Animal Disease and Animal Care

CFDA 10.025 Active Grant Cooperative Agreement

Open Opportunities (1)

Live Grants.gov opportunities funded under this program — you can apply now.

Program Funding

Annual program obligations reported to SAM.gov.

Latest annual funding (estimated)
$91M FY2026
$103.6M
FY24
$92.8M
FY25
$91M
FY26*
* estimated

Who has received this funding

Organizations awarded under CFDA 10.025 (USAspending.gov).

Funded Projects

Examples of what this program has supported.

FY2025 An APHIS cooperative agreement enhanced animal emergency response coordination. In FY 2025, APHIS cooperative agreement provided outreach, including on HPAI, to more than 680 exotic animal stakeholders, including zoos, aquariums, wildlife parks, sanctuaries, rehabilitation facilities, service centers, professional associations, hobbyist groups, private owners, private veterinary practitioners and other governmental emergency management agencies.
*Continued to enforce an African swine fever (ASF) protection zone in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands to prevent the disease from spreading to these locations or the U.S. mainland and assisted the Dominican Republic and Haiti in their ASF eradication programs to help contain the disease
*Monitored U.S. livestock health, including testing 23,783 samples for ASF and/or classical swine fever (with all results negative), and conducting 3,515 foreign animal disease investigations, of which 1,464 involved investigations of vesicular diseases such as foot-and-mouth disease and 1,322 involved poultry diseases
*Invested $16.9 million in the National Animal Vaccine and Veterinary Countermeasures Bank
*Licensed 86 manufacturers and permit holders for 1,448 active product licenses/permits for the control of 278 animal diseases
*Initiated an emergency program to address nationwide detections of highly pathogenic avian influenza
*Endorsed 329,344 health certificates to facilitate safe animal and animal product exports and approved 2,663 facilities to export U.S. animal products
FY2026 Emergency Preparedness & Response in the fields of Contingency planning, Exotic Animals, Animal Welfare Act.

Program Objective

To protect U.S. agriculture from economically injurious animal diseases ensure the safety and potency of veterinary biologic, and ensure the humane treatment of animals. APHIS monitors and responds to potential diseases of livestock, wildlife, and invasive species as it strives to assure its stakeholders that it is on guard against the introduction or re-emergence of animal diseases that could limit agricultural production.

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants

  • Unrestricted by Entity Type
  • Unrestricted by Individual Type
  • Tribal Government (other)
  • International Organization
  • Nonprofit Organization

Foreign, State, local, and U.S. Territorial government agencies, Indian Tribes, nonprofit institutions of higher education, and nonprofit associations or organizations requiring Federal support to eradicate, control, or assess the status of injurious plant and animal diseases and pests that are a threat to regional or national agriculture and conduct related demonstration projects.

Beneficiaries

  • Unrestricted by Entity Type
  • Unrestricted by Individual Type

Farmers, ranchers, agriculture producers, State, local, U.S. Territorial government agencies, public and private institutions and organizations benefit from Federal assistance to eradicate or control injurious plant and animal diseases and pests that are a threat to regional or national agriculture.

How to Apply

Award Procedure

Applications are approved by the Administrator or Authorized Departmental Officers (ADOs) upon determination that the project will contribute toward accomplishment of the Agency's overall mission and meet any established project evaluation/selection criteria.

Decision Timeline

  • Approval: From 60 to 90 days

From 60 to 120 days.

Program details & compliance

Description

APHIS’ Veterinary Services program protects and improves the health, quality, and marketability of our Nation’s animals, animal products, and veterinary biologics. Our team includes veterinary medical officers, animal health technicians, epidemiologists, statisticians, and many others in specialized fields.

Mission Categories

Primary: Agricultural Resource Conservation and Development

Other categories:
Production and OperationAgriculture Stabilization and ConservationForestrySustainable Agricultural Systems

Use of Funds

Allowed Uses

Conduct surveys, inspections to detect and appraise infestations, eradication and control activities, and carry out regulatory actions to prevent interstate spread of infestations and diseases.

Restrictions

See 2CFR part 200 Subpart E - Cost Principles

Reporting & Compliance

Records Retention
3 years

Applicable 2 CFR 200 Subparts

  • Subpart B — General Provisions
  • Subpart C — Pre-Federal Award Requirements
  • Subpart D — Post-Federal Award Requirements
  • Subpart E — Cost Principles
  • Subpart F — Audit Requirements

Contacts

Michael Peranio
(301) 851-2835
5601 Sunnyside Avenue, Beltsville, MD 20705
Data from SAM.gov Federal Assistance Listings. Source published: 2026-02-05. Spec v2.0. Last synced: 2026-05-28 07:29:28.