infrastructure
Nonprofits
Business Builder Subaward Grant Program
$50,000
Heartland Regional Food Business Center
Private

Application Deadline

Oct 15, 2024

Date Added

Sep 20, 2024

The Heartland Regional Food Business Center is offering Business Builder Subawards ranging from $5,000 to $50,000 to support small food and farm businesses in selected states and counties, aiming to expand local and regional food markets, increase business acumen, and strengthen food systems in response to COVID-19, with projects to be completed within a year.

Business and Commerce
Nonprofits
2025 Ash Grove Affiliate Grantmaking Program
Contact for amount
Ash Grove Community Foundation
Private

Application Deadline

Oct 3, 2024

Date Added

Sep 20, 2024

The Ash Grove Community Foundation in Missouri is offering a $2,000 grant with a deadline of 10/03/2024, prioritizing projects in the Ash Grove area and inviting 501(c)3 organizations or other IRS approved entities serving Ash Grove to apply, with the aim of improving the community's quality of life.

Women & Girl Services
City or township governments
City of Liberty Neighborhood Enhancement Grants
$10,000
City of Liberty
Local

Application Deadline

Nov 28, 2025

Date Added

Sep 19, 2024

This program provides funding to registered neighborhood or homeowners' associations in Liberty to support community-driven projects that enhance and revitalize local neighborhoods.

Community Development
Nonprofits
2024 Catapult Grants for Educators in Missouri and Illinois
$30,000
Innovative Technology Education Fund
Private

Application Deadline

Oct 31, 2024

Date Added

Sep 17, 2024

This funding opportunity provides educators in Missouri and Illinois with financial support to acquire essential technology and equipment needed to enhance innovative teaching and improve student learning.

Science and Technology
County governments
Coover Regional Youth Mental Health Grant Program
$25,000
Community Foundation of the Ozarks
Private

Application Deadline

Nov 14, 2024

Date Added

Sep 17, 2024

This grant provides funding to nonprofit organizations and local entities in rural Missouri to improve mental health services and programs for youth aged 0-21.

Recreation
City or township governments
2025 Barton County Community Foundation Gant Program
$10,000
Barton County Community Foundation
Local

Application Deadline

Oct 21, 2024

Date Added

Sep 4, 2024

The Barton County Community Foundation in Missouri is accepting applications for a grant program, offering $1000 to $10,000 for projects that provide vital community services or innovative solutions for community needs, with a maximum request of $4,000 per applicant, open to 501(c)(3) organizations or other IRS approved nonprofits serving Barton County.

Employment Labor and Training
Nonprofits
Jackson County Outside Agency Funding
Contact for amount
Jackson County Missouri
Local

Application Deadline

Not specified

Date Added

Sep 4, 2024

The Jackson County grant in Missouri is a competitive funding opportunity for community-based nonprofits that provide basic, emergency, quality of life, and support services to underserved residents, with a focus on health, human services, and self-sufficiency, and is disbursed on a quarterly reimbursement basis.

Health
Nonprofits
Building Economic Resilience through Financial Wellness in Latino and Immigrant Communities
$30,000
National Association for Latino Community Asset Builders (NALCAB)
Private

Application Deadline

Sep 18, 2024

Date Added

Sep 3, 2024

The National Association for Latino Community Asset Builders (NALCAB), with generous support from the Wells Fargo Foundation, is offering capacity building grants of $30,000 and customized technical assistance to 10 organizations. This program prioritizes organizations located in Wells Fargo’s priority geographic markets. The primary purpose of this award is to support a nationwide network of Latino- and immigrant-serving organizations to advance culturally relevant approaches to family financial health in low- and moderate-income Latino and immigrant communities. This aligns with the foundation's mission by strengthening the delivery of financial capability services within these communities. The target beneficiaries of this program are Latino- and immigrant-serving organizations, and ultimately, low- and moderate-income Latino and immigrant communities. The program aims to achieve several impact goals, including integrating culturally relevant financial curricula into asset-building programs like homeownership and small business development services, intentionally utilizing financial coaching to prepare participants to access capital for asset-building activities, and improving organizational capacity to track and report financial health outcomes. The program focuses on several key priorities to achieve its goals. These include integrating culturally relevant financial curricula, utilizing financial coaching, improving organizational capacity to track and report financial health outcomes, and prioritizing access to innovative financial products. The financial health outcomes specifically target improving credit, increasing savings, increasing income, and reducing debt. Innovative financial products are also prioritized to boost family financial wellness, with a focus on increasing savings, decreasing debt, or building or establishing credit. Expected outcomes and measurable results include meaningful and measurable impact and change for Latino and immigrant financial health. This will be demonstrated through a comprehensive and specific strategy. The program also expects to strengthen the delivery of financial capability services through grantmaking, technical assistance, and training. The grant period is from October 1, 2024, to June 30, 2025. Eligible applicants are 501(c)(3) nonprofits that integrate, or plan to integrate, culturally relevant financial capability services into existing asset-building programs.

