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Find the perfect Small grants for nonprofits in Colorado on Instrumentl. 200+ Small grants for nonprofits in Colorado in the United States
200+
Available grants
$25.7M
Total funding amount
$17.5K
Median grant amount
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A. V. Hunter Trust Grants to Organizations
A V Hunter Trust, Inc
Comis Foundation Grant
The Comis Foundation
PNC Foundation: Foundation Grant
PNC Foundation
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Roy & Gloria Dinsdale Foundation Grant
Roy And Gloria Dinsdale Foundation
About Us
Next50 is a private, national foundation based in Denver, Colorado. Since 2016, Next50 has been working toward creating a world that values aging.
The mission of Next50 shall be to promote independence and dignity for the aging population, to include the needs of low and moderate income persons encompassing individuals with physical, cognitive and/or behavioral disabilities, by encouraging and supporting innovative, affordable and coordinated services and initiatives.
Ways we Support Affordable Aging
At Next50, we believe in maximizing our impact by deploying our capital across a range of diverse investment tools and strategies – a polycapital approach.
Next50’s philanthropic approach blends responsive and proactive strategies to drive meaningful, lasting change across our priority areas. By actively engaging with the communities we serve, we gain critical insights that allow us to bridge gaps, anticipate challenges, and amplify impact.
Through polycapital, we leverage a full spectrum of financial and non-financial tools – including grants, investments, policy, advocacy, and community engagement – because creating a world that values aging requires a multifaceted and adaptive strategy.
Sudden and Urgent Need (SUN)
Providing small, Colorado-based organizations serving marginalized older adults with one-time funding to address sudden and urgent needs.
SUN funding is available for efforts such as:
- An organization providing mobile technology training for low-income older adults in a rural area has an unexpected issue that has arisen with their mobile training vehicle and needs a replacement part to be able to continue providing services.
- A small organization providing a financial boot-straps course for low-income older adults has a water leak in their building and must shut down classes until the leak is fixed.
- A small organization serving older adults in rural Colorado receives unexpected notice that its lease will not be renewed, requiring sudden legal and moving expenses to secure new space and maintain operations without disruption.
Sudden & Urgent need
The organization must demonstrate that their need is unbudgeted, unforeseen, time-sensitive, and significantly interferes with their ability to serve older adults and/or their caregivers or provides an immediate opportunity to enhance services. The request must be for an expense that is a one-time need and is not a part of the organization’s general operating or ongoing expenses.
Improving economic well-being for older adults
Applicants must demonstrate how the work of their organization contributes to the economic well-being of the older adults they serve.
Alignment with priority areas
Applicants should be able to briefly describe how their work with older adults aligns with one or more of Next50’s priority areas – Ending Ageism, Advancing Digital Equity, and Supporting Aging in Place
Population served
Requesting organizations must demonstrate a current focus on serving marginalized populations aged 50+ and/or their caregivers. Marginalized refers to the systematic social, economic, and political exclusion or disadvantage faced by individuals or groups, particularly those with intersectional identities. Please refer to our list of priority populations. Applicants who demonstrate a strong understanding of the intersectional identities of the older adults they serve and actively work to dismantle systemic barriers to access will be prioritized.
Impact
Applicants must explain the potential to have an immediate impact on the organization’s ability to serve older adults.
Need For Funds
Applicants must clearly describe their organization’s financial need for requested funds. We will consider both an organization’s need for funding and its financial sustainability. If you have significant cash reserves or a budget surplus, please explain why the requested funds are needed. Similarly, if you have low cash reserves or a budget deficit, please share how the requested funds will help improve financial sustainability and/or how you plan to improve your financial position.
The Bank of America Foundation Sponsorship Program
Bank Of America Charitable Foundation Inc
Southwest Intervention Fund
National Trust for Historic Preservation
Colorado Bar Foundation Grant
Colorado Bar Foundation
Rural Microentrepreneur Assistance Program in Colorado
United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)
What does this program do?
