Northern Ireland Housing Executive - Community Involvement Grants

Grants are available to residents and community groups in Northern Ireland Housing Executive communities for projects that deliver benefits for people and the environment in their local area.

The funding is intended to support residents and community groups in Northern Ireland Housing Executive communities with delivering projects that encourage health and wellbeing, environment improvement, intergenerational partnerships and digital inclusion.

Grants of up to £5,000 are available.

Applications will be accepted from constituted community groups, tenants, residents and leaseholder groups who are active within Housing Executive areas across Northern Ireland and are involved in the Housing Community Network (HCN).

Applications from community groups who do not sit on the HCN will only be considered after applications from HCN groups have been reviewed.

The grant should not be seen as a means of continuous funding for projects, groups or schemes for an indefinite period.

The funding is used for costs associated with delivering projects that align with one or more of the programme's themes, which are as follows:

  • Health and Wellbeing

  • Environment Improvement

  • Intergenerational Practice

  • Digital Inclusion

  • Cost of Living/Poverty

Further information can be found in the programme guidelines.

The deadline for applications is 17 June 2025 (16:00).

Applicants must contact their Good Relations Officer for a copy of the Community Involvement Grants guidelines. 

The online application form can be found on the Northern Ireland Housing Executive website.

It is intended that a response will be issued within a maximum of 10 weeks of receipt of the application.

The Housing Executive - Community Involvement

The £5,000 community pledge

Tesco and easyfundraising have come together again to give a little help to voluntary groups, charities and CICs this May. As part of their community pledge, Tesco will donate five £1,000 funding pots to community organisations across the UK who are using easyfundraising.

To get involved:

Register your organisation with easyfundraising (if you haven't already): Get free, unrestricted cashback donations every time volunteers, staff, and supporters shop online with 8,000 retailers, including Tesco

Shop with Tesco via easyfundraising: Ask everyone connected to your organisation to join in support and shop with Tesco by May 31st. Each time one of them does so, your organisation has a better chance of winning the £1,000.

Plus, each time someone shops with Tesco, your organisation will receive £10 if it's their first shop and 50p for every subsequent shop. T&C's apply.

Good luck!

Support for Sport

Large Development Support for Sport Grants

Eligible sports activity

To be eligible to apply for this funding, your application should include:

  • sport science support

  • outreach programmes

  • coach mentoring

  • creation of partnerships

  • crime diversion

  • inclusive working with excluded or underrepresented groups

Essential requirements ​

In your application, you will need:

  • a strong three-year (current) Club Development Plan.

  • evidence that programme applied for is linked to SDP

  • evidence that project is sustainable and will continue to contribute to the club's development plan

  • measurable targets  

  • to ensure your application requires links to GB’s plan and letter of support from governing body

How much you can apply for

  • maximum award is £5,000

  • 80 per cent payment is paid upfront

  • 20 per cent on providing end-of-event report form and original receipts

    Small Development Support for Sport Grants

    Eligible sports activity

    • Coach education

    • Kick start – new clubs or sections

    • Equipment grants

    • Try-it events

    • Club development

    • Sports festivals or development events

    How much your club can apply for

    • 75 per cent of eligible costs up to a maximum of £1,500

    • Equipment grant of £250 (within three years)

    • 80 per cent payment upfront

    • 20 per cent on production of end of event report form and original receipts

    • Cap on medals and marketing of £200 each

    Hospitality grants

    Eligible hospitality activity

    • Hospitality linked to large sporting events in Belfast

    • Must bring in a minimum of 50 guests from outside Northern Ireland

    • Assessed on

      • Tourism – number of visitors

      • Bednights

      • Media coverage

    How much your club can apply for

    Maximum award of £3,000 based on the number of visitors to Belfast from outside Northern Ireland.

    • More than 50 visitors but less than 100 visitors: £1,000 maximum eligible

    • More than 100 visitors but less than 200 visitors: £2,000 maximum eligible

    • More than 200 visitors: £3,000 maximum

    Events where possible should take place in City Hall. If this venue is not available, events must take place in Belfast.

Sporting Individual Grants

Eligible sports activity

  • Applications from recognised sports governing bodies on behalf of:

    • individuals and people playing “team sports” that meet the recognised governing body criteria.

