Funding opportunity

Funding opportunity: Nuclear physics consolidated grants 2026

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Apply for funding to support nuclear physics research.

The Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC) nuclear physics programme supports research in four areas: nuclear structure, nuclear astrophysics, hadronic physics and theory.

You must be employed by a UK research organisation eligible for STFC funding.

Awards must start on 1 October 2027 and will run for four years.

STFC will fund 80% of the full economic cost (FEC).

The funding opportunity opens on 6 November 2025 and closes on 12 March 2026.

Who can apply

This funding opportunity is open to organisations with standard eligibility. Check if your organisation is eligible.

Who is eligible to apply

To lead a project, you must be based at an eligible organisation.

This funding opportunity is open to all members of the nuclear physics research community based at UK research organisations eligible for UKRI funding. For full details, visit Eligibility as an individual.

All applications are expected to fall with STFC’s nuclear physics remit.

Additional information on STFC funding can be found here: Types of funding we offer.

Equality, diversity and inclusion

We are committed to achieving equality of opportunity for all funding applicants. We encourage applications from a diverse range of researchers.

We support people to work in a way that suits their personal circumstances. This includes:

  • career breaks
  • support for people with caring responsibilities
  • flexible working
  • alternative working patterns

UKRI can offer disability and accessibility support for UKRI applicants and grant holders during the application and assessment process.

What we're looking for

Aim

STFC’s nuclear physics consolidated grant programme provides funding for the nuclear physics research community within the UK. It delivers long-term funding for research groups to support a coherent programme of research within a department or institution, enabling researchers to plan and execute their work more effectively.

By providing funding for four years, research groups can plan their projects with greater confidence and stability, allowing for more ambitious and comprehensive research agendas.

The consolidated grant programme aims to collectively enhance the effectiveness and impact of nuclear physics research funded by STFC, ensuring that the UK remains internationally competitive and able to contribute to advancements in the field.

Scope

This grant round takes place every four years to support nuclear physics research within the UK.

Activities funded within this funding opportunity must fall within STFC’s Nuclear Physics remit. In addition they should align with STFC Science Challenges and the Nuclear Physics Advisory Panel Roadmap 2024.

We will take note of international reports for example, the NuPECC long range plan (PDF, 75MB) for European Nuclear Physics, to help set the context for the proposed work.
Funding is available from 1 October 2027 to 30 September 2031.

Only one consolidated grant can be awarded to an eligible research organisation or consortium. However, awards may consist of multiple, distinct scientific themes.

Consortium grants

Groups from different institutions working collaboratively in the same well-defined research area may apply for a consolidated research grant as a consortium. This is intended to allow members of such consortia the opportunity to bid for shared resources, that they might not otherwise be able to secure on their own, perhaps due to the size or scope of their activity.

A single application covering all collaborating organisations should be submitted on behalf of the entire consortium by the lead institution.

All funds are awarded directly to the lead consortium institution. It will be the responsibility of the lead institution to channel agreed funds to their consortium partners. Please note that this will require a collaboration agreement that includes provision for institutional transfer of funds, to be in place prior to a collaborative application starting.

For more information on the background of this funding opportunity, go to the Additional information section.

Duration

The duration of this award is four years.

Projects must start on 1 October 2027.

Funding available

The grant funding opportunity is being launched prior to the outcome of the UK government comprehensive spending review, therefore the budget is not currently known. It is anticipated that the budget for the programme will be constrained, in comparison with previous years.

You must therefore ensure that all requested funds are appropriate and fully justified.
Due to constrained budgets we aim to prioritise exploitation of previous investments and support the training and development of future talent.

Capital equipment items may be applied for, however unless there is strong justification and a recognised need, it is likely that the grants panel will deprioritise these.
STFC will fund 80% of the FEC.

What we will fund

We will fund:

  • staff costs
  • travel
  • maintenance and operations
  • consumables and equipment (see new UKRI equipment policy)

What we will not fund

We will not fund:

  • research that falls outside of our nuclear physics remit
  • doctoral studentships

Supporting skills and talent

We encourage you to follow the principles of the Concordat to Support the Career Development of Researchers and the Technician Commitment.