Community Development
Nonprofits
Charless Foundation Grant Program
$500,000
Charless Foundation
Private

Application Deadline

Oct 4, 2024

Date Added

Sep 2, 2024

The Charless Foundation is offering grants ranging from $5,000 to $30,000 to 501(c)3 nonprofits that support the health, welfare, and wellness of economically underserved seniors in the St. Louis region, particularly through residential support, aging in place, health and safety resources, and social support, with a preference for initiatives in South St. Louis City.

Health
City or township governments
Dairy Business Builder Grant Program
$100,000
Center for Dairy Research
Private

Application Deadline

Apr 2, 2025

Date Added

Aug 28, 2024

This funding opportunity provides financial support to dairy farms and processing facilities in select Midwestern states to promote product development, diversification, and value-added dairy innovations.

Science and Technology
Exclusive - see details
Forecast Public Art’s Midwest Memory Grant 2024
$75,000
Forecast
Private

Application Deadline

Oct 1, 2024

Date Added

Aug 16, 2024

The Forecast Public Art’s Midwest Memory Grant, ranging from $10,000 to $100,000, is open to non-profit organizations in rural Midwest communities, aiming to elevate and preserve the stories of BIPOC communities through monuments, with a focus on addressing systemic inequities and advancing racial justice.

Capacity Building
Nonprofits
2025 Republic Philanthropic Society Grantmaking Program
$20,000
Republic Community Foundation
Private

Application Deadline

Sep 16, 2024

Date Added

Aug 14, 2024

The Republic Community Foundation's grant program is designed to enhance the quality of life for individuals in Republic through thoughtful grantmaking and community leadership. As a community foundation, its unique role is to operate a flexible grantmaking program that consistently addresses the most critical needs of the community. This adaptability is fueled by charitable donors who establish unrestricted or field-of-interest funds, entrusting decision-making to community leaders on the Board of Directors, as well as by funds raised directly by the Foundation. This approach aligns directly with the Foundation's mission to improve community well-being by empowering local initiatives. The grant program targets 501(c)3 organizations and other IRS-approved entities, such as government bodies, school districts, and churches, that serve the Republic area. The primary impact goal is to address priority needs within Republic, which includes supporting the expansion of existing programs and the creation of new services. The Republic Philanthropic Society (The RepMO PHIL) is responsible for making grant decisions, demonstrating a commitment to local leadership and needs-based funding. The program prioritizes initiatives that tackle current community needs, with an emphasis on flexibility and responsiveness. While collaboration among applicants is encouraged to foster broader community impact, it is not a mandatory requirement, allowing for diverse approaches to problem-solving. Grant proposals are reviewed according to an announced timetable, and funding is disbursed as it becomes available, ensuring a consistent and transparent process for applicants. Expected outcomes include the successful expansion of vital community programs and the establishment of innovative new services that directly address identified priority needs in Republic. While specific measurable results are not explicitly detailed in the provided text, the focus on "priority needs" and the encouragement of program expansion and creation imply a commitment to tangible improvements in community services and overall quality of life. The maximum request amount of $20,000.00 guides the scale of the projects, suggesting an emphasis on impactful, yet manageable, initiatives.

Employment Labor and Training
Nonprofits
2024 Small Arts Grant Fund
Contact for amount
Francis Family Foundation
Private

Application Deadline

Sep 5, 2024

Date Added

Aug 12, 2024

The 2024 Small Arts Grant Fund, supported by the Francis Family Foundation, is currently accepting applications. This grant program is designed to support arts and culture within the greater Kansas City area, defined as a 60-mile radius. The foundation's continued investment in this fund, despite a transition from a community to a family board in 2022, demonstrates its ongoing commitment to fostering artistic endeavors and ensuring access to arts and culture opportunities. This aligns with a broader mission to enrich the community through the arts, supporting both established arts organizations and non-arts organizations with community-based arts programs. Target beneficiaries for the Small Arts Grant include tax-exempt 501(c)(3) public charities with an EIN, or organizations partnering with a fiscal sponsor. Specifically, arts organizations with annual revenues under $300,000 in their last fiscal year are eligible. Additionally, non-arts organizations, regardless of their budget size or mission, are encouraged to apply if they offer community-based arts programs that provide access to arts and culture in various traditional and non-traditional sites across the greater Kansas City area. The impact goal is to broaden participation in and exposure to arts and culture, ensuring these opportunities are accessible to a wider community. The program's priorities and focuses are clearly on community-based arts initiatives. This means the grant prioritizes organizations that are deeply embedded in their local communities and actively work to bring arts and culture directly to residents. The emphasis on "traditional and non-traditional sites" highlights a flexible and inclusive approach, aiming to reach diverse audiences where they live, work, and gather. The foundation seeks to maintain a consistent investment in these types of programs, suggesting a long-term strategic priority of sustaining a vibrant arts ecosystem in the Kansas City region. Expected outcomes include an increase in the number and variety of accessible arts and culture opportunities available to residents. Measurable results would likely involve the number of people reached by these programs, the diversity of locations where arts activities are offered, and the engagement levels within the community. While the explicit "theory of change" is not detailed, the strategy appears to be rooted in the belief that direct funding to local organizations will empower them to create and sustain impactful arts programs, thereby enhancing the overall cultural landscape and well-being of the greater Kansas City area. The foundation’s consistent support for this fund, despite internal changes, reinforces this strategic priority.

