EU Grant Programmes Database

Showing 20 of 5396 grant calls

Closed

Markets & networking

CREA Project Grants

Budget:€7 500 000
Deadline:August 24, 2021
Closed

Partnerships for Cooperation - Cooperation Partnerships in the field of Education and Training submitted by European NGOs

ERASMUS Lump Sum Grants

Budget:€2 200 000
Deadline:March 5, 2024
Closed

Improved warheads

EDF Research Actions

Budget:€10 000 000
Deadline:December 8, 2021
Closed

Unmanned ground vehicle technologies

EDF Research Actions

Budget:€41 000 000
Deadline:December 8, 2021
Closed

Competence Centre for 3D (deployment)

DIGITAL Simple Grants

Budget:€2 000 000
Deadline:May 29, 2024
Closed

Call for proposals to promote gender equality

CERV Lump Sum Grants

Budget:€10 100 000
Deadline:April 9, 2024
Closed

Capacity Building in the field of Youth

ERASMUS Lump Sum Grants

Budget:€9 230 000
Deadline:March 6, 2024
Closed

EIC Pathfinder Open

HORIZON EIC Grants

Budget:€179 500 000
Deadline:March 7, 2023
Closed

RFCS-2021 Coal Pilot and Demonstration Projects

RFCS Project Grants

Budget:€11 362 500
Deadline:September 22, 2021
Closed

Inland waterways and ports: studies, works or mixed

CEF Infrastructure Projects

Budget:€2 800 000 000
Deadline:January 30, 2024
Closed

Rail: studies, works or mixed

CEF Infrastructure Projects

Budget:€250 000 000
Deadline:January 30, 2024
Closed

Improving transport infrastructure resilience: studies, works or mixed

CEF Infrastructure Projects

Budget:€150 000 000
Deadline:January 30, 2024
Closed

Road safety: studies, works or mixed

CEF Infrastructure Projects

Budget:€150 000 000
Deadline:January 30, 2024
Closed

Resilient and secure urban planning and new tools for EU territorial entities

HORIZON Innovation Actions

Budget:€5 000 000
Deadline:November 19, 2024
Closed

Demand-led innovation through public procurement

HORIZON Pre-commercial Procurement

Budget:€6 000 000
Deadline:November 19, 2024
Closed

Endo-atmospheric interceptor – concept phase

EDF Research Actions

Budget:€28 000 000
Deadline:December 8, 2021
Closed

European Platforms for the promotion of emerging artists

CREA Lump Sum Grants

Budget:€33 000 000
Deadline:September 29, 2021
Closed

Roads, rail-road terminals and multimodal logistic platforms: studies, works or mixed

