Behavioral Health Grants for HBCU

As of July 2026, Grantoria lists 11 Behavioral Health Grants for HBCU — 6 open right now, across 2 funding agencies. Award amounts range $200K to $8.5M. The next application deadline is September 7, 2026. All listings are free, with direct links to the official application.

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11total grants
6open now
2agencies
$200K–$8.5Mfunding range
Sep 7next deadline

Frequently asked questions

How many behavioral health grants for hbcu are available?
Grantoria currently lists 11 behavioral health grants for hbcu, of which 6 are open for applications right now. The database is refreshed daily from official federal sources (Grants.gov and SAM.gov).
When is the next deadline?
The next application deadline is September 7, 2026 — about 52 days away. Deadlines vary by program; open any grant to see its exact closing date and application window.
How much funding is available?
Award sizes range from $200K to $8.5M, depending on the program and applicant. Each grant shows its specific funding range where the agency has published one.
Is Grantoria free to use?
Yes — Grantoria is completely free. No account or subscription is required to browse behavioral health grants for hbcu, view deadlines and eligibility, or reach the official application.
How do I apply?
Open any grant to see its full profile — eligibility, required documents, deadlines and a direct link to the official application on the funding agency's website. You apply through the federal portal; Grantoria simply helps you find the right opportunity.

About Behavioral Health Grants for HBCU

The National Institutes of Health leads funding for behavioral health research and capacity-building initiatives at historically Black colleges and universities. With 6,404 active grants in this category, HBCUs have significant opportunities to advance mental health science, substance abuse prevention, and health disparities research through NIH's competitive funding mechanisms.

These grants typically support multi-year projects with no cost-sharing requirements, making them accessible to institutions with limited matching resources. Nearly all awards use competitive application models, ensuring rigorous peer review of proposals. Filtering by support type—particularly Research versus Capacity Building—will help identify grants aligned with your institution's current priorities and infrastructure stage.