You’ll find some grants are based on location, while others are tailored to certain types of businesses or those facing specific challenges. Are you self-employed? A start-up? A community-led business? Are you going through a particularly difficult period? Are you looking to take on an apprentice? Where is your business? There’s help available both from the government and other organisations.
Training and start-up grants
Prince’s Trust development programme
The Prince’s Trust works with 18 to 30-year-olds living in the UK. It provides development awards of between £175-250 to help younger people kickstart their business or get training.
Apply if you’re:
Aged 16 to 30 and live in the UK
Studying under 14 hours a week and not in compulsory education
Unemployed or working less than 16 hours a week.
Grants can cover:
Accredited course fees up to Level 3 (A level standard)
Tools, equipment or uniforms for a job or qualification
Job licence fees
Transport to a new job until you get your first pay slip.
You won’t get a grant to cover your living expenses (rent, bills), business start-up costs, items already paid for or gap year projects.
The National Lottery Heritage Fund
Heritage can be anything you value from the past and want to pass on to future generations. The National Lottery’s Heritage Fund provides grants from £10,000 up to £10 million.. Your heritage project could include:
Nature – works to improve habitats or conserve species, as well as help connect people to nature
Designed landscapes – improving and conserving historic landscapes like parks and historic or botanic gardens
Rural projects – that help improve landscapes for people and nature
Oral history recordings – recording people’s stories, memories and songs
Cultural traditions – exploring different cultures’ histories through storytelling, dance, theatre, food or clothing, language or dialect
Community archaeology – everything from investigating, photographing and surveying to excavation
Historic buildings, monuments and the environment – from houses and mills to caves and gardens.
To find out more, including what you can and can’t spend grant money visit the Heritage Fund’s website.
Help starting a business if you’re unemployed
You can get government help to start a business if you’re currently unemployed. If you claim Universal Credit, you may qualify for a 12-month ‘start-up period’ if go self-employed.
During this start-up period, no matter how much you earn:
Your Universal Credit payments are based on your monthly earnings
You do not need to look for other work
You’ll get support from a work coach who’s trained to work with the self-employed.
Ask your current work coach if you’re eligible. For more information, read claiming Universal Credit when you’re self-employed.
Government apprenticeships
Need an apprentice? First, read the government’s help page on how to go about employing an apprentice.
You can get financial support from the government:
If your annual pay bill is less than 3 million, you won’t pay the apprenticeship levy. And as long as your apprentice started on or after 1 April 2019, you’ll get 5% towards training and assessment costs. You can find out more about apprenticeship levy.
Innovate UK smart grants
If your business’s focus is innovation or you’re trying to bring a new product to the market, apply for an innovation grant. Innovate UK supports business-led innovation in any industry, for tech or innovation-based projects. The UK’s flagship grant programme, the Innovate UK Smart Grant awards £125 million to British businesses every year.
Any UK-registered SME can apply. Grants are available for tech-based projects lasting 6 – 18 months. Theoretically, you could get up to £2 million. But that amount is more likely to be awarded to multiple firms collaborating on a project.
Research and development R&D tax relief
You can claim corporation tax relief if your company takes part in a research and development project. Your business will be eligible if you have less than 500 employees and a turnover of less than £100 million euros.
If you’ve got angel investors or venture capital funding, you’ll need to provide details and may not qualify. You’ll also have to declare any partner firms or companies you’re connected to.
If you’ve made a loss on an R&D project, you’re entitled to claim tax relief as a tax credit of 14.5%. For more information, head to the gov.uk website’s R&D relief page.