Trusted Research and Innovation (TR&I)

UKRI is committed in ensuring that effective international collaboration in research and innovation takes place with integrity and within strong ethical frameworks. Trusted Research and Innovation (TR&I) is a UKRI work programme designed to help protect all those working in our thriving and collaborative international sector by enabling partnerships to be as open as possible, and as secure as necessary. Our TR&I Principles set out UKRI’s expectations of organisations funded by UKRI in relation to due diligence for international collaboration.

As such, applicants for UKRI funding may be asked to demonstrate how their proposed projects will comply with our approach and expectation towards TR&I, identifying potential risks and the relevant controls you will put in place to help proportionately reduce these risks.

See further guidance and information about TR&I, including where applicants can find additional support.

Changes since the previous (2023) consolidated grants round

Whilst the key principles of the Nuclear Physics Consolidated Grants (NPCG) programme remain unchanged from previous rounds, some significant changes to the application process have been introduced for 2026. These changes have been made to better align the consolidated grants with UKRI’s Funding Service.

UKRI Funding Service

This funding opportunity is being run through the UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) Funding Service. You cannot apply on the Joint Electronic Submissions (Je-S) system. More details on this can be found in the ‘How to Apply’ Section.

Assessment criteria

This round of NPCG will use UKRI’s standard grants question set and assessment criteria. Whilst these cover the same broad areas as previous NPCG rounds, the wording and structure is different. Details of the assessment criteria that will be used for this round are provided in the ‘How we will assess your application’ section below.

Financial requirements form

To capture the level of detail needed to assess a consolidated grant application, a separate Financial requirements form must be completed. A copy of this form can be found here: Financial Requirements Form (XLSX, 40KB). Once completed, an Excel (.xlsx) version of this form must be submitted via email to STFC before the application closing date of12 March 2026.

Expert review

In line with new UKRI policy, this funding opportunity will not have a separate, written expert/peer review stage. Expert review will be undertaken by the Nuclear Physics grants panel with additional international members.

Equipment policy

Applications to this funding opportunity must adhere to UKRI’s new equipment and capital threshold policy, introduced on 1 April 2025, which states:

  • single items costing £25,000 and over will be considered capital expenditure, an increase from the previous equipment capital threshold of £10,000.
  • items of equipment will be funded at 80% of their full economic cost (80% FEC). However, awards for instrument development may (at the panel’s discretion) be funded at 100% FEC.
  • in the Funding Service individual items of £25,000 and over should be included under the equipment heading, items under £25,000 should be included as Other Directly Incurred.

Staff roles

With the introduction of the Funding Service, the number of available staff roles has been expanded. Details can be found in the ‘How to Apply’ Section below.

Form X

You are not required to provide a Form X for this funding opportunity. Instead, all requested staff time and FTE should be recorded within your Vision and Approach document and the ‘Resources and Cost’ section of the Funding Service.

Studentships

Doctoral studentships will not be funded through Nuclear Physics Consolidated Grants. All studentships should now be funded through our dedicated student funding programmes.

Consortia funding

As detailed above, and in line with current UKRI policy, all funding for consortia awards will be paid by UKRI to the lead (award holding) institution. That institution will be responsible for distributing the funding allocated to each consortium partner, including any STFC laboratory partners. Such a consortium should establish collaboration agreements before the grant start date, in order to facilitate the transfer of funds between partner institutions.

STFC laboratory costs

All costs relating to STFC laboratories who are consortium partners should be clearly identified and entered into the Funding Service in-line with other partner costs. It is essential that all costs associated with STFC laboratories can be clearly identified.

How to apply

We are running this funding opportunity on the new UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) Funding Service so please ensure that your organisation is registered. You cannot apply on the Joint Electronic Submissions (Je-S) system.

The project lead is responsible for completing the application process on the Funding Service, but we expect all team members and project partners to contribute to the application.