It provides loans and grants to Microenterprise Development Organizations (MDOs) to:
- To help microenterprises startup and growth through a Rural Microloan Revolving Fund.
- Provide training and technical assistance to microloan borrowers and micro entrepreneurs.
Microenterprise Development Organizations must demonstrate experience in managing a Revolving Loan Fund, or:
- Certify that it or its employees have received education and training from a qualified microenterprise development training entity so that the applicant has the capacity to manage such a revolving loan fund.
- Demonstrate that it is actively and successfully participating as an intermediary lender in good standing under the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) Microloan Program or other similar loan programs as determined by the Administrator.
What kind of funding is available?
- Grants are available to provide technical assistance to rural micro-entrepreneurs or microenterprises, up to $100,000 annually. Funding at the requested level is not guaranteed, and at least 15 percent matching funds are required.
- Loans of $50,000 to $500,000 may be used for establishing a Rural Microloan Revolving Fund managed by the Microenterprise Development Organization. Total aggregate debt is capped at $2.5 million.
What are the loan terms?
- Maximum term is 20 years.
- Two-year payment deferral.
- Must establish a loan loss reserve fund.
What terms are required on loans to ultimate recipients?
- Up to $50,000.
- Fixed interest rate.
- Limited to 75 percent of project cost.
How may the funds be used?
Microlenders may make microloans for qualified business activities and expenses including, but not limited to:
- Working capital.
- Debt refinancing.
- Purchasing equipment and supplies.
- Improving real estate.
Latinos Investing in the Future Together (LIFT): for nonprofits serving Northern Colorado Grant
The Weld Community Foundation
Latinos Investing in the Future Together (LIFT): for nonprofits serving Northern Colorado Grant
The LIFT Fund was created to shift the narrative around Latino philanthropy in Weld County and Northern Colorado and to build a legacy of impact in the community. Latinos have long been leaders, organizers, and changemakers in Northern Colorado, often working behind the scenes to make a difference. This fund brings that collective investment into the light by providing mini-grants to local nonprofits advancing initiatives in:
- Youth Engagement & Success
- Economic Mobility and Small Business Support
- Community-Led Research & Innovation
Grant Amount:
- up to $5,000 (subject to change)
The LIFT Fund of Weld County will, in particular, look for:
- A project that drives meaningful change
- Has measurable outcomes
- Partnership and volunteering opportunities
- Goal of program self-sufficiency
- Financial stability
- Opportunities to leverage funds
Youth and Adult Grant Programs
Adolph Coors Foundation
Intermountain Community Care Foundation: Child & Family Mental Well-Being Grants
Intermountain Community Care Foundation Inc
Intermountain Community Care Foundation
Our mission: Helping people live the healthiest lives possible.
Intermountain Health is the largest nonprofit health system in the Intermountain West. We’re dedicated to creating healthier communities and helping our patients thrive.
Intermountain Health was established in 1975, but our legacy of compassion and care extends well beyond that, going back to the late 1800s and the early 1900s in Colorado and Utah respectively. We have since become a 60,000+ person strong nonprofit health system, with operations in six states across the interior West with a shared vision to be a model health system that inspires the future of health.
Intermountain Healthcare, SCL Health, and HealthCare Partners Nevada have now come together to serve communities in Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Utah, and Wyoming.
Grants
The Intermountain Community Care Foundation awards grants to organizations whose programs align with Intermountain Health’s mission, our national community health areas of focus, and priorities identified through our Community Health Needs Assessment. By supporting evidence-based programs and services that strengthen communities, the Foundation is dedicated to helping people live the healthiest lives possible.
What We Fund
We provide grants to organizations whose programs align with Intermountain Health’s mission, our national community health areas of focus, and priorities identified through our Community Health Needs Assessment.
