The UK Fund

Sol Cafe, England

The UK Fund offers larger amounts of funding for existing projects. We’ll fund projects that help bring diverse communities together. From July 2024 we’ll also fund projects that help children and young people use their voice to influence change.

All projects must:

  • benefit communities across the UK (by working in different places, or by sharing learning between countries)
  • scale up their impact by expanding their work (by helping more people, or doing more for people they already work with)
  • support people experiencing poverty, disadvantage and discrimination
  • help make significant changes to services or systems that affect people’s everyday lives.

And meet one of these aims:

  • improve relationships between people with different life experiences
  • help people and communities who find it difficult to meet face-to-face to make meaningful connections online
  • help people from all backgrounds to influence the future of their communities
  • help children and young people facing specific challenges change the systems that affect them
  • help more organisations to involve and listen to children and young people.

You are more likely to get funding if you meet one aim well.

We’re unlikely to fund projects that do a little of everything. See what we’re hoping to fund for details and examples.

We’ll only fund you to increase the impact of things you’re already doing.

So we will not fund a brand new way of working. Or projects that are mainly about delivering a service.

Area
UK-wide
Suitable for
Voluntary or community organisations, statutory organisations
Funding size
£500,000 to £5 million. Funding is available for 2 to 10 years. We expect to fund around 20 projects a year.
Application deadline

Ongoing

Apply

Before you apply

1. Check this funding is right for you by reading what we’re hoping to fund.

2. Watch our short video summary of The UK Fund:

Read a transcript of the short video summary.

How to apply

Apply online Continue online application

If it's difficult or impossible for you to complete an online application form

You can contact us if you have any communication support needs.

We can provide other ways for you to tell us about your idea, such as:

  • an Easy Read version of the application form and guidance
  • a PDF version of the application form
  • sharing a video describing your project idea, rather than describing it in words
  • a British Sign Language (BSL) version of the application form and guidance.

What information you need to apply

In the application form we’ll ask you:

  • what you want to do and why
  • how your idea meets our funding aims and criteria (listed in what we're hoping to fund)
  • what you hope to learn and what impact your learning will have.

You can see a full list of questions from the application form.

We ask for the contact details, home addresses and dates of birth of two different people from your organisation. We need a different email address for each person

One person should be someone we can talk to if we have any questions about your project. The other should be a senior member of your organisation, who'll be legally responsible for the funding. Both need to live in the UK.

These two people cannot be related. Related can mean:

  • related by marriage
  • in a civil partnership with each other
  • in a long-term relationship with each other
  • related through a long term partner
  • living together at the same address
  • related by blood.

What happens after you apply

It normally takes at least 6 months from when you send us your first application to find out if you are getting funding.

Here's what happens after you apply:

  1. We’ll consider your application
    We may contact you to talk about your project, or to get more information.

    There is high demand for this funding. So we’ll only invite you to the next stage if your application strongly fits with what we’re hoping to fund.

  2. We’ll aim to tell you if you're through to the final stage within 12 weeks
    If you’re not successful, we’ll tell you why.

    If you’re successful, we’ll email you asking for more information about your project.

  3. You’ll send us more information
    This includes financial information and a more detailed project proposal covering how you’ll deliver this work.

    You will usually have at least 2 weeks to provide this information. One of our team will read through it. They’ll work with you to find out more about your project. We’ll usually have calls or emails with you.

  4. We’ll tell you our final decision around 4 months after we get your proposal
    Our panel will decide whether to offer you funding.

    If we do not offer you funding we’ll give you feedback to explain why. We’ll also try to offer you support. For example, giving you suggestions about how to improve any applications you write in the future. Or letting you know about other groups doing similar work.

  5. If your application is successful
    Here’s what happens when you’re awarded funding. We’ll also discuss how we can help you:
    • celebrate and promote your funding
    • share your learning and collaborate with others.

We only have a certain amount of funding to award

We get a lot of applications, and many of them are for really worthwhile projects. So we have to make some tough decisions about which projects we can fund. This means there are often lots of good projects we cannot fund.

To find out how we use your personal data

You can read our data protection statement.