  • To financially assist talented athletes on the international stage.

  • Grants to assist towards expenses for preparation, training and competition’s recognised by their governing body.

  • Individuals must be on GB’s High Performance Squads or equivalent in an Olympic, Paralympic or Commonwealth Sport.

How much you can apply for

  • The maximum award is £1,000 towards out-of-pocket expenses

  • Excludes day-to-day living costs, membership or insurance, equipment and salaries

Funding to Provide Access to Justice for Disabled People in the UK

The Three Guineas Trust is offering funding for projects within the UK supporting Disabled or neurodivergent people to exercise their rights on:

  • Income, welfare benefits or debt

  • Housing and homelessness

  • Community care

  • Personal liberty

  • Equal access to goods and services

A total of £1.5 million is available for this grant round. The maximum annual grant will be £50,000 a year. Grants can run for one to three years. There are no restrictions on what the grant can be used for provided the funding furthers access to justice for disabled people.

Applications will be accepted from not-for-profit organisations with an income of less than £1 million for work to provide legal advice, advocacy, or overcome barriers to access advice and advocacy services for Disabled or neurodivergent people.

This funding is not targeted at general advice services that sometimes includes Disabled people among the people they help.

 The deadline for applications is 12 June 2025. For more information please visit Access to justice for Disabled people | Three Guineas Trust

Barclays New Community Sport Fund Launches for the UK

This new fund, delivered in partnership with Sported, aims to reduce inequalities in sport – with a focus on football, tennis, and cricket. It replaces the Barclays Community Football Fund which closed to applications last year.

The three-year funding programme, running from April 2025 to December 2027, will provide £1.4 million each year. 

The funding supports community groups and grassroots sports organisations who are working within the most deprived areas of the UK and are making sport more accessible to women and girls, as well as engaging people from other under-represented groups including people with disabilities, from racially diverse communities and from the LGBTQ+ community. 

Applications will be accepted from not-for-profit organisations including community groups, youth groups and traditional sports clubs.

To be eligible, applicants must:

  • Deliver football, cricket, or tennis activities for women and girls – or are applying for funding to start.

  • Operate in an area of high deprivation. Only organisations located in or supporting people from IMD areas 1-3 are eligible to apply.

Disability applications from groups that sit outside of IMD areas 1-3 will be considered as long as they groups offer activities for women and girls.

The following funding is available:

  • Grants of £1,000 which can be split across football, tennis or cricket activities.

  • Female Coaches for Girls Grants (Football - £160 grant; Tennis - £200 grant; Cricket - £200 grant) to support coaching courses to help increase the number of female coaches delivering sport to girls. 

The £1,000 grant is unrestricted and can be used for anything that will support delivery of football, cricket, or tennis activities for women and girls. Ideally the funding should be spent within a six month period.

The fund also offers:

  • Exclusive match tickets, mascot places, and promotional opportunities.

  • Access to advice and support and signposting to training and resource.

The fund is expected to be popular and may close early if heavily over-subscribed.

The deadline for applications is 22 June 2025. For more information please visit Barclays Community Sport Fund - Sported

Tourism Ireland Fund Open for International TV Programming Projects

Tourism Ireland is inviting applications for the second and final round of its International Programming Ireland Fund for 2025. The initiative supports factual and unscripted television projects that promote the island of Ireland to international audiences through content that highlights its landscapes, heritage, culture, food and people.

The fund is open to producers applying for up to £170,000 (€200,000) per project. The requested amount must not exceed 50% of the total global budget. Applicants must demonstrate support from an overseas broadcaster or distributor and ensure the programme will air in one or more of Tourism Ireland's key markets, including the USA, Great Britain, France, Germany, Spain, Italy, Nordics, Belgium, the Netherlands, Canada and Australia/New Zealand.

Projects should focus on themes such as exploration, authentic local experiences and connection with nature. Applications profiling Northern Ireland, and regional locations, particularly with content suited to autumn, winter or spring, are prioritised in this round.

The deadline for applications is 11 June 2025 (15:00).