CEF Infrastructure Projects

Budget:€250 000 000
Deadline:January 30, 2024
Closed

Ship Structural Health Monitoring

EDF Research Actions

Budget:€43 500 000
Deadline:December 8, 2021
Closed

European Networks of Cultural and Creative Organisations

CREA Lump Sum Grants

Budget:€27 000 000
Deadline:August 26, 2021

Frequently Asked Questions

A call is the funding invitation (with deadlines). A topic is the specific scope within a call (what the EU wants funded and what outcomes/impacts they expect). An action is the funding scheme/type of project (e.g., RIA/IA/CSA) that sets rules like budget model and evaluation emphasis.
It’s the project “scheme” that defines the goal and many rules. RIA = Research and Innovation Action; IA = Innovation Action; CSA = Coordination and Support Action; COFUND = co-funding programme; MSCA = Marie Skłodowska‑Curie Actions; EIC = European Innovation Council calls. Type of Action affects eligibility, consortium needs, funding rates/cost rules, and evaluation focus.
Single-stage means you submit the full proposal once. Two-stage means you first submit a short proposal (stage 1); only shortlisted applicants are invited to submit a full proposal (stage 2).
Associated Countries have an agreement with the EU programme, so their entities typically participate on (almost) the same terms as EU Member States. Non‑Associated (Third) Countries may be allowed to participate, but funding eligibility can differ by call and country—always check the call conditions.
“Participating countries” are those allowed to take part in the programme/call. “Eligible countries” usually refers to countries whose organisations are eligible to receive EU funding under that call. Some participants may join without EU funding depending on the rules.
An SME is generally an organisation with fewer than 250 employees and either turnover ≤ €50M or balance sheet total ≤ €43M, plus “autonomy/ownership” criteria. It’s typically declared by the applicant and can be verified during grant preparation or audits using corporate/financial information.
Many Horizon calls require a consortium (often at least 3 independent entities from 3 different EU/Associated countries). Some schemes/calls allow single beneficiaries (common in ERC/EIC-type calls and some CSAs). The call’s eligibility/admissibility conditions are the source of truth.
TRL is a 1–9 scale describing technology maturity (1 = basic principles; 9 = proven in real operations). Pick a call whose expected TRL range matches your start point and the TRL you can credibly reach by the end of the project; RIAs tend to target lower TRLs than IAs.
Expected outcomes are the direct results the EU expects from funded projects (short/medium term). Expected impacts are the longer-term changes those outcomes should contribute to (economic, societal, environmental, strategic). Strong proposals trace a clear path from activities → outcomes → impacts.
Work packages (WPs) are major blocks of work. Tasks are the concrete activities within a WP. Deliverables are tangible outputs you submit (reports, prototypes, datasets, etc.). Milestones are checkpoints used to track progress and decisions.
Many Horizon calls use three criteria: Excellence (quality of concept and methodology), Impact (value and credibility of expected outcomes/impacts), and Implementation (work plan, resources, team/consortium). Weighting and wording can vary by call and Type of Action.
A threshold is the minimum score required for a criterion (and sometimes an overall minimum). Proposals that pass thresholds are ranked by total score (and sometimes tie-break rules). Funding is offered from the top of the ranked list until the available budget is exhausted.
Time‑to‑grant is the time from deadline to signing the Grant Agreement. GAP is the phase after selection where you provide validations/administrative info, confirm budget details, and finalise the grant agreement.
Eligible costs are necessary for the project, incurred during the action, properly recorded, and compliant with the grant rules. Ineligible costs are not reimbursed (common examples include fines/penalties, some taxes like recoverable VAT, and costs not linked to the action). Always follow the specific programme rules for the call.
Direct costs are clearly attributable to the project (personnel, travel, equipment depreciation, subcontracting, etc.). Indirect costs are overheads (rent, utilities, admin) usually reimbursed as a flat rate—often 25% of eligible direct costs (excluding some categories, depending on the programme rules).
A lump sum grant pays a fixed amount for completing agreed work (typically per work package). Reporting focuses on whether the work/deliverables were completed as agreed, rather than reimbursing actual costs line-by-line.
Subcontracting is purchasing a service from an external provider for a defined task (with procurement/value-for-money rules). “Third parties” can mean linked/affiliated entities contributing resources. “In‑kind contributions” are non-cash resources provided to the project (e.g., equipment use or staff time), under specific conditions.
Typically, you must provide open access to peer‑reviewed publications and manage research data under FAIR principles via a Data Management Plan (DMP). Exceptions can apply for confidentiality, security, IP protection, or other justified reasons.
Communication is outreach to the public and stakeholders about the project and its value. Dissemination is sharing results with target audiences (researchers/industry) to enable uptake. Exploitation is turning results into real use (products, services, standards, policy, further investment).
In Horizon Europe, many public bodies, higher education establishments, and research organisations established in EU/Associated countries must have a GEP in place to be eligible. Exact applicability depends on organisation type and the current programme rules.
Projects often complete an ethics self‑assessment and may need approvals (e.g., human participants, animal research, sensitive data). If you process personal data, you must comply with GDPR and implement appropriate safeguards (lawful basis, minimisation, security, retention, etc.).
Background IP is what partners bring in before the project; results (sometimes called foreground) are created during the project. Access rights define who can use what for implementation and exploitation. A consortium agreement typically governs ownership, access, publication review, and exploitation rules among partners.