Information for Entrepreneurial Researchers - Funding at NSF | NSF - U.S. National Science Foundation

Source: https://www.nsf.gov/funding/entrepreneurs

Archived: 2026-04-23 17:35

Information for Entrepreneurial Researchers - Funding at NSF | NSF - U.S. National Science Foundation
Updates to NSF Research Security Policies
On July 10, 2025, NSF issued an
Important Notice
providing updates to the agency's research security policies, including a research security training requirement, Malign Foreign Talent Recruitment Program annual certification requirement, prohibition on Confucius institutes and an updated FFDR reporting and submission timeline.
Information for Entrepreneurial Researchers
Funding at NSF
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The U.S. National Science Foundation offers a variety of grants, fellowships and other funding for entrepreneurial scientists and engineers.
This page highlights key funding opportunities for those interested in moving their idea from the lab to the market.
Learn more about NSF's support of use-inspired and translational research on the
Directorate for Technology, Innovation and Partnerships
website. And visit the
Funding Search
to explore all of NSF's funding opportunities.
On this page
America's Seed Fund
Who can apply: Startups and small businesses
America's Seed Fund powered by NSF
, the Small Business Innovation Research and Small Business Technology Transfer (SBIR/STTR) programs, funds hundreds of deep-tech startups each year working across almost all areas of science and technology.
Each startup can receive up to $2 million from NSF for early-stage research and development; NSF takes no equity in the companies it funds.
Small businesses located in the United States are eligible to apply. Visit the
America's Seed Fund website
for full eligibility criteria.
To apply to America's Seed Fund, you must first submit a Project Pitch to NSF, which can be done at any time. Visit the
America's Seed Fund website
for instructions on how to apply.
Convergence Accelerator
Who can apply: Researchers at universities, for-profit and nonprofit organizations
NSF's
Convergence Accelerator
funds transdisciplinary teams of researchers, innovators and other partners from academia, industry, nonprofits, government and other sectors to co-design and co-create technology advances that in turn solve societal and economic challenges.
Teams funded by the program must complete an innovation curriculum under the guidance of mentors and coaches who help steer their projects toward high-impact, societally focused deliverables. Teams can receive up to $5.75 million across two phases.
This hands-on program is recommended for researchers or innovators who are still advancing their research and are interested in gaining use-inspired research skills such as human-centered design, customer discovery and early-stage prototyping.
U.S.-based institutions of higher education, nonprofit organizations and for-profit organizations are eligible to apply. To see the full eligibility criteria,
read the latest
solicitation or broad agency announcement.
Find open Convergence Accelerator funding opportunities and announcements about upcoming research tracks on the NSF
Funding Search
website.
Innovative Postdoctoral Entrepreneurial Research Fellowship
Who can apply: Individuals with doctorates in an NSF-supported STEM discipline
Funded by NSF, the
Innovative Postdoctoral Entrepreneurial Research Fellowship
(I-PERF) recruits, trains, mentors, matches and funds early-career, Ph.D.-level scientists and engineers so they can participate in innovative entrepreneurial activities at some of the nation’s most promising startup companies.
Fellows receive an annual stipend of $78,000, optional individual health and life insurance benefits, relocation assistance to the approved host company, a professional conference travel allowance, and scripted professional development training.
Applicants must have earned a doctoral degree in an NSF-supported STEM discipline within the last seven years. Only U.S. citizens, nationals or permanent residents are eligible to apply. See the
I-PERF website
for full eligibility criteria.
Visit the
I-PERF website
to apply.
NSF Entrepreneurial Fellowship
Who can apply: Individuals with research, engineering or technology development experience
Through an agreement with Activate, NSF-funded
Entrepreneurial Fellows
can develop research breakthroughs into new products and services with broad societal and economic benefits.
Fellows receive at least $350,000 in direct support over two years, including a stipend, travel allowance, research funding and additional flexible capital. In addition to mentorship and funding, fellows gain access to vital research tools, equipment, facilities and expertise through collaboration with host laboratories.
Activate takes no rights to fellows' intellectual property; fellows retain ownership of any intellectual property developed during their fellowship term.
Applicants must have a bachelor's degree and four or more years of post-baccalaureate scientific research, engineering or technology development experience. See the
Activate website
for full eligibility criteria.
Activate accepts applications each year. Visit the
Activate website
to learn more.
NSF Innovation Corps (I-Corps™️)
Who can apply: University-based researchers
The
Innovation Corps Teams program
supports researchers interested in entrepreneurial education and mentoring, with the goal of reducing the time it takes to bring technologies from the laboratory to the marketplace.
Researchers participate in the seven-week program as a team of three that consists of a technical lead, entrepreneurial lead and business mentor. Participants learn the art of customer discovery and business planning from seasoned entrepreneurs.
There are two pathways for eligibility to the NSF I-Corps program:
Prior NSF research award:
Researchers who have a relevant and related research award from NSF that has been active within the past five years in any area of science or engineering are eligible to apply to the NSF I-Corps program.
Regional I-Corps training:
Researchers who have not received a research award from NSF may earn eligibility to the NSF I-Corps Teams program by first participating in a regional I-Corps program and receiving a letter of recommendation to the national program.
Find a regional program.
To apply to the program, start by forming a team. Each team consists of three to five members, including a technical lead, an entrepreneurial lead and an industry mentor. Each team must first apply by submitting an executive summary; learn more on the
I-Corps website
.
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