- Healthcare Access Grants
- Social Drivers of Health Grants
- Child & Family Mental Well-Being Grants
- Utah Education Innovation Grants
Child & Family Mental Well-Being Grants
To qualify for Child and Family Mental Well-Being funding, your program or service must focus on families with children. Funding priority areas include:
- Mental well-being for children, including: reducing suicide deaths; reducing frequent mental distress, anxiety, and depression; decreasing substance misuse
- Advance prevention and early intervention addressing risk and protective factors
- Expand comprehensive, family-centered, mental well-being programs
- Build trauma-informed systems for young children including evidence-based prevention, behavioral health treatment, or related interventions or programs
- Strengthen community behavioral health capacity and collaborations through coalition-building
Requirements
- A full and complete financial audit conducted within the last two years. Submission must include the entire audit, including any findings and the auditor's letter
- A copy of the organization's 501(c)(3) designation letter or a comparable government designation
- A completed W9
- A completed Supplier Form (a blank copy will be provided in the application)
Additional information
- In Utah and Idaho, applicants can request a total grant award between $5,000 to $100,000 per year for 3 years (up to $300,000 total) for the entire project period. Projects can last between 12 and 36 months and must begin upon receipt of funding.
- In Colorado, Montana, and Nevada, applicants can request a total grant award between $5,000 to $50,000 per year for 2 years (up to $100,000 total) for the entire project period. Projects can last between 12 and 36 months and must begin upon receipt of funding.
- A funding request may not exceed 20 percent of an organization’s annual operating budget, e.g., to be eligible for a $50,000 grant, your organization’s annual operating budget must be at least $250,000.
- In general, small equipment and materials are eligible at no more than a total $5,000 cost, but large equipment, construction, and capital costs are not eligible. Consideration will be given if computer equipment is necessary and vital to the success of the project.
Intermountain Community Care Foundation: Healthcare Access Grants
Intermountain Community Care Foundation Inc
Intermountain Community Care Foundation: Social Drivers of Health Grants
Intermountain Community Care Foundation Inc
Intermountain Community Care Foundation
Our mission: Helping people live the healthiest lives possible.
Intermountain Health is the largest nonprofit health system in the Intermountain West. We’re dedicated to creating healthier communities and helping our patients thrive.
Intermountain Health was established in 1975, but our legacy of compassion and care extends well beyond that, going back to the late 1800s and the early 1900s in Colorado and Utah respectively. We have since become a 60,000+ person strong nonprofit health system, with operations in six states across the interior West with a shared vision to be a model health system that inspires the future of health.
Intermountain Healthcare, SCL Health, and HealthCare Partners Nevada have now come together to serve communities in Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Utah, and Wyoming.
Grants
The Intermountain Community Care Foundation awards grants to organizations whose programs align with Intermountain Health’s mission, our national community health areas of focus, and priorities identified through our Community Health Needs Assessment. By supporting evidence-based programs and services that strengthen communities, the Foundation is dedicated to helping people live the healthiest lives possible.
What We Fund
We provide grants to organizations whose programs align with Intermountain Health’s mission, our national community health areas of focus, and priorities identified through our Community Health Needs Assessment.
- Healthcare Access Grants
- Social Drivers of Health Grants
- Child & Family Mental Well-Being Grants
- Utah Education Innovation Grants
Social Drivers of Health Grants
To qualify for Social Drivers of Health grant funding, your program or service must align with at least one of these social drivers of health priorities:
- Improve nutrition security
- Improve stable and quality housing through wraparound and support services
Requirements
- A full and complete financial audit conducted within the last two years. Submission must include the entire audit, including any findings and the auditor's letter
- A copy of the organization's 501(c)(3) designation letter or comparable government designation
- A completed W9
- A completed Supplier Form (a blank copy will be provided in the application)
Additional information
- Applications will be accepted for new or existing programs that clearly address a social driver of health. New programs may include pilot initiatives.
- In Utah and Idaho, applicants can request a total grant award between $5,000 to $100,000 per year for 3 years (up to $300,000 total) for the entire project period. Projects can last between 12 and 36 months and must begin upon receipt of funding.
