Zeffy Grant Finder

Find Grants for Chronic Illness Support Groups

Find grants for chronic illness support groups to cover meeting spaces, peer programs, resources, and patient advocacy efforts. Refine this list with the filters below, or explore all categories from the homepage.

2,755 results found
FOR ONE OR MORE EXEMPT PURPOSES DESCRIBE...
THE BLUM FAMILY FOUNDATION
$2,827 on average
303grants

Last awarded in 2024

Chronic Illness Supp...Health Charities
COMMUNITY SERVICES
HUNTINGTON'S DISEASE SOCIETY
$40,309 on average
259grants

Last awarded in 2024

Chronic Illness Supp...Disease Research Ins...Health Charities
PROMOTE HEMOPHILIA
THE HEMOPHILIA ALLIANCE FOUNDATION
$12,015 on average
199grants

Last awarded in 2024

Chronic Illness Supp...Health Charities
SUPPORT ACTIVITIES THAT BENEFIT THE BLEE...
COLBURN-KEENAN FOUNDATION INC
$4,861 on average
161grants

Last awarded in 2024

Chronic Illness Supp...Health Charities
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCEDURING CANCERTREATME...
PANOLA COUNTY CANCER COALTION INC
$1,410 on average
121grants

Last awarded in 2024

Cancer Support Group...Chronic Illness Supp...Health Charities
Medical Assistance
Insulin For Life USA Inc
$38,936 on average
104grants

Last awarded in 2024

Chronic Illness Supp...Health CharitiesHospitals and Clinic...
PROGRAM SUPPORT
GOODIN COMPANY FOUNDATION
$1,897 on average
100grants

Last awarded in 2024

Chronic Illness Supp...Health CharitiesVeterans
CHARITABLE
FILOTIMO FOUNDATION
$2,595 on average
88grants

Last awarded in 2024

Chronic Illness Supp...Health Charities
ASSIST RENAL DISEASE PATIENTS.
VIRGINIA C WARRINGTON MEMORIAL
$101 on average
84grants

Last awarded in 2024

Chronic Illness Supp...Health Charities
Research
ARTHRITIS FOUNDATION INC
$384,457 on average
83grants

Last awarded in 2024

Chronic Illness Supp...Disease Research Ins...Health Charities+1
GENERAL SUPPORT
THE Y C HOHELEN AND MICHAEL CHIANG
$48,197 on average
80grants

Last awarded in 2024

Chronic Illness Supp...Education NonprofitsHealth Charities+1
RESEARCH FOR A CURE FOR MIGRAINE HEADACH...
MILES FOR MIGRAINE
$16,378 on average
71grants

Last awarded in 2024

Chronic Illness Supp...Disease Research Ins...Health Charities
CASH CONTRIBUTION
EASTERN SHORE CHARITABLE FOUNDATION INC
$70 on average
55grants

Last awarded in 2024

Cancer Research Cent...Chronic Illness Supp...Health Charities
Support for medical services for persons...
Cascade Hemophilia Consortium
$199,853 on average
51grants

Last awarded in 2024

Chronic Illness Supp...Health CharitiesHospitals and Clinic...
CHARITY
THE HARDOON FAMILY FOUNDATION INC
$187 on average
50grants

Last awarded in 2024

Cancer Research Cent...Chronic Illness Supp...Health Charities+1
STRATEGIC INITIATIVE
AMYOTROPHIC LATERAL SCLEROSIS ASSN
$81,404 on average
50grants

Last awarded in 2024

Chronic Illness Supp...Disease Research Ins...Health Charities
CF SUPPORT
BOOMER ESIASON FOUNDATION
$48,247 on average
50grants

Last awarded in 2024

Chronic Illness Supp...Disease Research Ins...Health Charities+1
MATCHING GRANTS
THE JOHN A HARTFORD FOUNDATION INC
$7,103 on average
47grants

Last awarded in 2024

Chronic Illness Supp...Dementia Support Gro...Health Charities
ANNUAL GRANT PAYMENT FY25 CENTER OF EXCE...
AMYOTROPHIC LATERAL SCLEROSIS ASSN
$16,087 on average
46grants

Last awarded in 2024

Chronic Illness Supp...Disease Research Ins...Health Charities
SCHOLARSHIP TO HHHC, CNA. PATH TO GOOD S...
JON DENZER BEAR HUG FOUNDATION
$807 on average
44grants

Last awarded in 2024

Chronic Illness Supp...Education NonprofitsJob Training Program...+1

The Complete Guide to Finding and Winning Grants for Chronic Illness Support Groups

Finding grants for chronic illness support groups can feel like searching for a needle in a haystack — especially when you're a small team juggling support meetings, awareness campaigns, and community outreach. You're competing with larger health organizations, navigating vague eligibility requirements, and often discovering that funders prioritize research institutions or direct medical services over peer support and education. Add to that the challenge of operating without a physical location (many support groups meet virtually or rotate spaces), and you've got a recipe for grant search burnout. If you've applied to five grants and heard nothing back, you're not alone — and this guide is here to help.