Only the lead research organisation can submit an application to UKRI.

To apply

Select ‘Start application’ near the beginning of this Funding finder page.

  1. Confirm you are the project lead.
  2. Sign in or create a Funding Service account. To create an account, select your organisation, verify your email address, and set a password. If your organisation is not listed, email support@funding-service.ukri.org
    Please allow at least 10 working days for your organisation to be added to the Funding Service. We strongly suggest that if you are asking UKRI to add your organisation to the Funding Service to enable you to apply to this opportunity, you also create an organisation Administration Account. This will be needed to allow the acceptance and management of any grant that might be offered to you.
  3. Answer questions directly in the text boxes. You can save your answers and come back to complete them or work offline and return to copy and paste your answers. If we need you to upload a document, follow the upload instructions in the Funding Service. All questions and assessment criteria are listed in the How we will assess your application section on this Funding finder page.
  4. Allow enough time to check your application in ‘read-only’ view before sending to your research office.
  5. Send the completed application to your research office for checking. They will return it to you if it needs editing.
  6. Your research office will submit the completed and checked application to UKRI.

Where indicated, you can also demonstrate elements of your responses in visual form if relevant.

When including images, you must:

  • provide a descriptive caption or legend for each image immediately underneath it in the text box (this must be outside the image and counts towards your word limit)
  • insert each new image on a new line
  • use files smaller than 5MB and in JPEG, JPG, JPE, JFI, JIF, JFIF, PNG, GIF, BMP or WEBP format

Images should only be used to convey important visual information that cannot easily be put into words. The following are not permitted, and your application may be rejected if you include:

  • sentences or paragraphs of text
  • tables
  • excessive quantities of images

A few words are permitted where the image would lack clarity without the contextual words, such as a diagram, where text labels are required for an axis or graph column.

For more guidance on the Funding Service, see:

References

References should be included within the word count of the appropriate question section. You should use your discretion when including references and prioritise those most pertinent to the application.

Hyperlinks can be used in reference information. When including references, you should consider how your references will be viewed and used by the assessors, ensuring that:

  • references are easily identifiable by the assessors
  • references are formatted as appropriate to your research
  • persistent identifiers are used where possible

General use of hyperlinks

Applications should be self-contained. You should only use hyperlinks to link directly to reference information. You must not include links to web resources to extend your application. Assessors are not required to access links to conduct assessment or recommend a funding decision.

Generative artificial intelligence (AI)

Use of generative AI tools to prepare funding applications is permitted, however, caution should be applied. For more information see our policy on the use of generative AI in application and assessment.

Deadline

STFC must receive your application by 12 March 2026 at 4:00pm UK time.

You will not be able to apply after this time.

Make sure you are aware of and follow any internal institutional deadlines.

Following the submission of your application to this funding opportunity, your application cannot be changed, and submitted applications will not be amended. If your application does not follow the guidance, it may be rejected.

Personal data

Processing personal data

STFC, as part of UKRI, will need to collect some personal information to manage your Funding Service account and the registration of your funding applications.

We will handle personal data in line with UK data protection legislation and manage it securely. For more information, including how to exercise your rights, read our privacy notice.

Sensitive information

If you or a core team member need to tell us something you wish to remain confidential, email grantspolicy@stfc.ac.uk

Include ‘NPCG26; sensitive information; [your Funding Service application number]’ in the subject line.

Typical examples of confidential information include:

  • individual is unavailable until a certain date (for example due to parental leave)
  • declaration of interest
  • additional information about eligibility to apply that would not be appropriately shared in the ‘Applicant and team capability’ section
  • conflict of interest for UKRI to consider in reviewer or panel participant selection
  • the application is an invited resubmission

For information about how UKRI handles personal data, read UKRI’s privacy notice.

Institutional matched funding

There is no requirement for matched funding from the institutions hosting the project lead, project co-leads or other staff employed on the application, beyond the standard 20% FEC. Expert reviewers and panels assessing UKRI funding applications must not consider levels of institutional matched funding as a factor on which to base recommendations. Direct and in-kind contributions from third party project partners are encouraged.

