American Center Yangon (ACY) Small Grants Competition
🏛 U.S. Mission to Myanmar
✓ Free, no account · Source: Grants.gov · Last verified Jul 15, 2026
Can you apply?
This grant is for organizations and individuals working on U.S. interests in Myanmar. Eligible applicants include U.S. and foreign nonprofits, think tanks, civil society organizations, educational institutions, alumni of USG exchanges, and individuals. For-profit entities are not eligible. Organizations must have a UEI and SAM.gov registration. Individuals do not need these registrations. Only one proposal per organization is allowed.
Projects must advance "America First" principles in four priority areas: making America safer (security, rule of law, counter-trafficking), making America stronger (education, workforce development), making America more prosperous (economic ties, entrepreneurship), or showcasing American excellence. Partisan political activities and purely charitable work are not supported.
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Program description
1. Project Background, Goals and Objectives
American Center Yangon Small Grants’ projects must clearly advance America First foreign policy principles by demonstrating how the proposed activities make the United States safer, stronger, and more prosperous, while celebrating Freedom250 and American excellence.
Priority will be given to projects that deliver tangible, measurable benefits to U.S. interests; elevate U.S. leadership and credibility; promote reciprocal and mutually beneficial engagement with Burma and focus on one of the priority areas outlined below.
AMERICA FIRST: MAKING AMERICA SAFER – Programs that directly advance the security and resilience of the United States by promoting American democratic governance and interests in Burma. This includes initiatives that reinforce the rule of law, counter trafficking, digital freedom, anti-scam awareness and corruption that threaten U.S. interests, uphold American-defined human rights, and empower civil society to create an environment that aligns with U.S. peace and security priorities in the region.
AMERICA FIRST: MAKING AMERICA STRONGER – Programs that advance America First priorities by equipping Burma’s students and young adults with skill‑based and vocational training that strengthens U.S.–relevant economic competitiveness. Proposals should promote accurate understanding of U.S. education, institutions, and culture; prepare potential qualified candidates for lawful study and exchange opportunities related to the United States; and build durable linkages with American academic, vocational, and cultural institutions. These may also include activities that strengthen the United States’ global leadership by promoting American values, and civic engagement rooted in U.S. principles. These programs should deepen U.S. influence in Burma, reinforce American cultural and educational standards, and build enduring partnerships that serve American diplomatic and strategic interests.
AMERICA FIRST: MAKING AMERICA MORE PROSPEROUS – Projects that advance U.S.–Burma economic ties and U.S. prosperity by strengthening entrepreneurs and businesses that align with U.S. commercial and strategic interests. Activities that expand economic opportunities for the United States by fostering innovation, entrepreneurship, and workforce development that benefit American businesses and industries. Priority will be given to programs that promote U.S.-led STEM education, vocational training aligned with American economic priorities, or trade capacity building that directly supports U.S. economic growth and reduces reliance on adversarial actors.
AMERICA FIRST: AMERICAN EXCELLENCE – Projects that showcase the superiority of American leadership, innovation, arts, and community service. These initiatives should highlight U.S. achievements and role models, inspire admiration for American values, and promote collaboration that advances U.S. interests in technology, entrepreneurship, education, and the arts, ensuring America’s continued prominence on the global stage. Activities may include programs that feature U.S. experts or content on Indo‑Pacific strategy, maritime and economic security, or resilient supply chains, and that clearly communicate U.S. strengths, values, and strategic objectives to Burma‑based audiences.
ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNING – Programs that advance America First priorities by providing Business English and English for Entrepreneurship essential to U.S.–linked trade, investment, and regional stability. Proposals should build high‑level English skills needed to work with American companies, navigate U.S. standards and contracts, participate in regional supply chains, and engage in lawful, rules‑based economic activity. Activities may include targeted English training for professionals, entrepreneurs, and future business leaders that uses U.S. materials, terminology, and case studies and clearly supports U.S. economic and strategic interests in the Indo‑Pacific.
Project Audiences:
· Youth and Young Adults: Including students, recent graduates, and emerging professionals in both urban centers and rural regions of Burma, with a focus on those from underserved or marginalized communities in Yangon.
· Civil Society Organizations: Local NGOs, advocacy groups, and community-based organizations in Yangon, engaged in promoting democratic governance, human rights, anti-corruption, and rule of law reforms.
· Commercial Advancement: Individuals and entities involved in innovation, trade, and workforce development that align with U.S.-Burma economic ties and regional supply chains.
· Educational and Cultural Institutions: Schools, vocational training centers, universities, and cultural organizations that facilitate bilateral exchanges and promote American cultural and educational standards.
Project Goals:
· Advance democratic governance and the rule of law in Burma by empowering civil society organizations to promote human rights, anti-corruption, and digital freedoms aligned with U.S. peace and security priorities.
· Enhance the skills and employability of Burmese youth and young adults through vocational training and English language programs that prepare them for lawful educational exchanges and economic participation linked to the United States.
