$1.1m More Per Year
The Instrumentl Impact Report
Looking for Plant Grants in Colorado? Find the perfect grant for your nonprofit on Instrumentl
Skip the search. Get matched with grants that fit your non-profit.
Smart recommendations based on your profile — in minutes.
Smart recommendations based on your profile — in minutes.
Environmental Justice Grant Program
The Colorado Environmental Justice Grant Program: Community solutions to improve environmental health
The Environmental Justice Grant Program funds projects to ensure every community has a healthy environment in which to live, learn, work, and play.
These projects help measure, prevent, or reduce pollution in disproportionately impacted communities. Disproportionately impacted communities include low-income communities, communities of color, communities impacted by pollution and climate change, and additional categories. Funding can also help pay for technical assistance to help community organizations most effectively participate in rulemaking hearings. To see if your community qualifies for these grants, check out Disproportionately Impacted Communities Map.
The Environmental Justice Act created this grant opportunity to help communities disproportionately impacted by pollution and climate change. The Environmental Justice Advisory Board oversees the program and serves as the grant selection committee.
The grant program will fund projects that measure, prevent, or reduce pollution to protect public health or restore the environment. Projects can focus on any of the following topics:
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:
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.
The Laura Jane Musser Fund was established by the estate of Laura Jane Musser of Little Falls, Minnesota to continue the personal philanthropy, which she practiced in her lifetime.
Environmental Initiative Program
The Laura Jane Musser Fund assists public or not-for-profit entities to initiate or implement projects that enhance the ecological integrity of publicly owned open spaces, while encouraging compatible human activities. The Fund’s goal is to promote public use of open space that improves a community’s quality of life and public health, while also ensuring the protection of healthy, viable and sustainable ecosystems by protecting or restoring habitat for a diversity of plant and animal species.
Projects must..
Projects during any one grant period will be eligible for either:
Environmental Initiative - Implementation Grant Program
Implementation grant applications must demonstrate clear evidence of local community active participation and support.
Projects will be eligible for either planning or implementation funds during any one grant period.
Enterprise Community Partners
Enterprise Community Partners is a national nonprofit that exists to make a good home possible for the millions of families without one. Home is where life happens, where plans are made, and futures begin. It is the foundation for dignity, health, education, wealth, and community. Yet rents keep going up, paychecks don’t keep pace, and good homes in strong neighborhoods are increasingly out of reach.
The system doesn’t work. It must be changed, and it must be changed by us.
Enterprise has the breadth, scale, and expertise to do it. We support community development organizations on the ground. We aggregate and invest billions to improve housing and strengthen communities across the U.S. We advance housing policy at every level of government. We build and manage communities ourselves. Everything we do is informed by the residents we serve.
Together with our partners, we focus on the greatest need — the massive shortage of affordable rental homes — to achieve three goals:
Since 1982, we have invested $92.0 billion and created 1.1 million homes across all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands. We do all this to make home and community places of pride, power, and belonging.
National Housing Innovation Grant Competition
Home is foundational. It’s where we plant roots, raise and care for our families, and build community bonds. Yet in every corner of the country, millions of people of all ages and backgrounds need a home they can afford.
Wells Fargo is meeting this moment with a powerful grant opportunity. Together with Enterprise, Wells Fargo has launched the third iteration of the Housing Affordability Breakthrough Challenge. The 2026 cycle of the housing innovation competition will identify and propel proven, ready-to-scale solutions that transform current practices and increase housing choice and access.
Eligible applicants will compete for five individual grants of $2 million to advance their innovation and drive meaningful, systems-level change in the housing and adjacent industries. Winners will gain access to mentorship and coaching from industry leaders and experts and join a powerful network of Breakthrough Challenge innovators.
Focus Areas
This third cycle of the Housing Affordability Breakthrough Challenge aims to meet the nation’s affordable housing challenges across all types of communities: Native, rural, suburban, tribal, and urban.
Proposals must encompass one or more of three focus areas:
Applicants will be asked to show how their proof of concept or pilot program has achieved clear outcomes and success, and provide a clear pathway to expanding the innovation’s reach and impact
Round 1: Criteria and Scoring
Your innovation must meet the criteria below to advance to the official scoring stage.
Type of Community
Innovations can serve all types of communities:
Location
Priority scoring will be given to applications from entities that are based in – or whose innovations are designed for – one or more of these 28 states, plus D.C.:
Affordability
Innovations must serve residents at these income levels:
Showing 27 of 30+ results.
Sign up to see the full listWhat's the typical amount funded for Colorado?
Grants are most commonly $93,435.
What's the total number of grants in Plant Grants in Colorado year over year?
In 2024, funders in Colorado awarded a total of 25,497 grants.
Among all the Plant Grants 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
How is funding for Plant Grants in Colorado changing over time?
Funding has increased by -53.64%.
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 |
Make New Friends But Keep the Old: A Case for Consistent Prospecting w/ Amy Mauser
Grant Experts Share How to Scale the Number of Grant Proposals You Send This Year
We Won That Grant: A 5-Step Blueprint to Successful Post-Award Management | Instrumentl Workshop
Stages Of Grant Research Nonprofits Go Through As They Grow