 For more information, please visit Tourism Ireland International Programming Ireland Fund 2025 - Call for TV funding applications - Northern Ireland Screen

Funding for Community Mental Health Projects in Northern Ireland

Funding is available to voluntary and community groups in Northern Ireland to support the delivery of projects with a focus on improving mental health and emotional wellbeing within local communities.

The Making Life Better Through Short Term Funding programme is a Public Health Agency initiative administered by Developing Healthy Communities Northern Ireland through the Clear Project.

The funding is intended to support strategic themes such as 'Making Life Better,' the Suicide Prevention Strategy, and the Mental Health Strategy. Projects will promote positive mental health, address health determinants, reduce health inequalities, enhance community capacity to prevent suicide, build resilient communities, and encourage innovative mental health interventions.

The following levels of funding are available:

  • Award One: grants of up to £1,000 for non-constituted and constituted non-profit taking community/voluntary sector groups.

  • Award Two: grants of between £1,001 and £5,000 for constituted, non-profit taking community/voluntary sector groups.

Applications will be accepted from constituted and non-constituted voluntary and community groups located in the Western, Belfast, Northern, South-eastern, and Southern Health and Social Care Trust areas of Northern Ireland.

Organisations can apply for either Award One or Award Two, but not both. Only one application per organisation for delivery within the area (per Trust area) stated on the application will be accepted.

All projects must be completed by 27 February 2026.

The deadline for applications is 16 May 2025 (15:00). For more information please visit Developing Healthy Communities

A B Charitable Trust Accepting Applications for Autumn/Winter Projects

The AB Charitable Trust (ABCT) offers grants to UK-registered charities working to support marginalised groups and protect human dignity within the UK.

Grants range from £10,000 to £30,000 and can be awarded for one to three years. Eligible organisations must have an annual income between £150,000 and £1.5 million and be registered and working in the UK.

The Trust supports charities across four priority areas: migrants and refugees, criminal legal system and penal reform, access to justice and the human rights framework. Organisations can apply for core or project funding within these categories.

Applicants must demonstrate effective work that makes a tangible difference, listen to the people they support and engage individuals with direct experience of the issues they address.

Charities can apply for funding to deliver services such as legal advice, policy influencing, rehabilitation support and advocacy work. The Trust typically supports single-focus organisations working exclusively in these priority areas.

The fund is competitive, with only around a third of eligible applicants receiving funding. Applications are considered on a quarterly basis.

The next deadline for applications is 25 July 2025 for decisions in October 2025. For more information please visit The A B Charitable Trust, an independent grant-making organisation

SPAR’s £100,000 Community Cashback Campaign 2025 Invites UK Entries

For a fourth year in a row, SPAR shoppers can apply for a grant of up to £10,000 for a local voluntary or community organisation or charity they feel deserves funding.

Applicants for grants are open to UK residents (England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland mainland only) aged 16 years or over.

All applicants need to do is share the exceptional contribution that a local organisation has made to their local community and what the grant would be used for.

The grants will be given based on the strength of the applicant’s story, the recipient’s levels of dedication to their community and the credibility of what the grant would be spent on and its impact for the local community.

The following are not eligible for funding:

  • Individuals

  • Community Interest Companies with shares (CICs).

  • Community Interest Companies with guarantee that are less than two years old.

  • Profit-making organisations.

The short application form and Terms and Conditions can be found on SPAR’s website. 

Please note there is a different website for Northern Ireland groups.

Once the closing date of 4 June 2025 has passed, SPAR will carry out a shortlisting process, where the successful organisations will be selected by SPAR, at SPAR’s discretion and so as to provide a broad representation across Great Britain and Northern Ireland. The proportion of the grant being allocated to each region shall be decided by SPAR once the successful applicants have been chosen.

Commenting on the new round, SPAR UK Brand and Marketing Director, Suzanne Dover, said:

“Empowering local communities is about nurturing our neighbourhoods and promoting a brighter future. We had such a brilliant response to last year’s campaign that we are delighted to bring it back again this year."

The deadline for all applications is 4 June 2025 (midnight).

For more information please visit SPAR NI donate £20,000 to local community organisations | SPAR

 

The Different Foundation’s ‘AI for All’ Funding/Mentoring Programme Opens for UK Applications

The Different Foundation, a charity registered in 2024, 'exists to embrace diversity, empower the underrepresented, and shape an inclusive future'.