· Strengthen U.S.-Burma economic ties by supporting entrepreneurship, innovation, and workforce development programs that foster trade capacity building and reduce reliance on adversarial actors.
· Promote American cultural excellence and leadership by facilitating educational, artistic, and community service initiatives that highlight U.S. values and strategic objectives in the Indo-Pacific region.
· Support sustainable, measurable outcomes by encouraging projects that incorporate robust monitoring, evaluation, and reporting mechanisms to demonstrate progress toward U.S. foreign policy goals.
Project Objectives:
· Objective 1: Promote American Democratic Governance
Enhance the institutional and operational capacity of at least 10 civil society organizations over a 12-month period to effectively advocate for rule of law, anti-trafficking measures, digital freedoms, and anti-corruption reforms. Success will be measured by the adoption and implementation of key organizational policies (e.g., financial management, transparency protocols), increased advocacy activities, and demonstrable influence on public policy aligned with U.S. peace and security priorities.
· Objective 2: Empower Youth through Vocational and English Language Training
Provide vocational skills development and high-level English language instruction to a minimum of 1,500 youth and young adults, improving their readiness for lawful educational exchanges, workforce participation, and engagement with U.S.-linked economic opportunities. Progress will be assessed via standardized skill assessments, participant retention rates, and post-training employment or education placement data.
· Objective 3: Commercial Advancement and Economic Competitiveness
Support at least 200 entrepreneurs and small businesses through training, mentorship, and capacity-building activities that promote innovation, STEM education, and trade capacity building. Programs should align with American economic priorities by enhancing workforce skills, facilitating access to U.S. markets, and reducing reliance on adversarial actors. Indicators of success include business growth metrics, increased participation in regional supply chains, and measurable expansion of U.S.-Burma commercial ties.
· Objective 4: Showcase American Excellence and Values
Develop and implement cultural, educational, and leadership programs that highlight American innovation, arts, community service, and strategic expertise in areas such as Indo-Pacific security, maritime resilience, and economic policy. These initiatives should engage local audiences, promote admiration for American values, and strengthen bilateral cultural ties. Success will be measured by audience reach, participant feedback, and enhanced understanding of U.S. strategic objectives.
Note: Please see detail information by clicking Related Document tab.
Who can apply
Eligible applicants
How to apply
Application links
Key dates & requirements
Required documents
- SAM.gov registration and UEI (for organizations)
- Project narrative/proposal
- Budget and budget narrative
- Proof of nonprofit status (for organizations)
- Sub-contract agreements (if applicable)
Program contact
- 👤 Min T Soe Grantor
- 📧 RangoonPDGrants@state.gov
- 📞 951536509
Funding track record
Recent awards under CFDA 19.022 from the last 3 years — real organizations that won funding through this same program.
Top 10 Largest Recent Awards
-
$570,002
-
$550,000
-
$500,000
-
$500,000
-
$425,000
-
$315,177
-
$290,000
-
$269,061
-
$268,500
-
$250,000
Source: USAspending.gov — federal spending transparency. Data covers last 3 years.
Funding history
Annual funding for this program — Federal obligations (CFDA 19.022). How funding has trended year over year.
| 2024 | $9,943,397 | |
| 2025 | $9,943,397 | |
| 2026 est. | $9,943,397 |
FAQ
Who can apply for this grant?
U.S. and foreign nonprofits, think tanks, educational institutions, USG exchange alumni, and individuals can apply. For-profit entities cannot apply. Organizations need a UEI and SAM.gov registration; individuals do not.
What geographic areas does this grant support?
This grant funds projects that advance U.S. interests specifically in Myanmar (Burma). Activities must support the four "America First" priority areas.
What types of projects are funded?
Projects that make America safer (security, rule of law), stronger (education, workforce development), more prosperous (economic ties), or showcase American excellence. Partisan political activity and purely charitable work are not eligible.
What is the funding range for awards?
Grants range from $5,000 to $20,000. The total funding pool is $100,000, so multiple awards will be made.
Can I submit multiple proposals?
No. Each organization can submit only one proposal. Multiple submissions will make all proposals from that organization ineligible.
💡 Tips for applicants
- Frame your project around how it advances U.S. interests in Myanmar, not just local community needs. Funders want tangible benefits to America.
- Choose one of the four priority areas (safer, stronger, more prosperous, or American excellence) and align your entire proposal to it.
- Be specific about measurable outcomes. Vague goals like "raise awareness" will not compete well for limited funding.
- Clearly explain any subcontracting arrangements and define each partner's role. Funders review this carefully.
- Register your organization in SAM.gov early. Technical registration issues often delay applications near the deadline.
⚠️ Common mistakes
Proposals that focus on general development or charity work rather than advancing U.S. strategic interests fail. Applications that don't clearly align with one priority area lack competitive focus. Submitted proposals from organizations with multiple applications cause all to be rejected.
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