Health Grants in South Dakota
12 matching federal health opportunities for South Dakota. Updated daily.
Health grant alerts for South Dakota
Get notified when new health funding posts — free.
Advancing Global Health
DOS-GHSD · DFOP0017890
Small Health Care Provider Quality Improvement Program
HHS-HRSA · HRSA-26-046
Rural Communities Opioid Response Program (RCORP)-Technical Assistance
HHS-HRSA · HRSA-26-038
Limited Competition: Centers of Biomedical Research Excellence: Expansion/Sustainability Phases (COBRE-E/S) (P30 - Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
HHS-NIH11 · PAR-27-055
Reducing the burden of parasitic infections in the United States through evidence-based prevention and control activities.
HHS-CDC-NCEZID · CDC-RFA-CK-26-0221
Preventing global health threats by strengthening surveillance systems to accelerate outbreak detection, notification, and response
HHS-CDC-GHC · CDC-RFA-JG-26-0113
Enhancing global laboratory systems to safely manage biological risks, deploy diagnostics, and sequence pathogens to improve capacities for global health threat response and detection
HHS-CDC-GHC · CDC-RFA-JG-26-0058
Medical Student Education Program (MSE)
HHS-HRSA · HRSA-27-098
Rural Hospital Provider Assistance Program
HHS-HRSA · HRSA-26-105
Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program Part D Coordinated HIV Services and Access to Research for Women, Infants, Children, and Youth (WICY) Existing Geographic Service Areas
HHS-HRSA · HRSA-26-067
Coccidioidomycosis Collaborative Research Centers (P01 Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
HHS-NIH11 · RFA-AI-27-012
Tuberculosis Research Advancement Centers (TRACs) (P30 Clinical Trial Not Allowed)
HHS-NIH11 · RFA-AI-27-016
Health Grants in South Dakota: How to Apply
Federal health grants available to South Dakota organizations are funded by agencies like NIH, HRSA, CDC, and SAMHSA. Most require 501(c)(3) status, though some are open to state/local governments, tribal organizations, and educational institutions.
Typical process: Review the Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO), confirm eligibility, submit a Letter of Intent if required (2-4 weeks before deadline), then submit the full application through Grants.gov before the close date. Applications typically include a project narrative, budget, and organizational capacity statement.
Why timing matters: Most NOFOs have a 30-60 day window. Starting the day it posts (vs. finding it 3 weeks late) can be the difference between a strong submission and a rushed one. That's what GrantQuick solves.
FAQ: Health Grants in South Dakota
Who is eligible for health grants in South Dakota?
Most federal health grants require 501(c)(3) nonprofit status. State and local government agencies, tribal organizations, and educational institutions in South Dakota are also often eligible. Check each NOFO's eligibility section — some are restricted to specific org types.
How much funding is available?
Federal health grants range from $10,000 (planning grants) to $10M+ (multi-year program grants). Small-to-mid nonprofits in South Dakota typically target $50K-$500K awards. Many agencies also offer capacity-building grants specifically for smaller organizations.
How often do new health grants post for South Dakota?
New opportunities post year-round, but volume peaks in the federal fiscal year Q1-Q2 (October-March) when agencies release new-year funding. Set up a free alert to get notified the same day a matching grant posts.