Arts
Nonprofits
Civic Infrastructure Program
$20,000
James S. McDonnell Foundation
Local

Application Deadline

Aug 30, 2024

Date Added

Aug 9, 2024

The James S. McDonnell Foundation (JSMF) is offering a grant program designed to foster economic mobility in its priority communities and among specific groups. This initiative aligns with the foundation's mission by supporting collaborative efforts that bring together individuals from diverse zip codes, races, and income levels. The program emphasizes the importance of cross-cultural and cross-socioeconomic engagement to achieve its economic objectives. The primary target beneficiaries of this grant are low and moderate-income individuals and families, as well as Black and historically marginalized groups, including immigrants, residing in the City of St. Louis and North St. Louis County, Missouri. The program aims to strengthen the collaborative capacity of these diverse groups to work together effectively and, in doing so, improve their economic well-being. The foundation's strategic priorities and theory of change are centered on the belief that fostering collaboration across differences can lead to tangible economic improvements. JSMF encourages proposals that implement approaches to strengthen collaborative capacity and create positive, long-term, and tangible impacts on the economic well-being of their priority populations. Examples of focus areas include youth mentorship across class divisions, networking support for first jobs, community investment clubs, business-to-business mentorship, and peer-to-peer lending. Expected outcomes include enhanced collaborative capacity among participants and improved economic well-being for JSMF priority populations. While specific measurable results are not explicitly detailed beyond these objectives, the foundation seeks proposals that will demonstrate a clear alignment with its mission and guiding principles, and that can achieve a positive and lasting impact. Grants range from $20,000 to $40,000, with awards totaling $200,000, and most grants will be for one to three years. Eligible applicants must be 501(c)3 organizations or have a fiscal sponsor, and proposals must bring people together across diverse backgrounds to partner for the first time.

Infrastructure
Nonprofits
Wealth Building Grant Program
$900,000
James S. McDonnell Foundation
Local

Application Deadline

Aug 30, 2024

Date Added

Aug 9, 2024

The James S. McDonnell Foundation (JSMF) is offering grants to support innovative, sustainable, and scalable approaches to wealth building and preservation within specific priority communities and groups. This initiative aligns with JSMF's broader mission to foster human well-being by addressing systemic economic disparities and promoting long-term financial stability. The foundation's strategic framework emphasizes helping individuals and communities build and protect wealth, demonstrating a clear theory of change that by increasing access to financial resources and strengthening community capacity, economic resilience can be significantly improved. The primary beneficiaries of this grant program are low and moderate-income individuals and families, as well as Black and historically marginalized groups, including immigrants, residing in the City of St. Louis and North St. Louis County. The impact goals are centered on increasing the number of individuals and families served by financial products, services, or practices, and ultimately increasing and preserving wealth for these target populations. This focus is directly tied to the foundation's strategic priority of addressing wealth disparities in disinvested communities. Successful proposals are expected to align with one or more of three core tactics. Tactic A focuses on increasing access to low-cost, low-barrier financial products and services that drive asset attainment, growth, and preservation. Tactic B aims to build the capacity of community-based organizations and financial institutions to support wealth building and preservation efforts. Tactic C prioritizes attracting new investment capital to disinvested communities within the designated geographic areas. These tactics serve as the foundational elements of JSMF's theory of change, postulating that a multi-pronged approach encompassing access, capacity, and investment is essential for sustainable wealth creation. The program anticipates several expected outcomes and measurable results. These include the development of new loan products for homeownership, providing private equity access for companies owned by people of color, adjusting financial products to support small and diverse-owned businesses, creating investment products that increase ownership in financial markets, supporting employee ownership business models, and implementing systemic changes to credit building. The grants, ranging from $450,000 to $900,000, will be awarded for one to three years, with awards totaling $1.8 million. Proposals will be evaluated based on the innovation, scalability, and sustainability of the proposed approach, and their alignment with JSMF’s mission and guiding principles, ensuring that funded projects have the potential for significant and lasting impact.

Environment
Nonprofits

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