A business grant is a sum of money awarded to a business that does not need to be repaid. Unlike a business loan or equity financing , grants are non-dilutive and non-repayable, making them one of the most attractive forms of business funding available.

However, grants are competitive, often restrictive in how the money can be used, and typically require match funding — meaning you must contribute a percentage of the project cost yourself.

How Business Grants Work

Grant funding follows a structured process:

  1. A grant scheme is announced by a government body, local authority, or private organisation with a specific purpose (e.g. innovation, job creation, sustainability)
  2. Businesses apply by submitting a detailed application demonstrating how they meet the criteria
  3. Applications are assessed competitively, with awards going to the strongest proposals
  4. Funds are released — often in stages, against evidence of expenditure (not upfront)
  5. Reporting — Grant recipients must demonstrate how the money was spent and what outcomes were achieved

Most grants are paid in arrears or instalments, so you need cash flow to cover costs before claiming the grant. An overdraft or other short-term finance may be needed to bridge this gap.

Types of Business Grants in the UK

Innovate UK / UKRI Grants

Innovate UK, part of UK Research and Innovation (UKRI), is the largest public funder of business innovation in the UK. Programmes include:

  • Smart Grants — Open to any sector, funding innovative projects with strong commercial potential, typically £25,000 to £2 million
  • Knowledge Transfer Partnerships (KTPs) — Collaborative projects between businesses and universities
  • Innovate UK Loans — Interest-free loans for late-stage R&D
  • Sector-specific competitions — Targeted funding rounds for areas like net zero, health tech, and defence

Government Grants

Various UK government departments offer grants for specific purposes:

  • British Business Bank programmes — Including Start Up Loans (technically loans, not grants, but government-backed with favourable terms)
  • Department for Business and Trade — Export grants and trade support
  • HMRC R&D Tax Credits — Not a grant per se, but a tax relief that refunds a portion of qualifying R&D expenditure

Devolved Government Grants

Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland each have their own grant programmes:

  • Scottish Enterprise and Highlands and Islands Enterprise — Regional development grants
  • Business Wales — Welsh Government support programmes
  • Invest Northern Ireland — Business development grants

Local Authority Grants

Many local councils and Local Enterprise Partnerships (LEPs) offer grants, particularly for:

  • Job creation in their area
  • Premises improvements or relocation
  • Small business start-up support
  • Green initiatives and energy efficiency

Private and Charitable Grants

Various trusts and charities provide business grants:

  • The Prince’s Trust — Grants and loans for young entrepreneurs (18 to 30)
  • UnLtd — Awards for social entrepreneurs
  • Nesta — Innovation grants and challenges
  • European funding (legacy programmes still disbursing in some cases)

Eligibility Criteria

Every grant has specific eligibility requirements, but common criteria include:

CriterionCommon Requirements
Business sizeOften limited to SMEs (under 250 employees)
LocationMany grants target specific regions or nations
SectorSome are sector-specific (e.g. manufacturing, technology, agriculture)
Project typeInnovation, export, job creation, sustainability
Match fundingTypically 30% to 70% of project costs must come from the business
Legal structureMust be a registered business; often must be a limited company
Trading historySome require minimum trading periods; others are open to start-ups

How to Find Grants

  • GOV.UK Business Finance Support Finder — The government’s official search tool for grants and schemes
  • Innovate UK — Check the UKRI website for current funding competitions
  • Local council websites — Search for business support in your local authority area
  • LEP websites — Local Enterprise Partnerships publish regional grant opportunities
  • Grant databases — Services like Grantfinder, GrantTracker, and Funds Online aggregate opportunities
  • Business advisors — Accountants, business consultants, and Growth Hubs can alert you to relevant schemes

Writing a Strong Grant Application

Grant applications are competitive. The best applications:

  • Address the grant criteria directly — Show exactly how your project meets each requirement
  • Demonstrate clear outcomes — Quantify the expected results (jobs created, revenue increased, emissions reduced)
  • Show match funding — Confirm where your contribution will come from
  • Include a realistic budget — Break down costs in detail with evidence to support each item
  • Explain why the grant is needed — Demonstrate that the project would not happen without the funding
  • Provide supporting evidence — Market research, customer testimonials, letters of intent, and financial projections
  • Meet deadlines — Late applications are almost always rejected outright

Having well-maintained accounting records and a clear balance sheet demonstrates financial credibility and makes budget preparation easier.

Grant Funding and Tax

Grant income is generally taxable — it counts as income for Corporation Tax purposes. However, if the grant funds capital expenditure, you may be able to claim capital allowances on the assets purchased, offsetting some of the tax.

Grants must be accounted for correctly, usually recognising the income as it relates to the expenditure it funds. Deferred income accounting may be required for grants received in advance.

Advantages of Grants

  • Non-repayable — You keep the money with no debt or interest
  • Non-dilutive — You do not give up any equity
  • Credibility — Winning a competitive grant signals quality and rigour to other investors and partners
  • Access to networks — Many grant programmes include mentoring, events, and introductions
  • Catalyst for growth — Grants can fund projects that would otherwise be unaffordable

Disadvantages of Grants

  • Highly competitive — Success rates can be as low as 10% to 20%
  • Time-consuming applications — Writing a strong application takes significant time and effort
  • Restrictive — Funds must be used for the specified purpose, with detailed reporting requirements
  • Slow disbursement — Grants are often paid in arrears, creating cash flow challenges
  • Match funding required — You still need to fund a substantial portion yourself
  • No guarantee of continuation — Grant schemes are time-limited and may not be renewed

Alternatives to Grants

If grants are not available or practical for your situation, consider: