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Non-dilutive R&D funding for US deep tech startups.
Project Pitch mandatory before full proposal
Up to $305,000 non‑dilutive Phase I (Phase II $1.25M)
No majority VC/PE ownership allowed – NSF‑unique rule
SAM.gov registration takes 4‑6 weeks – start now
You can't just apply for NSF SBIR STTR Fund as you do for other government grants. You pitch first. And if they like it, they invite you to apply - that invitation is good for one year. Also, if VC firms own more than 50% of your company, you're automatically out. This restriction is unique to NSF among federal SBIR programs. I've been digging into this program for years, and the number of founders who miss these two gates still surprises me.

America's Seed Fund offers up to $305,000 in Phase I non‑dilutive R&D funding, and Phase II adds another $1.25 million. But the path is gated, and the rules are strict. Let's walk through what actually matters.
Before you spend weeks on SciENcv forms and the 15‑page proposal, check the basic gates – especially the VC ownership rule that trips up half of applicants. Our tool surfaces that trap early. It walks you through the key requirements: US ownership, headcount, PI commitment, and the unique NSF restriction on VC ownership.
If the tool shows you're eligible, your best next step is to with us so we can craft your pitch and proposal. If you're unsure about your ownership structure or PI setup, book a live consultation with a grant expert. And if you're not eligible, don't worry – scroll down to the More Grants section for other opportunities matched to your profile.
The National Science Foundation runs this program through its SBIR and STTR tracks. SBIR is for companies doing the research themselves; STTR requires a formal partnership with a research institution (university or federal lab) that performs at least 30% of the work. Both share the same funding, the same eligibility, and the same weird first step: the Project Pitch.
You submit a three‑page online form covering your technology, the technical challenges, the market opportunity, and your team. If a Program Director likes it, you get an email invitation to submit a full proposal. That invitation is gold – it's valid for one full year. I learned that from the official solicitation (NSF 23‑515). Most people don't realize they have twelve months to write the 15‑page proposal.
The amounts changed in 2024. Phase I now goes up to $305,000 for proof‑of‑concept work. Phase II up to $1.25 million to develop the prototype further. If you get both, you're looking at roughly $1.55 million – the “up to $2M” figure includes both phases and possible supplements. It's real money, and it's non‑dilutive. No equity given up.
The pitch is not a formality. It's the primary gate. NSF program directors review these to determine if your innovation aligns with their mandate for high‑risk, high‑impact technical development. You submit through the NSF portal anytime. One to two months later, you receive either an invitation or a decline with feedback.
The pitch has four sections with strict character limits: Technology Innovation (3,500), Technical Objectives and Challenges (3,500), Market Opportunity (1,750), and Company/Team (1,750). These limits are enforced by the portal. Exceed them, and your pitch gets rejected administratively without review. I always draft outside the portal and paste in.
What kills pitches? The most common reasons are insufficient technical risk (your innovation can be built with existing methods), unclear market opportunity, weak team credentials, and misalignment with NSF scope (incremental engineering rather than fundamental advance). The feedback is specific – use it to decide whether to revise or pivot.
Also, you can only have one active Project Pitch per submission cycle. No duplicates.
The most competitive Project Pitches demonstrate technical risk explicitly. NSF funds what has not been proven, not incremental improvements. If your innovation can be built with existing engineering practices, it likely does not qualify.
Before you fall in love with the numbers, check these gates. They're non‑negotiable.
There are also immediate disqualifiers: including URLs in the Project Description (forbidden by the solicitation), proposing clinical trials, or having any connection to malign foreign talent recruitment programs. The pre‑award forms (OMB 3145‑0270) ask detailed questions about foreign affiliations – be ready to answer honestly.
Before you can submit a Project Pitch or full proposal, you need three registrations. Start these immediately – they take longer than you think.
Miss one step and the portal blocks you hours before deadline. NSF doesn't grant extensions for registration failures.
Once you get the invitation, the real work begins. The full proposal is extensive. Here's what you'll need:
That's at least 14 items. The Project Description must follow strict headers (Intellectual Merit, Broader Impacts, Commercial Potential) and be written for dual audiences: scientists and commercialization reviewers. Formatting violations (wrong font, margins, missing headers) trigger automatic return without review.
Voluntary cost sharing is prohibited. Some costs are unallowable: equipment purchases, foreign travel, publication costs, marketing, and sales expenses. Customer letters of support are banned in Phase I – reviewers want to see technical proof first.
The $305,000 cap is firm. Proposals exceeding it are returned without review. You must choose between the 50% safe rate on salaries or the 15% de minimis rate on Modified Total Direct Costs. The de minimis rate is the forward‑looking choice for most applicants.
Once submitted, your proposal goes to peer review. NSF guarantees at least three expert reviewers. They evaluate based on three criteria:
The exact weights aren't public, but funded proposals demonstrate technical risk explicitly. They explain why the technology might fail and how they'll find out. They also show commercial awareness without overselling – specific customers, revenue models, and competitive landscape.
Timeline: Pitch (1‑2 months) → invitation → registration and proposal prep (2‑4 months) → merit review (4‑6 months) → award notification and contracting (1‑2 months). Total: 6‑12 months minimum. If you need funding within 90 days, this program isn't a fit.
You get the email. You celebrate. Then you discover the pre‑award paperwork. Before any money moves, your PI and Authorized Organizational Representative must certify they've watched:
You also fill out a detailed form (OMB 3145‑0270) disclosing every owner with more than 5% equity, their citizenship, any foreign affiliations, and any ties to malign foreign talent programs. It's invasive, but it's mandatory. Fail to disclose, and you risk losing the award – or worse.
We help clients through this step too. Because winning shouldn't feel like a second job.
If your technology is truly deep tech – rooted in fundamental science – and you meet the eligibility gates, you should absolutely pitch. The worst that happens is you get a no, and you've only spent a week on the pitch, not 100 hours on a full proposal.
If you're building a straightforward software product with no research component, or if your cap table includes majority VC ownership, this isn't the right program. Look at other non‑dilutive options like NIH SBIR (which allows VC ownership) or state grants.
If you're unsure about the STTR vs SBIR decision, read our SBIR vs STTR explained guide.
Q: Are venture capital‑backed startups eligible for NSF SBIR?
A: No. Companies where venture capital, private equity, or hedge funds collectively own more than 50% are ineligible. This restriction is unique to NSF – NIH and DOE SBIR programs allow majority VC ownership under SBA rules. The prohibition applies even if ownership is split across multiple firms.
Q: What are the Project Pitch field limits?
A: Four sections with explicit caps: Technology Innovation 3500 characters, Technical Objectives and Challenges 3500, Market Opportunity 1750, and Company and Team 1750. Draft outside the portal and paste to avoid truncation.
Q: Do I need preliminary data to apply?
A: No. NSF explicitly states preliminary data is not required for Phase I. They want high‑risk unproven R&D – not de‑risked prototypes. This differs from NIH SBIR, which often expects preliminary data.
Q: How long does NSF take to make a decision?
A: 6‑9 months from full proposal submission to award notification. No status updates during review – just email when decisions land. Factor in the 1‑2 months for pitch review, and total timeline is 6‑12 months.
Q: What is the difference between SBIR and STTR?
A: SBIR requires the small business to perform at least two‑thirds of the research. STTR requires a formal partnership with a research institution (university or federal lab) that performs at least 30% of the work. STTR is designed for academic spinouts.
Q: Can I resubmit a declined Project Pitch?
A: No. NSF prohibits resubmission of declined Project Pitches for the same concept within 12 months. This raises the stakes of your first submission – which is why pre‑submission review is valuable.
Q: How do I choose between the 50% safe rate and 15% de minimis indirect cost rate?
A: The 50% safe rate applies to total budgeted salaries and wages. The 15% de minimis applies to Modified Total Direct Costs (excluding equipment, tuition, and subawards over $25,000). For personnel‑heavy projects, the safe rate often yields higher indirect cost recovery. The safe rate is being phased out, so de minimis is the forward‑looking choice.
Q: What happens after Phase I?
A: If successful, you may apply for Phase II funding up to $1.25 million for 24 months of continued development. Phase II requires commercialization progress, not just technical milestones. Fast‑Track applicants submit Phase I and II proposals simultaneously.
Q: Does reauthorization mean pitches reopened?
A: The program operates on periodic cycles. Check the official seedfund.nsf.gov for current status. If you have an existing invitation, it remains valid for one year.
If NSF SBIR/STTR isn't right for you – maybe your tech is earlier stage, or you're blocked by the VC rule – there are other non‑dilutive options. Use the tool below to find grants matched to your profile.
The friction points in this application are specific and costly. The Project Pitch character limits are not software‑enforced, so over‑length submissions get rejected administratively after weeks of waiting. The ownership calculation requires fully diluted analysis that many founders get wrong. The three‑portal registration maze has failure modes that cost months. The 15‑page technical narrative must satisfy dual audiences with different evaluation criteria. And the 12‑month resubmission ban means your first submission must be your best.
That's where we come in. Our team includes former NSF reviewers and proposal writers who know exactly what Program Directors want to see. We don't just check boxes – we help you frame your technical risk so it sounds like an opportunity to NSF rather than a red flag. We review your cap table against NSF's specific interpretation, identifying disqualifying issues before you invest in SAM registration. We handle the tedious SciENcv formatting and budget justification to ensure you don't get disqualified for a formatting error. And we offer full application submission support, including writing the narrative and managing the Research.gov upload, when the grantor allows third‑party submission.
If you've already received an invitation, or you're ready to craft a pitch that gets you invited, click below to start your full application with us.
Or if you're still deciding, grab a free 15‑minute call to ask a specific question. No pressure, just clarity.
I'm the founder of Grantaura, and I've spent the last decade helping founders navigate federal grants. This page is based on the actual solicitation documents, my conversations with program officers, and the experiences of real applicants. If you spot something that's changed, or you have a question I haven't answered, book time with me – I'd love to help.
You can also read more about my background if you're curious.
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