If you need funding to create a piece of journalism that you truly believe can change the world, look for it here
Journalistic projects that change the world require a lot of work. To take at least something off your plate, we have compiled a list of grants for a range of situations so you can find the right opportunity to finance your plans.
The Pulitzer Center, the Financial Times and One World Media have come together to announce a $20,000 grant for an experienced filmmaker to create a 25-minute-long documentary about how climate change affects those in the global south. The applicants should live and work in the global south and provide an interesting and unique angle or cover an unreported story.
Deadline: 1 September 2024 | More info here
This grant applies to freelance journalists, staff reporters and media outlets who are looking to create high-quality, unbiased nonpartisan investigative journalism that has a significant impact. The regular grant can be up to $10,000, with the opportunity for follow-up grants if necessary.
Deadline: 9 September 2024 | More details here
This grant is for photojournalists and visual storytellers whose work promotes social change and blends photographic tradition with the contemporary. The grant calls for "a photographer and project that seem most likely to use exemplary and compelling photojournalism and documentary photography to address an issue of import and impact related to the human condition: social change, humanitarian concern, armed conflict, or other topics of interpersonal, psychological, cultural, social, environmental, scientific, medical and/or political significance." Note that students cannot apply for this grant but can instead apply for the W. Eugene Smith Student Grant.
Deadline: 8 October 2024 | More info here
This grant can be given to teams of journalists or newsrooms who plan to conduct cross-border environmental investigations in Europe. The resulting stories must be published in at least two outlets in two different countries, one of which must be European. The grant can cover working time and expenses such as logistics, travel, insurance, access to legal support, translations, access to technology and data sets and more. Teams can also apply for an experienced mentor to aid the investigation. This grant has a maximum of €400,000 per call to be distributed among all supported investigations.
Deadline: 24 October 2024 | More details here
This fund awards bursaries to students from diverse backgrounds to help fund NCTJ-accredited diploma courses. This is looking to help diversify newsrooms, which have historically been dominated by the white middle class.
Deadline: 6 November 2024 | More info here
This fund looks to advance the role of women in news media. Applications are open to any woman and non-binary journalists who have the passion and drive to pursue a big project. This project must outline an underrepresented but critical social issue and challenge traditional media narratives. The fund is open to applications for up to $10,000.
This fund has a rolling deadline. Applications submitted before the 31 August will be reviewed in September | More info here
The Pulitzer Center supports data journalism stories that employ cutting-edge data collection techniques. This could be using data mining, machine learning, satellite imagery or any other technique that is at the forefront of technical development. The project must be innovative and cover an underreported issue in an engaging, data-focused way. This grant is open to all journalists, filmmakers, writers, photographers and radio producers, especially those from diverse backgrounds.
This grant has a rolling deadline, and applications submitted in any given month can expect a response by the end of the following month | More info here
This grant aims to help women and girls in journalism elevate the level of reporting on gender equality and women’s empowerment issues. Applications from journalists and newsrooms who are from diverse and underrepresented groups or underprivileged economic backgrounds are strongly encouraged. The average grant is $5,000, but it can be greater or smaller depending on circumstances.
This grant has a rolling deadline | More info here
This fund aims to help those who are starting their first job in journalism and are struggling with essential costs such as accommodation, transport or work-related equipment. To qualify you must have been working as a full-time journalist for less than two years, and your main source of income must be from journalism.
If you like our news and feature articles, you can sign up to receive our free daily (Mon-Fri) email newsletter (mobile friendly).
Sign up to receive job alerts of your choice by email, or manage your subscription
Featured recruiter: click to view its vacancies
Investigative journalism publication seeks editor to lead reporting on AI, Big Tech and influence operations with experience in these areas and creative ideas about how to to report on them
Subscribe to our newsletter for latest news, tips, jobs and more
End that deadline stress today and find help in our freelance directory
Cargo Force stuns the world: free 10kg shipping to India in celebration of ICC Trophy victory – offer ongoing until Sunday, 16 March!
Our 35th Newsrewired conference will be held 13 May 2025, News UK, London.
Reporters who have worked under Putin, Erdogan and the Taliban share what they have learned about how autocrats consolidate power and how communities can fight back against the erosion of democratic freedom
Leaders from The Times, Sky News and Reuters reveal why chasing fewer but more engaged readers - and embracing AI as a creative tool rather than a threat - is proving more profitable than old-school mass reach strategies
A TikTok master with 100m views, a paywall pioneer with 3,000 subscribers, and a community visionary backed by local businesses share their strategies for making independent journalism pay beyond ads
Slovakia's Dennik N broke three years of subscriber stagnation with an innovative anniversary campaign, while The New Statesman transformed podcasts from a side project into a powerful growth engine – both offering valuable lessons for media companies hitting plateaus