'AI for All' is the Foundation's 'flagship programme' which offers one-off grants of up to £2,500 and four hours of specialised mentorship with respected leaders in AI. This mentorship provides practical guidance to enhance impact, improve programme delivery, and strengthen organisational capabilities.

The funding is intended to promote access and opportunity for members of underrepresented and diverse communities in AI innovation. It supports organisations committed to diversity in technology.

The current focus is addressing digital bias, elevating diverse voices, and developing AI that works for everyone.

Applications will be accepted from UK registered charities, based and working within the UK, with a turnover of between £150,000 and £1.15 million and one to ten employees.

There will be two funding rounds in 2025 and two rounds in 2026.

The first round opens for applications on 1 May and closes on 30 June 2025.

For more information please visit Our Programme — The Different Foundation

Henry Moore Foundation Accepting Applications for Spring 2025 Funding Round

Grants are available for not-for-profit organisations for projects and activities that promote the growth and development of sculpture across historical, modern, and contemporary registers, and research that expands the appreciation of sculpture.

The Henry Moore Foundation offers funding in the following categories:

  • New projects and commissions: Grants of up to £20,000 to encourage new thinking about sculpture or sculpture history or contribute to public awareness and appreciation of sculpture.

  • Acquisitions and collections: Grants of up to £20,000 for museums and galleries to acquire or conserve sculpture for their collections, cataloguing, and display costs.

  • Research and development:

    • Long-term grants of up to £20,000 for projects that require funding for more than one year, such as a permanent collection catalogue.

    • Small research grants of up to £2,500 for academics, curators, and independent scholars for research costs on the history and interpretation of sculpture.

  • Conferences, lectures, and publications: Grants of up to £5000 to publish a new book or journal, or to stage a conference or other event related to sculpture.

There are typically four deadlines per year. This funding round is for projects starting, or opening to the public, no sooner than 1 October 2025.

The next deadline for applications is 1 June 2025 (23:00). 

For more information please visit Grants & fellowships | Henry Moore Foundation

 

Asda Foundation’s New Local Community Spaces Fund Opens 7 May for UK Applications

The Foundation is inviting local grassroots community organisations with an income of less than £250,000 to apply to their new £1.25 million fund.

Grants of between £10,000 and £20,000 are available for projects within the UK that meet at least one of the following objectives:

  • Carry out essential repairs to enable the space to continue to function.

  • Renovate an existing space to accommodate more users/activities.

  • Create a new community space where groups can meet and undertake activities.

  • Improve accessibility to, or within, a community building.

The funding can support a range of costs including but not limited to:

  • Kitchen and bathroom refurbishments.

  • Creation of a new permanent space.

  • Roof and floor repairs.

  • Building extensions.

  • Disabled access ramps to a community building Upgrades and replacements to windows and doors.

  • Boilers and heating.

  • Essential building security upgrades.

  • Transformation of a disused space into a functional space.

  • Removable items.

The Foundation must contribute at least 50% of the total project cost (up to £20,000) and can fund up to 90% of the total project cost.

It is anticipated that around 70 projects will be funded.

Projects must not start before September 2025 and must be completed by December 2026.

Groups that have previously received an Asda Foundation Investing in Spaces and Places grant may not apply to this fund.

Applications may close early if the fund is oversubscribed.

Applications will be accepted from 7 May (10am) to 28 May 2025 (10am). For more information please visit Local Community Spaces Fund | Asda Foundation

Northern Ireland's Grassroots Facilities Investment Fund Accepting Applications

Funding is available towards larger capital projects focusing on the installation and improvement of natural grass or certified artificial grass pitches at community sports venues in Northern Ireland.

Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy recently announced that the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) will invest £100 million in grassroots sports facilities across the UK in 2025/26. £3 million has been allocated to Northern Ireland for 2025/26. The Grassroots Facilities Investment Fund is administered by the Irish Football Association.

Grants of between £100,000 and £500,000 are available.

The fund is accepting applications from community providers of football and multi-sport facilities, which include:

  • Football clubs based in Northern Ireland that are:

    • Accredited under the Irish FA’s People and Clubs programme.

