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Homelessness Services Grants (2026)

Homelessness services funding supports the organizations on the front line: street outreach teams, emergency and extreme-weather shelters, rapid re-housing, and the local Continuum of Care (CoC) that coordinates the response. These grants help homeless services agencies move people from the street into stable housing and keep emergency capacity open year-round.

17 open housing grants — homelessness services and related

17 grants worth up to $181.8M match your search

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Self-Help Homeownership Opportunity Program (SHOP)

open

Department of Housing and Urban Development

This NOFO solicits applications for the Self-Help Homeownership Opportunity Program (SHOP). This grant awards funds to eligible national and regional nonprofit organizations and consortia to purchase home sites and develop or improve the infrastructure needed to set the stage for sweat equity and volunteer-based homeownership programs. The SHOP program is a tool to promote the production of affordable housing for low-income persons and families, including first-responders, veterans, and persons with disabilities, while fostering safe, stable neighborhoods in communities nationwide.The SHOP grant program provides competitive awards to national and regional nonprofit organizations and consortia to purchase home sites and develop or improve the infrastructure needed to set the stage for sweat equity and volunteer-based homeownership programs and to promote the production of affordable housing for low-income persons and families, including veterans, homeless persons , first responders, and persons with disabilities . The SHOP units must:Be sold to homebuyers at below market prices;Homebuyers must be low-income and contribute a significant amount of sweat equity towards the development of their SHOP home; andSHOP homes must be non-luxury units that comply with state and local codes, ordinances, and zoning requirements, and with all other SHOP requirements.Applicants must also:Propose to use a significant amount of SHOP grant funds in at least two states.Use the SHOP grant funds for only land acquisition, infrastructure improvements, and reasonable and necessary planning and administration costs (not to exceed 10 percent).The average SHOP expense for the combined cost of land acquisition and infrastructure improvements cannot exceed $25,000 per SHOP unit.Applicants must leverage other public and private funds to pay for the construction or rehabilitation costs of every SHOP unit.Leveraged funds may also be used for other program costs not covered by SHOP grant funds.All communications between HUD, SHOP applicants, SHOP awardees, and SHOP beneficiaries must be in English. The application must be received through Grants.gov in English.This NOFO makes available $24,000,000 ($12,000,000 in FY2025 and $12,000,000 in FY2024) to carry out eligible activities of the SHOP program.

$1.1M – $12M
2026-07-15
Community DevelopmentHousingopportunity_zone_benefits

Free to search & build · $99 one-time to unlock the application pack · No subscription

FY 2026 Continuum of Care Competition and Youth Homelessness Demonstration Program Grants NOFO

open

Department of Housing and Urban Development

The Continuum of Care (CoC) Program is designed to:promote a community-wide commitment to the goal of ending homelessness;provide funding for efforts by nonprofit providers, States, Indian Tribes or Tribally Designated Housing Entities [as defined in section 4 of the Native American Housing Assistance and Self-Determination Act of 1996 (25 U.S.C. 4103) (TDHEs)], and local governments to quickly rehouse individuals and families experiencing homelessness, persons experiencing trauma or a lack of safety related to, or fleeing or attempting to flee domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking, and youth experiencing homelessness while minimizing the trauma and dislocation caused by homelessness;promote access to, and effective utilization of, mainstream programs and programs funded with State or local resources; andoptimize self-sufficiency among individuals and families experiencing homelessness.The goal of the Youth Homelessness Demonstration Program (YHDP) is to support the development and implementation of a coordinated community approach to preventing and ending youth homelessness and sharing that experience with and mobilizing communities around the country toward the same end. The population to be served by the demonstration program is youth ages 24 and younger who are experiencing homelessness, including unaccompanied and pregnant or parenting youth.

$3K – $25M
2026-08-26
Community DevelopmentHousing

Free to search & build · $99 one-time to unlock the application pack · No subscription

FY 2026 Continuum of Care Competition and Youth Homelessness Demonstration Program Grants NOFO

open

Department of Housing and Urban Development

The Continuum of Care (CoC) Program is designed to:promote a community-wide commitment to the goal of ending homelessness;provide funding for efforts by nonprofit providers, States, Indian Tribes or Tribally Designated Housing Entities [as defined in section 4 of the Native American Housing Assistance and Self-Determination Act of 1996 (25 U.S.C. 4103) (TDHEs)], and local governments to quickly rehouse individuals and families experiencing homelessness, persons experiencing trauma or a lack of safety related to, or fleeing or attempting to flee domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking, and youth experiencing homelessness while minimizing the trauma and dislocation caused by homelessness;promote access to, and effective utilization of, mainstream programs and programs funded with State or local resources; andoptimize self-sufficiency among individuals and families experiencing homelessness.The goal of the Youth Homelessness Demonstration Program (YHDP) is to support the development and implementation of a coordinated community approach to preventing and ending youth homelessness and sharing that experience with and mobilizing communities around the country toward the same end. The population to be served by the demonstration program is youth ages 24 and younger who are experiencing homelessness, including unaccompanied and pregnant or parenting youth.

$3K – $25M
2026-08-26
community development

Free to search & build · $99 one-time to unlock the application pack · No subscription

Homelessness Services grant FAQ

Who can apply for homelessness services grants?

Nonprofits, community development corporations, supportive and transitional housing providers, homeless services agencies, and housing rehab programs apply for different programs. Some funding flows through states and local governments that re-grant it to nonprofit subrecipients; other programs accept direct applications. The right fit depends on your organization type and where you work.

What do homelessness services grants pay for?

Homelessness services funding supports the organizations on the front line: street outreach teams, emergency and extreme-weather shelters, rapid re-housing, and the local Continuum of Care (CoC) that coordinates the response. These grants help homeless services agencies move people from the street into stable housing and keep emergency capacity open year-round.

When are homelessness services grant applications due?

Deadlines vary by program — federal NOFO cycles, state funding rounds, and rolling local programs run on different calendars. The open opportunities above show current deadlines, or run your organization's profile through FindGrants to see every housing grant you qualify for right now.

Other housing grant types

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