This policy does not remove the need for support from host organisations, who must provide the necessary research environment and infrastructure for award-specific activities funded by UKRI, for example research facilities, training and development of staff.

Summary

Word limit: 550

In plain English, provide a summary we can use to identify the most suitable experts to assess your application.

We usually make this summary publicly available on external-facing websites, therefore do not include any confidential or sensitive information. Make it suitable for a variety of readers, for example:

  • opinion-formers
  • policymakers
  • the public
  • the wider research community

Guidance for writing a summary

Clearly describe your proposed work in terms of:

  • context
  • the challenge the project addresses
  • aims and objectives
  • potential applications and benefits

Core team

List the key members of your team and assign them roles from the following:

  • project lead (PL)
  • project co-lead (UK) (PcL)
  • specialist
  • grant manager
  • professional enabling staff
  • research and innovation associate
  • technician
  • visiting researcher
  • researcher co-lead (RcL)

Only list one individual as project lead.

UKRI has introduced a new addition to the ‘Specialist’ role type. Public contributors such as people with lived experience can now be added to an application.

Find out more about UKRI’s core team roles in funding applications.

Application questions

Vision and Approach

The Vision and Approach (V&A) document replaces the ‘Case for Support’ used in previous nuclear physics consolidated grant rounds.

Use the Vision and Approach template (DOCX, 72KB) to create and structure your Vision and Approach document. The document should not exceed the word counts specified within each section of the template. Content should be single spaced 11-point Arial (or equivalent sans serif font) with margins of at least 2cm. You may include images, graphs, tables.

For the file name, use the unique Funding Service number the system gives you when you create an application, followed by the words ‘Vision and Approach’.

Save this document as a single PDF file, no bigger than 8MB. Unless specifically requested, please do not include any sensitive personal data within the attachment.

If the attachment does not meet these requirements, the application will be rejected.

What are you hoping to achieve with and how will you deliver your proposed work?
What the assessors are looking for in your response

For the Vision, explain how your proposed work:

  • is of excellent quality and importance within or beyond the field(s) or area(s)
  • has the potential to advance current understanding, generates new knowledge, thinking or discovery within or beyond the field or area
  • is timely given current trends, context and needs
  • impacts world-leading research, society, the economy or the environment

For the Approach, explain how you have designed your work so that it:

  • is effective and appropriate to achieve your objectives
  • is feasible, and comprehensively identifies any risks to delivery and how they will be managed
  • if applicable, uses a clear and transparent methodology
  • if applicable, summarises the previous work and describes how this will be built upon and progressed
  • will maximise translation of outputs into outcomes and impacts
  • describes how your, and if applicable your team’s, research environment (in terms of the place, and relevance to the project) will contribute to the success of the work

References may be included within this section.

Contextual information

The Vision and Approach document replaces the ‘Case for Support’ used in previous consolidated grant rounds. The template is divided into three parts:

  • Part 1: Application (Group) Overview
  • Part 2: Cases for the Themes
  • Part 3: Cross-Community Request (where appropriate)

In addition to the standard UKRI Vision and Approach questions, the template includes sections and tables that must be completed by each applicant. Additional guidance and maximum word extents for these sections are included in the template.

Applicant and team capability to deliver

Word limit: 550

Why are you the right individual or team to successfully deliver the proposed work?

Please provide your response to this section within the PDF Vision and Approach document. The spirit of ‘what the assessors are looking for in your response’ (below), should form the basis of your application when making the scientific case relating to the proposed programme.

Please confirm in the text box that you have included your response to this question in the attachment by inserting ‘Included in the Vision and Approach document’.

What the assessors are looking for in your response

Evidence of how you, and if relevant your team, have:

  • the relevant experience (appropriate to career stage) to deliver the proposed work
  • the right balance of skills and expertise to cover the proposed work
  • the appropriate leadership and management skills to deliver the work and your approach to develop others
  • contributed to developing a positive research environment and wider community

You may demonstrate elements of your responses in visual form if relevant. Further details are provided in the Funding Service.

