Grants for K-12 Schools in New Hampshire
Last updated July 2, 2026
There are 8 active grants for k-12 schools tagged to New Hampshire, part of 2,983 active grants for k-12 schools listed nationwide. Updated daily.
Find the grants for k-12 schools matched to your org
Free, no account to start — Grantable's AI ranks all 8 on mission, geography, and award size in a few minutes.
| ★ | Grant | Deadline ▲ | Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| CTE Transportation Grants | Rolling | Varies | |
| CTE Ambassador Grants Request for Applications | Rolling | Varies | |
| Co-Curricular Program Fund FY26 | Rolling | Varies | |
| Bridging the Gap in the 603: Pathways to Literacy Proficiency Request for Applications | Rolling | Varies | |
| Education for Homeless Children and Youth Request for Applications 2025-2028 | Rolling | Varies | |
| Robotics Education Development Grants Request for Applications 2025-2027 | Rolling | Varies | |
| Beyond School Enrichment Grant | Rolling | Varies | |
| After Dark Pilot Program Grant | Rolling | Varies |
Showing 1–8 of 8
About grants for k-12 schools in New Hampshire
Grants for K-12 schools fund instruction, school improvement, technology, and student support through a mix of federal formula grants, state programs, and private giving. The largest federal source is Title I, Part A of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (as amended by ESSA), administered by the U.S. Department of Education, alongside Title II, Title III, and Title IV programs. Foundations and corporate funders supplement these with competitive grants for specific initiatives.
Grants for K-12 Schools in other states
Frequently Asked Questions
What grants are available for K-12 schools?
Federal Title programs under ESSA support low-income students (Title I), teacher and leader quality (Title II), English learners (Title III), and well-rounded education and school safety (Title IV). Beyond federal funding, schools pursue state grants and private and corporate grants for technology, literacy, arts, and other priorities. Most federal funds flow to districts and are distributed by formula based on student need.
Who funds K-12 schools?
The primary public funder is the U.S. Department of Education through ESEA/ESSA Title grants distributed via state education agencies to local school districts. State and local governments provide the majority of overall K-12 funding, while private foundations and corporate giving programs fund competitive grants for specific programs and innovations. Federal dollars are designed to supplement, not replace, state and local resources.
Do individual schools apply, or only districts?
Major federal formula grants such as Title I flow to local education agencies (districts), which then allocate funds to qualifying schools, so individual schools usually do not apply directly. Competitive grants from foundations and corporations may accept applications from individual schools, parent organizations, or educators. Review each opportunity to confirm whether the district, school, or an individual is the eligible applicant.
Get a shortlist of Grants for K-12 Schools in New Hampshire built for your organization
Tell Grantable's AI about your nonprofit and it ranks these grants on mission, geography, and award fit — then emails you a personalized shortlist with the reasoning for each. Free, no account to start.
Find my grants — emailed to meReady to apply for these grants?
- Assess your eligibility for this grant
- Draft a tailored application narrative
- Track the deadline and get reminders
- Find similar grants from other funders