    • In the process of accreditation (to be completed before final grant claim).

    • Licensed for the 2025/26 season (NIFL clubs).

  • Local authorities.

  • Schools, colleges and universities.

  • Football-focused sports community/charitable organisations.

The deadline for applications is 8 May 2025 (noon). For more information, please visit Irish FA/ DCMS Grassroots Facilities Investment Fund...

Breast Cancer Charities have until 30 May to Submit a Grant Application (UK)

Grants of up to £6,000 are available to breast cancer charities in the UK that assist people affected by breast cancer and organisations that work on breast cancer research and prevention. The funding is for projects and initiatives that make a direct impact on individuals with breast cancer in the UK.

For the 2025 grant period, and with requests for assistance growing, the Foundation will focus in the main on organisations with limited financial resources to deliver their services.

Application should relate to a specific project, not 'business as usual' or core costs. However, the Foundation has ‘helped out’ with core costs should the need be vital to the continuity of an organisation.

In most instances, the Foundation will consider funding delivery for projects that are already up and running. These can also be pilot programmes that are being rolled out to reach a new or much wider audience or projects that take a new approach in tackling a specific challenge.

Registered charities, community interest groups and social enterprises with a legal constitution and charitable objectives may apply.

The Foundation welcomes applications from all ethnic and minority groups. 

Grant applications must be hard copy and reach the Foundation by the deadline.

The deadline for applications is 30 May 2025. For more information, please visit The Pink Ribbon Foundation

Funding to Support Rural Communities Across the UK

NFU Mutual Charitable Trust is offering grants for organisations working in agriculture, rural development, and insurance across the UK to deliver projects and activities across one or more of the Trust’s main objectives:

  • To advance the education of the public using research and the dissemination of information concerning agriculture.

  • To advance the education of young people within rural areas.

  • To relieve poverty within rural areas.

  • To promote the benefit and social welfare of inhabitants of rural communities by associating together with the inhabitants and local authorities, voluntary and other organisations to advance education and leisure.

  • To promote research into agricultural-associated activities.

  • To advance the education of the public using research and the dissemination of information concerning insurance.

Priority will be given to larger initiatives that would have a significant impact on rural communities, as well as initiatives in the areas of education of young people in rural areas, relief of poverty within rural areas, and support for the next generation of farmers.

Funding is at the discretion of the Trust. However, most grants fall within the range of £1,000 to £50,000.

Trustees met twice a year to consider applications, typically in June and November.

The next deadline for applications is 23 May 2025. 

For more information, please visit NFU Mutual Charitable Trust: What do we do | NFU Mutual

Housing & Homelessness Fund 2025

Aim of the fund

The aim of the Housing & Homelessness Fund 2025 is to support voluntary and community sector organisations serving those who are homeless or housing insecure, through developing their capacity to support their service users.

Grants will be made available in two stages. Stage 1 is focused on supporting capacity building and developmental work. Applicants who are funded through this phase and who successfully complete their capacity building projects, will be invited to apply for further funding to support direct service delivery under Stage 2.

Achieving the aim

Your proposed activity or project needs to show how it will enable significant change to occur in the capacity of your voluntary or community organisation. This change must result in demonstrated benefits being delivered by your organisation (directly or indirectly) to the individuals or communities you support.

A useful definition of ‘capacity building’ comes from the American National Council of Nonprofits [language adapted to reflect UK circumstances]:

“Capacity building is whatever is needed to bring a voluntary or community group to the next level of operational, programmatic, financial, or organisational maturity, so it may more effectively and efficiently advance its mission into the future. Capacity building is not a one-time effort to improve short-term effectiveness, but a continuous improvement strategy towards the creation of a sustainable and effective organisation.” 

Building capacity could therefore mean an enhancement in skills or knowledge within your organisation, it could mean increased reach, scaling up or across, diversifying services, building collaborations to deliver efficiency, strengthening your structures and processes, or strengthening your organisation’s reputation or connections – but, importantly, in a planned and strategic fashion that will deliver sustainable change. We are therefore not necessarily seeking end-to-end projects to be delivered in the period of the grant (which is relatively short). If a short-term project can be shown to deliver significant change in a group’s capability, then it will be eligible, but so will more general development activity, which may be part of a longer-term process of change within a group or organisation.