Use the Résumé for Research and Innovation (R4RI) format to showcase the range of relevant skills you and, if relevant, your team (project and project co-leads, researchers, technicians, specialists, partners and so on) have and how this will help deliver the proposed work. You can include individuals’ specific achievements but only choose past contributions that best evidence their ability to deliver this work.

Complete this section using the R4RI module headings listed. Use each heading once and include a response for the whole team, see the UKRI guidance on R4RI. You should consider how to balance your answer, and emphasise where appropriate the key skills each team member brings:

  • contributions to the generation of new ideas, tools, methodologies, or knowledge
  • the development of others and maintenance of effective working relationships
  • contributions to the wider research and innovation community
  • contributions to broader research or innovation users and audiences and towards wider societal benefit
Additions

Provide any further details relevant to your application. This section is optional and can be up to 500 words. You should not use it to describe additional skills, experiences, or outputs, but you can use it to describe any factors that provide context for the rest of your R4RI (for example, details of career breaks if you wish to disclose them).

Complete this as a narrative. Do not format it like a CV.

References may be included within this section.

Ethics and responsible research and innovation (RRI)

Word limit: 500

What are the ethical and RRI considerations, implications and issues relating to the proposed work? If you do not think that the proposed work raises any ethical or RRI issues, explain why.

What the assessors are looking for in your response

Demonstrate that you have identified and evaluated:

  • the relevant ethical and RRI considerations, including both the research or topic area itself and the design and delivery of the project
  • the wider implications of the proposed work, and how you will maximise the positive societal, environmental, and economic benefits arising from the project, whilst minimising unintended negative impacts, such as research misuse or accidental harm
  • how you will manage these considerations throughout the lifecycle of the project

You may demonstrate elements of your responses in visual form if relevant. Further details are provided in the Funding Service.

Please refer to the UKRI position statement on funding ethical research and Responsible innovation for more information around our expectations on ethical and responsible research and innovation.

Research involving the use of animals

If this does not apply to your proposed work, you will be able to indicate this in the Funding Service. Please write N/A, as appropriate, in this box.

Does your proposed research involve the use of vertebrate animals or other organisms covered by the Animals Scientific Procedures Act?

What the assessors are looking for in your response

If you are proposing research that requires using animals, download and complete the Research involving the use of animals template (DOCX, 52.5KB), which contains all the questions relating to research using vertebrate animals or other Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act 1986 regulated organisms.

Save it as a PDF. The Funding Service will provide document upload details when you apply.

Resources and cost justification

Word limit: 100

You are required to provide details of your justification of resource within your submitted Vision and Approach Template, please write the following in response in this box:

‘I confirm that cost justifications have been detailed within the submitted Vision and Approach document.’

By doing so, you acknowledge that the full and suitable information has been provided.

Within the Vision and Approach document you should justify the application’s more costly resources, in particular:

  • project staff
  • significant travel for field work or collaboration (but not regular travel between collaborating organisations or to conferences)
  • any equipment that will cost more than £25,000
  • any consumables beyond typical requirements, or that are required in exceptional quantities
  • all facilities and infrastructure costs
  • all resources that have been costed as ‘Exceptions’

You can request costs associated with reasonable adjustments where they increase as a direct result of working on the project. For further information see Disability and accessibility support for UKRI applicants and grant holders.

Assessors are not looking for detailed costs or a line-by-line breakdown of all project resources. Overall, they want you to demonstrate how the resources you anticipate needing for your proposed work:

  • are comprehensive, appropriate, and justified
  • represent the optimal use of resources to achieve the intended outcomes
  • maximise potential outcomes and impacts

Financial requirements form

Word limit: 50

A single financial requirements form should be completed for each application.

