Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development Program

Department of Agriculture · Opportunity USDA-NIFA-BFR-011336

NewComplexity 4/5

At a glance AI extracted

Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development Program (National Institute of Food and Agriculture) $49,999 – $750,000

Who can apply

  • Others (see text field entitled "Additional Information on Eligibility" for clar…

Eligible uses

  • Agriculture

Typical documents

  • Application form (SF-424)
  • Project narrative
  • Detailed budget

⚠ Watch out for

  • Cost sharing / matching funds required
Award size$49,999 – $750,000
Deadline2026-06-16
Posted2026-05-13
Cost sharingRequired
Eligible applicantsOthers (see text field entitled "Additional Information on Eligibility" for clarification)
ActivityAgriculture
Funding instrumentGrant
CFDA programBeginning Farmer and Rancher Development Program
Org type filterNonprofit / For-profit / Higher Ed / Local Gov / Tribal Gov / IndividualAI-tagged
Sector filterResearch / Education / Agriculture / Arts / CommunityAI-tagged
Use filterResearch / Training / OutreachAI-tagged
Sourcegrants.gov
Last updated2026-05-14T14:08:51.538023+00:00

From the official announcement

The primary goal of BFRDP, under assistance listing number 10.311, is to help beginning farmers and ranchers in the United States and its territories enter and/or improve their successes in farming, ranching, and management of nonindustrial private forest lands, through support for projects that provide education, outreach, and technical assistance to give beginning farmers and ranchers the knowledge, skills, and tools needed to make informed decisions for their operations and enhance their sustainability. Applicants for the Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development Program (BFRDP) must meet all the requirements discussed in this NOFO. Failure to meet the eligibility criteria by the application deadline may result in exclusion from consideration or, preclude NIFA from making an award. For those new to Federal financial assistance, NIFA’s About Grants provides highly recommended information about grants and other resources to help understand the Federal awards process. Applications may only be submitted by a collaborative state, tribal, local, or regionally based network or partnership of qualified public and/or private entities. These collaborations may include the following entities: State Cooperative Extension Services; federal, state, municipal or tribal agencies; community-based organizations (CBOs); non-governmental organizations (NGOs); junior and four-year colleges or universities or foundations maintained by a college or university; and private for-profit organizations. Collaboratives led by State Cooperative Extension Services; federal, state, municipal or tribal agencies will be given funding priority. Application submission of a project effort that is a duplicate of a current beginning farmer project will not be accepted for review under this program. Incorporating beginning and/or non-beginning farmers and ranchers as part of the collaborative group is strongly encouraged. Applications submitted by individuals, or by organizations that do not involve other entities in a network or partnership, are not eligible for consideration under any category applicable to the BFRDP and will be excluded from review. To meet regional balance, multiple awards will not be made to the same organization, institution, or Project Director in the same calendar year. Further, organizations and institutions that have received a regular standard or education team grant in the last funding cycle (FY 2024) are ineligible to apply. To avoid chances of Project Directors providing oversight on two BFRDP grants concurrently, Project Directors of active awards can apply for new BFRDP awards when they are in their final year of project work. It is unallowable to have a new project and at the same time have a project that has not yet been terminated. Please do not apply for another simplified standard grant if you were previously awarded a simplified standard BFRDP grant. Simplified standard grants are designed for new trainers who have never received grants nor gained more than three years of experience in assisting with the development of beginning farmers and ranchers. Failure to meet an eligibility criterion by the application deadline may result in the application being excluded from consideration or, if reviewed, will preclude NIFA from making an award. Award recipients may subcontract to organizations not eligible to apply provided such organizations are necessary for the conduct of the project. USDA will not accept competitive applications for grants…

Agency contact

Joseph Perez Lead Policy Analyst

grantapplicationquestions@usda.gov

Open on grants.gov →

This page summarizes public information from grants.gov via AI extraction. Final eligibility and application terms are set by the issuing agency. AI summaries may contain errors. Verify on the official announcement before applying.