Criteria

Your Organisation 

You must be focused on serving those who are homeless or housing insecure. This may include refugees and asylum seekers, people in the criminal justice system, people with mental health needs, women, and/or young people.

We will prioritise strong applications from organisations which can demonstrate active commitment to lived experience engagement.

NB successful applicants will be supported in developing the lived experience components of their working practices.

The Grants  

Organisations should be addressing at least one of the priority areas below:

Renter rights

  • Help renters on low incomes to access decent homes at genuinely affordable rent levels;

  • Support renters in enforcing their rights, including in relation to tenancies, disrepair and preventing eviction

  • Uncover and challenge discrimination which excludes people from accessing affordable and safe homes.

Outcome – More renters are able to access their housing rights and live in decent and affordable

 

Supply and access to genuinely affordable and decent homes

  • Campaign to improve supply of homes that are affordable for people with the lowest income and/or facing the most discrimination;

  • Support different models of community ownership that benefit people with the greatest housing need; and

  • Empower communities to advocate for more homes that meet housing need.

Outcome – Increased supply of new and existing genuinely affordable and decent homes

 

Reduction and prevention of homelessness

  • Empower and support people through services that break the cycle of homelessness;

  • Develop stronger advocacy and campaigning to prevent all forms of homelessness;

Outcome – People are supported to avoid homelessness

Grants Available

Capacity building grants will be offered between £10,000 – £25,000 for a duration of up to two years.

 

Whilst the following is not an exhaustive list, we would expect to see some clear impact in at least one of these areas: 

  • A better understanding of your business model and finances;

  • A better understanding of how to access and/or develop other sources of income e.g. grants, contracts, trading etc;

  • An expanded and/or more efficient and effective service offer;

  • Leadership and governance;

  • Improved management systems;

  • Improved impact measurement systems;

  • Better strategic planning;

  • Building collaborative approaches;

  • Strengthening networks.

  • Essentially, we want to ‘unlock’ potential in organisations.

Demonstrating Change

We expect grant applicants to have systems in place to be able to effectively monitor the outcomes of the work funded by this grant.

Successful applicants to the Fund will need to be able to demonstrate at the full application stage the thinking behind their bid, the changes they are seeking to make, how the changes will be delivered, and how their organisation will be different as a result of the grant. They will also need to articulate what results these changes will have for the individuals or communities they support – directly or indirectly – and, ideally, be able to show how they will measure the anticipated results at the end of the grant period.

Eligibility

As indicated above, the Fund will award grants to capacity-building activity that impacts upon organisations that address housing and homelessness issues.

Whilst we have not set a maximum organisational income level, we will prioritise applications from smaller local organisations (taking in to account the applicant’s local knowledge and their embeddedness in the community, as well as annual turnover and reserves). We are looking to support organisations that have enough existing capacity to be able to develop, therefore we will prioritise offering funding to organisations with at least one member of paid staff.

The fund will be open to organisations with charitable purposes who aim to support people who are homeless or housing insecure in Northern Ireland.

It is anticipated that seven grants will be awarded.

Funding is flexible and we are content to approve whatever costs organisations may need, however, we anticipate some of the following may form part of a request for support:

  • Consultants

  • Research

  • Service delivery to free up senior management time for strategic planning

  • Education, training or coaching

  • Convening / building networks

  • Peer exchange

For more information, please visit Housing & Homelessness Fund 2025 - Community Foundation Northern Ireland

Circle of Change Fund

Background:

The Circle of Change are a group of people from all backgrounds from around Northern Ireland who have come together to talk about and learn from each other about the root causes of issues affecting our communities, particularly around North Belfast, and over 6 months we pool our fundraising and make grants to organisations working on those issues.

 

In our conversations we’ve learnt from each other, and it has reminded us of the power of connecting with other people; we’ve heard stories of how people have seen the impact of poor mental health on their communities; and we’ve heard about how racism in Northern Ireland can often remain unchallenged. We want to apply this learning to grants that we make.