What the assessors are looking for in your response

The Financial requirements form provides a detailed breakdown of all the cost and resource requests across your application. It also identifies the themes that specific costs are associated with. The form includes four tabs that you must complete:

  • staff & overhead costs
  • equipment costs
  • non-staff costs
  • summary

Forms submitted by consortia groups should clearly identify which costs are associated with each consortium partner (including any STFC laboratory partners).

A copy of the Financial requirements form can be found in the Financial Requirements form (XLSX, 40KB).

Whilst the figures provided in this form are more granular than those in the ‘Resources and cost justification’ section of the Funding Service, the overall total amounts should be the same.

Please note that as excel documents cannot be uploaded to the Funding Service, you must email a copy (in .xlsx format) directly to STFC, GrantsPolicy@stfc.ac.uk by 12 March 2026.

Data management and sharing

Word limit: 1,000

How will you manage and share data collected or acquired through the proposed research?

What the assessors are looking for in your response

Provide a data management plan that clearly details how you will comply with UKRI’s published data sharing policy, which includes detailed guidance notes.

Trusted Research and Innovation (TR&I)

Word limit: 100

Does your proposed work relate to UKRI’s Trusted Research and Innovation principles?

The office will use this information to ensure all applications have suitably considered and acted upon any concerns relating to Trusted Research and Innovation.

Demonstrate how your proposed work relates to UKRI’s Trusted Research and Innovation principles including:

  • list any dual-use (both military and non-military) applications to your research
  • if this project is relevant to one or more of the 17 areas of the UK National Security and Investment (NSI) Act, please list the area(s)
  • please read the academic export control guidance and confirm if an export control licence is required for this project and the status of any application(s)
  • if your project involves any items or substances on the UK strategic export control list, please provide a list
  • is this application part of experiments at international facilities? If yes, please indicate which facilities.

We may ask you to provide additional TR&I information later, in line with UKRI TR&I principles and funding terms and conditions (RGC 2.6.2, 2.7.1 and 2.7.2).

How we will assess your application

Assessment process

We will assess your application using the following process.

Overview

Once all applications have been received and checked by STFC, they will be read and given preliminary grades by members of the Nuclear Physics Grants Panel (NPGP).
The membership of the NPGP can be found here: Nuclear Physics Grants Panel. If required, STFC may add additional temporary members to the standing NPGP to cover any gaps in expertise during the grant application assessment process.

There will then be a clarification stage, at which point the panel can raise any specific questions or concerns with the project lead of each application.

Every scientific theme within each application will then be discussed, assessed and ranked by STFC Nuclear Physics Grants Panel.

Once all themes have been ranked, the panel will undertake a prioritisation exercise to bring the programme within the available funding envelope.

Expert review

In line with new UKRI policy for targeted funding opportunities, there will be no separate written expert review or project lead response stage for this round. Instead, expert review will be provided by the NPGP.

Clarification stage

Before the panel meeting, the NPGP will be given an opportunity to raise any questions or concerns with the project lead of each application to clarify any issues arising from their application. The purpose of this process is to provide an opportunity for the grants panel to fully understand the applications and raise any questions they may have. It is not an opportunity to re-make the science case.

The clarification stage is scheduled for April/May 2026 and is anticipated to be undertaken as a written question and response exercise.

Nuclear Physics Grants Panel (NPGP) assessment meeting

Following the clarification stage, the NPGP will meet to review, assess and agree ranking for all scientific themes. These will be assessed and graded individually and assigned a priority banding fromhigh to low.

Once all themes have been banded, the panel will consider the level of requested resource for each theme and potential cost revisions will be employed in line with its allocated rank.

For more information on how we prioritise applications for funding please visit: How we make decisions.

Timescale

The timetable for the 2026 consolidated grant funding opportunity is:

  • cross community requests submitted to CC group: End of January 2026
  • opening date for applications on UKRI Funding Finder: 6 November 2025
  • applicant webinar: 19 November 2025
  • closing date for applications on UKRI Funding Finder: 12 March 2026
  • clarification stage: April/May 2026
  • assessment panel meetings: June/July 2026
  • outcomes announced: January 2027
  • award start date: 1 October 2027
  • award end date: 31 September 2031

Feedback

We will give feedback with the outcome of your application.