- In Colorado, Montana, and Nevada, applicants can request a total grant award between $5,000 to $50,000 per year for 2 years (up to $100,000 total) for the entire project period. Projects can last between 12 and 36 months and must begin upon receipt of funding.
- Budget Limitation - A funding request may not exceed 20 percent of an organization’s annual operating budget, e.g., to be eligible for a $50,000 grant, your organization’s annual operating budget must be at least $250,000.
- In general, small equipment and materials, such as jump ropes or cooking utensils are eligible, at no more than a total $5,000 cost, but large equipment, construction, and capital costs are not eligible. Consideration will be given if computer equipment is necessary and vital to the success of the project.
LIFT Fund of Weld County Grant
The Weld Community Foundation
LIFT Fund of Weld County Grant
The LIFT Fund was created to shift the narrative around Latino philanthropy in Weld County and Northern Colorado and to build a legacy of impact in the community. Latinos have long been leaders, organizers, and changemakers in Northern Colorado, often working behind the scenes to make a difference. This fund brings that collective investment into the light by providing mini-grants to local nonprofits advancing initiatives in:
- Youth Engagement & Success
- Economic Mobility and Small Business Support
- Community-Led Research & Innovation
Grant Amount:
- up to $5,000 (subject to changes)
The LIFT Fund of Weld County will, in particular, look for:
- a project that drives meaningful change
- has measurable outcomes
- partnership and volunteering opportunities
- goal of program self-sufficiency
- financial stability
- opportunities to leverage funds
Best Life Community Awards
ALTRA FOUNDATION INC
Riverscape Restoration Initiative
Biophilia Foundation Inc
The Biophilia Foundation
Our Mission & Approach
The Biophilia Foundation is dedicated to advancing biodiversity conservation on private lands by fostering systemic change through people, their communities, and direct action. We approach our mission by offering grants to nonprofit organizations, administering in-house programs, and serving as a strategic partner and fiscal sponsor for organizations with which we collaborate.
Riverscape Restoration in the Western United States and Northern Mexico
The Biophilia Foundation is seeking proposals for projects to improve the resilience of watersheds in arid and semi-arid regions of the southwestern United States and northern Mexico.Two types of grants are available:
- Grants of $50,000 to $100,000 are available for projects that implement low-tech, process-based, and/or beaver-based restoration of upland streams and rivers.
- Grants up to $25,000 are available for:
- Capacity building:
- Assistance with the development of watershed plans, place-based networks, or preparation of proposals for federal or state grants.
- Engagement:
- Outreach to landowners and land managers to improve the availability of information and make implementation achievable.
- Capacity building:
The Biophilia Foundation also welcomes enquiries regarding capacity building for riverscape restoration, research (primarily carbon sequestration, climate change adaptation, and other riparian ecosystem services), innovative finance, and improving the availability of information available to landowners and land managers.
Funding Categories
Grants provided through this initiative will include the categories described below. Eligible entities can apply for funding from one or more categories.
- Implementation Grants
- Implementation grants of $50,000 to $100,000 are available for riparian restoration projects using low-tech, process-based restoration (LTPBR) techniques, such as RDS, BDA, PALS, grass plugs, etc., and supporting practices, such as tree planting and exclosures.
- Implementation grants can also support restoration for the purpose of beaver translocation or beaver recolonization.
- Grants for this purpose may include practices for nonlethal management of beaver conflicts (e.g., pond levelers).
- Where financially beneficial, the Biophilia Foundation supports integration of carbon finance and/or other payments for ecosystem services into restoration projects.
- Implementation grants will be evaluated based on ecological and social criteria, including appropriateness of LTPBR to the context, biodiversity and ecological value, project scale, partnerships, and financial viability.
- Only projects in the target geography will be considered for implementation grants.