Priorities:

  • The promotion of curiosity and conversations across different communities and backgrounds, recognising our shared humanity;

  • Community based approaches to improving mental health and addressing issues of trauma

  • Supporting people to take action against racism and value difference

  • The kind of work we are particularly interested in includes:

  • Peer to peer support;

Geographical Area:

Greater Belfast. We will give priority to projects in North Belfast.

Grant size:

Grants available up to £5,000

We want to fund innovation, creativity, and support flexibility.

12 months after the funding is distributed, we would like some feedback about how the money has been used but would like it to be treated as unrestricted income.

Who can apply?

  • Fully constituted voluntary organisations and community groups based within Northern Ireland;

  • We will only fund organisations with an income of less than £2m

For more information, please visit Circle of Change Fund - Community Foundation Northern Ireland

The National Lottery Community Fund Northern Ireland Upcoming Events

The National Lottery Community Fund is the largest community funder in the UK. Each year we distribute millions of pounds of #NationalLottery good causes money to community groups and charitable projects around the country. 

We regularly host support sessions both online and at face to face events here in Northern Ireland. Our upcoming sessions will be listed on this page. We are always happy to chat about our funding programmes and discuss your project ideas. 
 
If you would like to find out more about our our funding programmes in Northern Ireland, you can reserve a place at one of our upcoming sessions. You can also call us on 028 9055 1455 or email us at enquiries.ni@tnlcommunityfund.org.uk

For more information, visit The National Lottery Community Fund (Northern Ireland) event tickets from TicketSource.

Lisburn & Castlereagh City Council has announced a funding package of over £565K

£565,000 in funding announced!

Lisburn & Castlereagh City Council has announced a funding package of over £565K to support community and voluntary sector projects across the council area.

Two separate funds have been announced. £540K is being made available through the Community Facilities Fund (CFF) which provides funding for projects focused on community facility upgrades, event infrastructure and sports pitch maintenance/development.

£25,000 is also being made available through the council’s Good Relations Fund which provides financial assistance for projects that bring people together across cultural, religious, and political divides fostering inclusion, dialogue, and understanding.

 

Applications will close on Thursday 8th May 12 noon. To apply click here: Grant Information

 

More information on the application process is available at face-to-face or online information sessions which are being held by the council’s community team at the below times and locations.

 

  • Bridge Community Centre, Monday 14th April 2025 at 6.00pm

  • Online, Tuesday 15th April 2025 at 12.00pm (Link will be issued upon registration)

  • Ballyoran Community Centre, Wednesday 16th April 2025 at 6.00pm

 

For more information, please contact community.services@lisburncastlereagh.gov.uk or telephone 028 9244 7713.

Community Foundation for Northern Ireland - Thriving Futures Fund

Closing date 12/05/2025

Grants are available to not-for-profit organisations in Northern Ireland that support refugees and asylum seekers, people experiencing domestic abuse and those leaving the criminal justice system.

 

The fund aims to support:

  • Refugees and people seeking asylum.

  • People experiencing domestic abuse.

  • People leaving the criminal justice system.

 

Grants of between £30,000 and £50,000 per year for up to three years are available (maximum grant of £150,000).

It is anticipated that 8 to 10 awards will be made.

 

Applications will be accepted from not-for-profit organisations in Northern Ireland.

 

Funding is intended for organisations working in one or more of the following areas:

People Leaving the Criminal Justice System

  • Impact on services:

  • Systems and policy change:

Refugees and People Seeking Asylum

  • Impact on services:

  • Systems and policy change:

People Experiencing Domestic Abuse

  • Impact on services:

  • Systems and policy change:

 

Priority will be given to services that are:

  • Informed by lived experience and evidence. 

  • Holistic

  • Person centred. 

  • Relational.

  • Focused on lasting impact.

  • Focused on improving systems. 

Any associated costs, including core costs, are eligible for funding, provided organisations clearly outline how these costs support work that meets the fund criteria and priorities.

 

There is a two-stage application process:

  • Stage One: Initial applications must be submitted by 12 May 2025 (13:00).

  • Stage Two: Shortlisted applicants will then be invited to present to a panel early to mid-June 2025.

Guidance and an online application form are available from the Community Foundation Northern Ireland website.

Contact the Community Foundation Northern Ireland for further information.

Thriving Futures Fund - Community Foundation Northern Ireland