Principles of assessment

We support the San Francisco declaration on research assessment and recognise the relationship between research assessment and research integrity.

Find out about the UKRI principles of assessment and decision making.

Using generative artificial intelligence (AI) in expert review

Reviewers and panellists are not permitted to use generative AI tools to develop their assessment. Using these tools can potentially compromise the confidentiality of the ideas that applicants have entrusted to UKRI to safeguard.

For more detail see our policy on the use of generative AI.

We reserve the right to modify the assessment process as needed.

Assessment areas

The core assessment areas we will use are:

  • Vision & Approach document
  • Ethics and responsible research and innovation (RRI)
  • Applicant and team capability to deliver
  • Resources and costs

The panel will also be invited to take into account your responses regarding the Data Management Plans.

Find details of assessment questions and criteria under the ‘Application questions’ heading in the ‘How to apply’ section.

Contact details

Get help with your application

If you have a question and the answers aren’t provided on this page

The helpdesk is committed to helping users of the UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) Funding Service as effectively and as quickly as possible. In order to manage cases at peak volume times, the helpdesk will triage and prioritise those queries with an imminent opportunity deadline or a technical issue. Enquiries raised where information is available on the Funding finder opportunity page and should be understood early in the application process (for example, regarding eligibility, content or remit of a funding opportunity) will not constitute a priority case and will be addressed as soon as possible.

Contact details

For help and advice on costings and writing your application please contact your research office in the first instance, allowing sufficient time for your organisation’s submission process.

For questions related to this specific funding opportunity please contact: pp@stfc.ac.uk

Please include ‘NPCG26’ in the email subject line.

Any queries regarding the system or the submission of applications through the Funding Service should be directed to the helpdesk.

Email: support@funding-service.ukri.org
Phone: 01793 547490

Our phone lines are open:

  • Monday to Thursday 8:30am to 5:00pm
  • Friday 8:30am to 4:30pm

To help us process queries more efficiently, we request that users highlight the council and opportunity name in the subject title of their email query, include the application reference number, and refrain from contacting more than one mailbox at a time.

For further information on submitting an application read How applicants use the Funding Service.

Additional info

Background

Research and innovation impact

Impact can be defined as the long-term intended or unintended effect research and innovation has on society, economy and the environment; to individuals, organisations, and the wider global population.

Supporting documents

There are two supporting documents to be used as an integral part of the application process:

Webinar for potential applicants

We will hold a webinar on 19 November 2025, at 10:00am. This will provide more information about the funding opportunity and a chance to ask questions.

Watch the webinar on Teams:

Teams Meeting ID: 391 721 225 497 1

Passcode: 9cZ35e7w

Research disruption due to COVID-19

We recognise that the COVID-19 pandemic has caused major interruptions and disruptions across our communities. We are committed to ensuring that individual applicants and their wider team, including partners and networks, are not penalised for any disruption to their career, such as:

  • breaks and delays
  • disruptive working patterns and conditions
  • the loss of ongoing work
  • role changes that may have been caused by the pandemic

Reviewers and panel members will be advised to consider the unequal impacts that COVID-19 related disruption might have had on the capability to deliver and career development of those individuals included in the application. They will be asked to consider the capability of the applicant and their wider team to deliver the research they are proposing.

Where disruptions have occurred, you can highlight this within your application if you wish, but there is no requirement to detail the specific circumstances that caused the disruption.

New Applicants Scheme

Newly appointed academic members of staff (lecturers or lecturer equivalent fellows) who have joined a department between grant reviews may exceptionally apply separately for support. This will potentially allow them to begin to establish a research programme on appointment. If grant funding is agreed, funding will be awarded as a separate grant to the department’s existing consortium or consolidated grant.
Any enquiries relating to the new applicants scheme should be directed to STFC: grantspolicy@stfc.ac.uk. Please ensure that emails include ‘NPCG26’ in the subject line.

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