Stop wasting weeks on grants you were never going to win.
You spend 40 hours on an application only to realize the funder prioritizes organizations twice your size. Grantable evaluates fit before you write a word — so you invest your limited time in the right opportunities.
"You just spent three weeks on a proposal. The narrative was excellent. The budget was precise. Then the rejection letter arrives — and the feedback says your organization didn't meet their minimum budget threshold. It was on page 12 of the RFP in a paragraph about eligible applicants. Three weeks of work for a grant you never qualified for."
Time saved by evaluating fit first
The old way vs. the Grantable way.
You know the old workflow. Here's how it changes.
The gut-feeling approach
- 1
Skim the RFP
Quick read of the overview and deadline. Looks promising enough.
- 2
Check a few criteria
Geographic area? Check. Program area? Close enough.
- 3
Ask around
"Has anyone applied to this funder before?" No one remembers.
- 4
Decide on instinct
The amount is right and the deadline is doable. Let's go.
- 5
Write the full application
Invest 40+ hours before discovering deal-breaking misalignment
- 6
Get rejected
A disqualifying criterion you could have caught upfront
Structured fit assessment
- 1
Upload the grant info
Add the RFP, guidelines, or even just the funder's URL
- 2
AI evaluates across 4 categories
Eligibility requirements, funder priorities, org readiness, and effort vs. timing
- 3
Mandatory gates flag deal-breakers
If you fail eligibility or mission alignment, the AI tells you before you invest time
- 4
See evidence and reasoning
Every score backed by citations from the RFP and your org profile
- 5
Get a clear recommendation
Apply, Consider, or Skip — with a 0-100 fit score and explanation
- 6
Share with leadership
Generate a professional opportunity brief for board or ED review
The best grant strategy starts with knowing when not to apply.
Run a fit assessment in minutes. Invest your writing time in the opportunities where you're most competitive.