Regional food-security grant. This funder gave to two food pantries in your region last year.
Find out which grants your organization can win. Before you spend a dollar.
A private rundown of every open federal grant and foundation funder that appears to fit your organization, each scored 0–100 with the reason in plain English. It's free: no forms, no intake call. One email with your organization's name is enough.
No forms, no intake call. One email is enough.
Most "free grant assessments" start with a homework packet. Ours starts with your organization's name.
Your public record already says most of what a funder would see: your IRS filings, your budget size, your county, your cause. We build the report from that, the same way a skeptical program officer would look at you, and score every open opportunity against it.
You get the finished report and a 15-minute call to walk through it, if you want one. If nothing scores well right now, the report says that too. We only ever propose grants we believe you can win. An honest "not yet" costs you nothing; a flattering list of long shots would cost you months.
What's in the report
Every match, scored 0–100
Federal and foundation opportunities that appear to fit your cause, county, and size, ranked by how winnable they are for you, not how big they sound.
The funders' receipts
For foundation matches, we show what the funder actually gave last year: recipients and amounts from their own IRS filings. You approach people who already fund work like yours.
A real sample draft
A Statement of Need for an actual grant you appear to qualify for, written from public data about your community and your organization. It's yours to keep: use it, edit it, or hand it to another writer. No hard feelings.
Rural health orgs: the deadlines after the win
If your organization holds a federal award (a Rural Health Transformation subaward, an HRSA health center grant, any of them), your report adds a calendar of the reporting deadlines that come with it, plus a preview of the written justification a 2025 executive order now requires each time you draw funds down. Same public data, no extra cost.
What yours will look like
Rural health infrastructure grant. Strong county fit; one match-funding question to resolve. Six weeks out.
Youth literacy fund. A beautiful mission that has never funded south of Georgia.
A Tampa-area family foundation that gave $410K to food-security programs last year and accepts letters year-round.
A Statement of Need for your top-scoring match, written from public data about your community. Yours to keep.
Illustrative report. Yours is built from your organization's own public record, covering what's actually open when we write it.
Why free? Because it's how we earn the conversation. Some organizations will take the report and run with it themselves. Good. The ones that want help finishing an application become clients, already knowing exactly where they stand.
Not ready for a report about your org? Start smaller: Grant Radar — Florida is our free weekly email of winnable opportunities for organizations like yours. Read it for a few Mondays and request the report when something catches your eye.
And when you're ready to actually apply, here's how the writing service works.
Request your free report
Tell us your organization's name and where to send the report. We prepare reports in the order requests arrive; you'll hear back within five business days either way.
Email us your organization's nameButton not working? Email hello@winnablegrants.com with the subject "Free Winnable-Grant Report" and your organization's name.
Free, private, no obligation. No follow-up sequence hounding you.