Note: This is the second post in our ‘What Is’ series about the grant lifecycle and grant types.
A “discretionary” grant is a grant in which a federal agency selects the awardee (i.e., grant recipient) based on merit and eligibility. After you apply for a discretionary grant on Grants.gov, the applications are sent to the federal agency for a competitive review process and final funding decision.
The review process can vary for each program and federal agency. Here’s an example:
- Applications for a specialized type of research are likely to undergo rigorous peer review by a panel of subject matter experts
- Personnel in the federal agency also review the applications, and then make funding recommendations using the peer review results and their own assessments
- After multiple layers of review, a final funding decision is made based on the quality of the application and how well the proposed project will fulfill the program’s mission
So, what’s unique about a “discretionary” grant?
For discretionary grants, the federal awarding agencies review, assess, and evaluate the quality of the grant application to inform their funding decisions—it’s a competitive process.
There are other types of grants, such as mandatory, formula, or block grants, where federal agencies have less discretion in the final funding decision. For these types, grants are awarded based on the minimum eligibility and qualification requirements prescribed by legislation.
We’ll discuss these other grants as we continue our What Is series. Look for our next article in the series—What Is a Mandatory Grant?
Do you have questions or ideas about grant types? Post a comment below. Read our Comment and Privacy Policy.
Why are you charging for getting the Grants they said anyone that charges don’t go to, and what if after you charge they don’t get the grant, do you refund their money, or are you a scam like many others out there.
please reply, Stan Morris
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Hey Stan, we (i.e., the government) do not charge people for grants. It’s free to apply for grants on Grants.gov. Please review the Grant Fraud section of our website for more info http://www.grants.gov/web/grants/learn-grants/grant-fraud.html
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Very interesting information
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can i get a grant for houseing
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Hi Cynthia, please visit Benefits.gov and use the Benefits Finder tool to identify potential housing benefit opportunities: http://www.benefits.gov/benefits/benefit-finder#benefits&qc=cat_1 You may also want to visit this link on HUD.gov: http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/topics/rental_assistance
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This is cool and interesting
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