Small Business Grants for Black Founders: What’s Open in 2026 (and How to Win One)

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Black woman small business owner standing in her retail shop

The Quick Version

  • Real small business grants are open to Black founders in 2026, from $500 to $5,000 and up, including Wish Local, HerRise, NASE, and Breva Thrive.
  • Federal channels like Grants.gov and USDA add larger options but require early SAM.gov registration.
  • The founders who win are the ones with clean paperwork, real numbers, and a clear story ready before they apply.
  • Practical move: pick two grants that fit you today and build one reusable application packet.

Grant money for Black-owned businesses is not a myth — but it moves fast, and the people who win it are the ones who are ready before the application opens. Below is a practical rundown of small business grants that are open to Black founders right now in 2026, what each one actually pays, who qualifies, and — just as important — how to put together an application that stands out.

Grants open to Black founders in 2026

These programs are currently active and open to Black and minority entrepreneurs, according to NerdWallet’s 2026 grant roundup. Award amounts and eligibility are summarized below, but always confirm the current cycle on the official page before you apply.

Private grants

  • Wish Local Empowerment Program — $500 to $2,000. For Black business owners 18+, with 20 or fewer employees, under $1M in annual revenue, and a physical (brick-and-mortar) location.
  • HerRise Microgrant — $1,000. For businesses at least 51% owned by women of color, under $1M revenue, U.S.-based. Note: there is a small application fee.
  • The Freed Fellowship Grant — $500 monthly, plus a shot at a $2,500 year-end award. Open to underrepresented U.S. entrepreneurs. Small application fee applies.
  • NASE Growth Grants — up to $4,000. Open to members of the National Association for the Self-Employed.
  • Transform Business Grant — $1,000. For founders from marginalized backgrounds, including minority, LGBTQ+, disabled, and formerly incarcerated entrepreneurs.
  • Breva Thrive Grant — $5,000. For revenue-generating U.S. businesses, ideally with at least a year of operation.

Federal grant channels

  • Grants.gov. The front door to federal grant opportunities. You’ll need to register with SAM.gov first — start that early, because it takes time.
  • USDA Rural Business Development Grant. For businesses with 50 or fewer employees and under $1M in revenue in a rural area. Apply through your state USDA Rural Development office.

How to actually win one

Most grant applications are lost on preparation, not on the merits of the business. Here is the groundwork that separates funded founders from the rest:

  • Get your paperwork clean now. Business registration, EIN, a business bank account, and a simple one-page financial snapshot. Reviewers move fast — missing documents are the number one reason strong businesses get passed over.
  • Write your story in plain language. What problem you solve, who you serve, and what the money will unlock. Specific beats impressive: “this $5,000 buys a second commercial oven and doubles my catering capacity” lands harder than vague growth talk.
  • Have numbers ready. Monthly revenue, number of customers, and how you’ll measure the grant’s impact. Even rough figures show you run a real operation.
  • Apply to several, consistently. These are competitive and many recur monthly. Treat it like a pipeline, not a lottery ticket — a repeatable application packet you tailor each time.
  • Read the fine print on fees. A few reputable programs charge a small application fee; decide if the expected value is worth it for you, and never pay a large “processing fee” to a grant that contacts you out of nowhere.

Start here

Pick two grants from the list above that fit your business today, and give yourself one week to assemble a reusable application packet. Once that packet exists, applying becomes a 30-minute task instead of a weekend project. For more on building and funding Black-owned enterprises, browse our Business & Tech coverage, and keep an eye on community resources as new cycles open.

Grant amounts, fees, and eligibility change with each funding cycle. Confirm details on each program’s official site before applying.

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