Grants for Capital Funding in Vermont

Last updated June 30, 2026

There are 3 active grants for capital funding tagged to Vermont, part of 550 active grants for capital funding listed nationwide. Updated daily.

Find the grants for capital funding matched to your org

Free, no account to start — Grantable's AI ranks all 3 on mission, geography, and award size in a few minutes.

Start finding grants
Grant Deadline Amount
RECREATION – Building Communities Recreational Facilities Grants
Rolling
Up to $2.5M
CULTURE and THE ARTS – Cultural Facilities Grants
Rolling
$100K – $3M
OTHER – Building Communities Human Services and Education Grants
Rolling
Up to $2.5M

Showing 1–3 of 3

About grants for capital funding in Vermont

Capital grants (also called capital funding or bricks-and-mortar grants) pay for one-time physical and infrastructure investments rather than ongoing operations — things like buying or renovating a building, major equipment, vehicles, or technology systems. Because they fund durable assets, capital grants are often larger, restricted to a specific project, and tied to a defined timeline and budget. Funders frequently expect a capital campaign, matching funds, or other committed sources before they invest.

Grants for Capital Funding in other states

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a capital grant?

A capital grant funds the acquisition, construction, renovation, or improvement of long-lived assets: facilities, land, major equipment, vehicles, or significant technology infrastructure. Unlike operating or program grants, capital funds are restricted to the specified project and usually cannot be redirected to salaries or general expenses. They are typically released against a project budget and milestones.

Who funds capital projects for nonprofits?

Capital funding comes from private and family foundations, community foundations, government agencies, and corporate giving programs, often through dedicated capital or facilities initiatives rather than general grant cycles. Many funders prefer to be one part of a larger capital campaign and will look for committed matching dollars from boards, major donors, or other funders before contributing.

How is a capital grant different from a project or operating grant?

A capital grant pays for a tangible, lasting asset (a building, renovation, or major piece of equipment), while a project grant funds the activities of a specific program and an operating grant covers general day-to-day costs like rent, salaries, and utilities. Capital grants tend to be larger and one-time, are tightly restricted to the approved project, and often require evidence that the organization can sustain the asset once it is built or purchased.

Get a shortlist of Grants for Capital Funding in Vermont 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 me

Ready 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