How to use this list
- If you are a youth program or school-adjacent program: start with FFA Living to Serve, then Wild Ones (native habitat education), then state-level specialty crop funding.
- If you are a grower (or a nonprofit that actively farms): start with SARE (producer-led trials) and NRCS EQIP (season extension or organic transition support).
- If you are an organization proposing research or education for organic producers: look at USDA NIFA OREI (large, partnership-heavy) and Herb Society of America (small, focused research).
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Details: U.S. | Cash | Multiple grant sizes and time horizons (mini-grants up to $500; semester up to $1,200; yearlong up to $3,000; state-level days of service up to $8,000)
- Best for: Middle/high school FFA chapters (and alumni/collegiate chapters for some options) funding a defined service project that can include food access, sustainability, or garden build-outs.
- Funds: Service-learning projects by scope (one-day events through full-year projects).
- Key requirements: Project must map to one of four focus areas (community safety; hunger, health and nutrition; environmental responsibility; community engagement).
- Tip: This is a strong fit when you can describe a tight project plan, named partners, a short timeline, and clear deliverables (beds installed, pounds grown/donated, student hours, workshops delivered).
Details: U.S. | Cash | Final cycle ending in 2026; applications due March 1, 2026 | 501(c)(3) or IRC 7871 tax-exempt entities
- Best for: Nonprofits working on development, research, or education in the organic industry and cooperative community; also projects advancing organic/natural products or cooperative development.
- Funds: Organic and natural products development, research/education, and cooperative development in the natural products or organic industry.
- Key requirements: They cannot grant to individuals or organizations that are not tax-exempt; 501(c)(3) status (or IRC 7871 tax exemption) is required.
- Tip: Lead with why your project accelerates organic adoption or organic market capacity, then tie it to measurable community outcomes and a realistic budget narrative.
Details: U.S. | Cash | $10,000 total annually (may be split) | Herb-focused research with historical, horticultural, scientific, or medicinal angle
- Best for: Small, self-contained research projects that deepen knowledge and use of herbs, especially when the project can produce a clear write-up and shareable findings.
- Funds: The organization describes this as a research grant intended for small projects over a short period; the published program guidance also outlines allowable and non-allowable costs.
- Key requirements: Their published program guidance indicates applicants are U.S.-based and the recipient is affiliated with a nonprofit fiscal agent. Confirm the current-year deadline on the program page and instructions because posted materials can differ.
- Tip: Propose one precise research question, a lean methodology, and a dissemination plan that goes beyond “publish a report” (for example: a short grower-facing guide, workshop, or extension-style handout).
Details: U.S. | Cash | $100 to $500 | Youth outdoor learning using native plants (not vegetable gardens) | 2027 season application window July 15 to Nov 18, 2026
- Best for: Pollinator gardens, rain gardens, native plant habitat, sensory or nature play spaces that engage youth directly in planning and planting.
- Funds: Native plants and seeds for hands-on youth learning spaces.
- Key requirements: Must use native plants; the program explicitly notes it does not fund vegetable gardens.
- Tip: A simple maintenance plan (who waters, who weeds, what happens over breaks) is often the difference between “good idea” and “fundable project.”
Details: California | Cash | Smaller minimum awards with technical assistance; multiple programs with rotating open periods
- Best for: California-based community groups doing tree planting and care, outreach/education, volunteer development, or green jobs training as part of community greening.
- Funds: Pass-through grants designed to make urban forestry funding more accessible for smaller groups, including technical support.
- Key requirements: California focus; specific program rules vary by grant round.
- Tip: They prioritize community engagement and thoughtful placement for multi-benefit impact. If you can show community leadership and stewardship, you are speaking their language.
Details: U.S. (regional) | Cash (often reimbursement) | Recent maxima vary by region (example: Western Farmer/Rancher up to $35,000; North Central $15,000 individual / $30,000 team; Southern Producer $20,000 individual / $25,000 organizations)
- Best for: Testing a specific growing innovation (including organic systems, controlled environment agriculture, season extension, water/energy efficiency, soil health) and sharing results with other growers.
- Funds: Producer-driven research plus outreach, with reporting and knowledge-sharing expectations.
- Key requirements: Eligibility and mechanics vary by region; SARE commonly frames funding around research and education (not general operating support), and some programs require a technical advisor.
- Tip: Write the proposal like an experiment: one change, measurable outcomes, and a clear plan for sharing results (field day, short guide, local workshop).
Details: U.S. | Cost-share assistance (technical and financial) | Season extension infrastructure
- Best for: Growers extending the season for vegetables, starts, herbs, and nursery crops; often pairs well with organic transition plans.
- Note: Eligibility varies by state and local NRCS office. If you are exploring EQIP support for season extension infrastructure, contact your local NRCS office to confirm which structures and practices qualify in your area.
- Funds: NRCS describes this as targeted assistance to promote use of high tunnels for benefits including longer growing season.
- Key requirements: Details vary by local NRCS office and state payment schedules; typically requires producer eligibility and conservation planning steps.
- Tip: If hydroponics is in view, clarify whether your plan is a high tunnel plus hydroponic system inside, or a separate indoor facility; EQIP tends to be strongest for the season-extension structure itself.
Details: U.S. | Cost-share assistance (technical and financial) | Organic and transitioning producers
- Best for: Certified organic farms, or farms transitioning to organic, seeking support for conservation practices that improve soil health, pest management systems, and resilience.
- Funds: NRCS describes this as a voluntary conservation program providing technical and financial assistance for organic farmers/ranchers, or those interested in transitioning to organic.
- Key requirements: Work is administered through NRCS locally; requirements and practice lists vary by state.
- Tip: When you talk to NRCS, show up with a short list of the practices you want to implement and the production problem you are solving (labor, weeds, water, soil, season extension).
Details: U.S. | Cash via state Departments of Agriculture | Specialty crops include horticulture and nursery crops (including floriculture) | Non-federal entities apply through their state, not directly to USDA
- Best for: Nonprofits, associations, educational institutions, and coalitions proposing projects that improve specialty crop competitiveness via education, market development, research, or workforce development.
- Funds: State-run subawards that can support horticulture, nursery, greenhouse, and food systems projects tied to specialty crops.
- Key requirements: Only state Departments of Agriculture apply to USDA; other entities submit proposals to the appropriate state program when their RFP is open.
- Tip: Treat this like a state procurement process. Read your state’s RFP carefully and mirror their scoring rubric (target audiences, measurable outcomes, industry benefit).
Details: U.S. | Research + education + extension | Fieldwork on certified organic land or land transitioning to organic, as appropriate
- Best for: Larger, partnership-heavy proposals that produce practical, research-based information for organic producers, plus education and outreach delivery.
- Funds: Integrated research, education, and extension activities aimed at key organic agriculture issues and producer needs.
- Key requirements: Typically not “small grant” complexity. You usually need credible partners (extension, university, or established nonprofit) and a concrete outreach plan.
- Tip: If your community organization is the applicant, consider partnering with an extension office or university as a co-lead, with you as the on-the-ground implementation and outreach engine.
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Watchlist (relevant, but currently closed)
Details: U.S., Canada, Mexico | Up to $20,000 | Not currently accepting applications (newsletter signup recommended)
- Best for: Farmer-led organic research trials with outreach, often in partnership with researchers.