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Are you really interested in applying for a government grant? If you are, therefore, you’ve come to the right place.

Government grants are usually awards distributed in the form of gratis money which you never have to pay back. They are used to help fund a variety of extraordinary causes including home ownership, higher education, health care, starting or expanding a business,  and much more.

You are automatically qualified for government grant applications, if you are a U.S. citizen. And the best thing about it is that free government grant applications do not require security deposits, collateral, credit checks, or even co-signers.  Of course, there is no guarantee you will be accepted, but many people are suprised each year to find they were accepted when they thought they had very little chance.

The initial step in government grant applications is to determine your intention. Why do you have to apply for grants? Is it because you need money for college? Or you need an initial capital for your small business? Or a community project you believe will aid your fellow Americans?

Normally, government grant applications for community-based projects are the ones that get readily approved. However, that is not saying that your bid for college funding or your proposal for a business won’t be approved as well. All you really require is a little savvy throughout government grant application process.

Below is a list of some government grant application  resources available on the web:

Grants.gov

Grants.gov is  a live online portal and a charter, generated as one of 24 President’s Management Agenda E-Government initiatives. The site offers a simple, unified electronic government grant applications liaison between the grant applicants and the federal agencies that control grant funds.

There are 26 federal grant making agencies and more than 900 individual grant programs that award over $400 billion in grants annually. Submitting your government grant applications to every single one of these programs and agencies would be quite costly and tedious for the grant applicant.  However, with Grants.gov’s grant community, including state, local, and tribal governments, academia and research institutions and not-for-profits, you only to stop by one website, Grants.gov, to access and start submitting your government grant applications.

Basically, here’s what Grants.gov provides:

* A unified interface for all agencies to publicize their grant opportunities, and for all grant applicants to find and apply for those rare opportunities

* A standardized technique of locating and learning more about funding opportunities

* A single source for finding grant opportunities

* An individual,reliable and secure resource of government grant applications

* An easy grant application procedure with reduction of paperwork

FedMoney.org

Another oustanding resource for government grant applications is FedMoney.org.  Similar to  Grants.gov, FedMoney.org provides a comprehensive listing of all U.S. government grants and student financial aid programs as well, and serves as a primary stopping point for those seeking government grant applications.

The site is entirely text-based and searching for a grant that fits your criteria is as easy as selecting which one of over 130 federal government programs (grants and loans) you want to begin with. Besides government grant applications, FedMoney.org also provides scholarships,  traineeships, fellowships, and loans. Here you would find current and detailed information about who can apply for grants, how to apply, and full contact information of the foundations or organizations providing the grants.

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