- In general, funded projects may apply for funding for one or two years, depending on scale and scope.
- Capacity-Building and Engagement
- Grants of up to $25,000 are available to assist with capacity-building and engagement.
- Capacity-building includes the development of watershed plans, creation of place based networks, or preparation of proposals for federal or state grants.
- Funds may also be used for projects to increase the capacity of the system, such as addressing training and workforce development.
- Engagement grants fund efforts to reduce barriers to LTPBR implementation by landowners and land managers.
- Examples include videos, websites, hosted workshops, or targeted outreach marketing to candidate landowners.
- Topics could include guidance on practices, permitting, financing, benefits, and risk mitigation.
- Research and Finance
- In addition to the grants currently available, the Biophilia Foundation welcomes enquiries regarding:
- Research to address data gaps on the benefits and risks of riparian restoration.
- Our primary interest areas are carbon sequestration, climate change adaptation, and other ecosystem services.
- Innovative finance for riparian restoration, including carbon credits and other payments for ecosystem services.
- In addition to the grants currently available, the Biophilia Foundation welcomes enquiries regarding:
Wolcott Family Foundation Grants
The Wolcott Family Foundation
Grants for Social Change and Environmental Stewardship
The Wolcott Family Foundation
Kayla Marie Adsit Memorial Foundation Fund Grant
Community Foundation of Northern Colorado
Women's Development Initiatives Grant Program
Freeport-Mcmoran Copper & Gold Foundation
TJX Foundation Grants
The Tjx Foundation Inc
Community Ties Giving Program: Annual Local Grants
Union Pacific Foundation
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Top Searched Small Grants for Nonprofits in Colorado
Grant Insights : Small Grants for Nonprofits in Colorado
Grant Availability
How common are grants in this category?
Common — grants in this category appear regularly across funding sources.
200+ Small grants for nonprofits in Colorado grants for nonprofits in the United States, from private foundations to corporations seeking to fund grants for nonprofits.
82 Small grants for nonprofits in Colorado over $25K in average grant size
64 Small grants for nonprofits in Colorado over $50K in average grant size
45 Small grants for nonprofits in Colorado supporting general operating expenses
200+ Small grants for nonprofits in Colorado supporting programs / projects
2,000+ Grants on Instrumentl focused on Youth Services
600+ Grants on Instrumentl focused on Poverty Alleviation & Services
Grant Deadline Distribution
Over the past year, when are grant deadlines typically due for Small grants for Nonprofits in Colorado?
Most grants are due in the first quarter.
Typical Funding Amounts
What's the typical grant amount funded for Small Grants for Nonprofits in Colorado?
Grants are most commonly $17,500.
Average Grant Size
What's the typical amount funded for Colorado?
Grants are most commonly $93,435.
Total Number of Grants
What's the total number of grants in Small Grants for Nonprofits in Colorado year over year?
In 2024, funders in Colorado awarded a total of 25,497 grants.
2022 58,261
2023 56,542
2024 25,497
Top Grant Focus Areas
Among all the Small Grants for Nonprofits in Colorado given out in Colorado, the most popular focus areas that receive funding are Education, Philanthropy, Voluntarism & Grantmaking Foundations, and Human Services.
1. Education
2. Philanthropy, Voluntarism & Grantmaking Foundations
3. Human Services
Funding Over Time
How is funding for Small Grants for Nonprofits in Colorado changing over time?
Funding has increased by -53.64%.
2022 $5,306,649,967
2023
$5,130,283,753
-3.32%
2024
$2,378,257,140
-53.64%
Colorado Counties That Receive the Most Funding
How does grant funding vary by county?
Denver County, El Paso County, and Jefferson County receive the most funding.
| County | Total Grant Funding in 2024 |
|---|---|
| Denver County | $722,055,676 |
| El Paso County | $692,459,950 |
| Jefferson County | $346,494,820 |
| Boulder County | $317,496,019 |
| Larimer County | $315,001,998 |