Quick Stats About Grants for Chronic Illness Support Groups

Chronic illness support organizations represent a growing but underfunded segment of the nonprofit landscape. While exact figures vary by disease focus, mental health and chronic illness nonprofits typically face success rates around 10–15% when applying broadly — meaning you might need to identify 20–30 relevant opportunities to secure 2–3 awards. Many national health foundations prioritize medical research or clinical programs, leaving grassroots support groups competing for a smaller pool of community health, mental wellness, and patient advocacy grants. The good news? Funders increasingly recognize the value of peer support, health equity, and community-based care — you just need to know where to look.

How to Find Grants for Chronic Illness Support Groups

Start with Zeffy's Grant Finder Tool — it's free, built specifically for nonprofits like yours, and lets you filter by mission area, location, and eligibility criteria. Unlike generic Google searches that surface outdated listings or irrelevant opportunities, Zeffy shows you active grants with clear deadlines and requirements upfront.

Here's your step-by-step discovery process:

1. Use targeted search terms. Don't just search "health grants." Try "chronic illness support," "patient advocacy funding," "health equity grants," "community wellness programs," or your specific condition (e.g., "diabetes support groups," "autoimmune disease funding").

2. Compare free vs. paid databases. Free options include Zeffy, Grants.gov (for federal opportunities), and foundation websites directly. Paid platforms like Candid or GrantStation offer broader databases but can overwhelm you with thousands of irrelevant results — one user reported seeing 9,000+ grants but only 10 actually fit. Start free, then upgrade only if you have capacity to filter aggressively.

3. Filter ruthlessly. Prioritize grants that match:

  • Your geographic area (city, county, state, or national)
  • Your beneficiary population (e.g., LGBTQ+ communities, people of color, low-income families)
  • Your program type (support groups, education, awareness campaigns, webinars)
  • Your organizational structure (some grants require a physical office; others accept virtual-first orgs)

4. Check eligibility before you invest time. Look for requirements around 501(c)(3) status, annual budget size, years in operation, and specific policies (DEI statements, financial audits). If a grant funded only hospital-based programs last year, it's probably not your fit.

5. Set up a simple tracking system. Use a spreadsheet or Zeffy's grant history feature to log: grant name, deadline, amount, eligibility notes, and application status. This prevents you from rediscovering the same grants every quarter.

Tips to Win More Grants as a Chronic Illness Support Groups Nonprofit

1. Lead with lived experience and community impact. Funders increasingly value peer-led models. Highlight how your support groups are run by people with chronic illness, how many community members you serve, and the measurable outcomes (reduced isolation, improved self-management, increased healthcare access).

2. Partner with clinical or research organizations. If you lack a physical location or large budget, collaborate with hospitals, universities, or health departments. A letter of support from a medical partner can strengthen your credibility and show you're part of a broader care ecosystem.

3. Emphasize health equity and underserved populations. If your group serves communities facing barriers to care — whether due to race, income, geography, language, or disability — make that central to your narrative. Many health funders prioritize equity-focused work.

4. Provide clear, specific metrics. Instead of "we help people feel better," say "we facilitated 48 peer support sessions reaching 120 participants, with 85% reporting improved confidence in managing their condition." Funders want to see impact, not just activity.

5. Apply to smaller, local grants first. Community foundations, local health systems, and regional family foundations often have simpler applications and better fit for grassroots groups. Build your track record here before tackling national opportunities.

6. Reuse and refine your answers. Save responses to common questions (mission statement, program description, budget narrative) in a central document. Tweak for each funder, but don't start from scratch every time. This saves hours and improves consistency.

7. Only apply when you're confident it's a fit. One experienced grant-seeker shared: "We only apply to 5–7 grants a year, but we win most of them because we only apply when we're sure we match." Quality over quantity reduces burnout and increases your success rate.

How to Tell If a Grant Is a Good Fit

Before you spend hours on an application, run through this checklist:

  • Do you meet the basic eligibility requirements? (location, org type, budget size, IRS status)
  • Does the funder's mission align with your work? (Look at their past grantees — are any similar to you?)
  • Can the grant funds be used for your actual needs? (Some restrict funding to direct services, not admin or awareness work)
  • Is the application effort realistic for your team? (A 20-page application may not be worth it for a $5,000 grant if you're a two-person team)
  • Can you meet the reporting requirements? (Quarterly reports, site visits, and detailed metrics may be too heavy for volunteer-run groups)
  • Is the deadline manageable? (If it's two weeks away and you need board approval, financial audits, and three letters of support, skip it)
  • Do you have the required documentation ready? (501(c)(3) letter, budget, board list, financials, DEI statement, etc.)

If you answer "no" to more than two of these, move on. Protect your time.

When searching Zeffy, Grants.gov, Candid, or foundation websites, try these search terms to surface relevant opportunities:

  • "chronic illness support grants"
  • "patient advocacy funding"
  • "health equity grants"
  • "community health programs"
  • "peer support group funding"
  • "disease-specific grants" (e.g., "lupus nonprofit grants," "MS support funding")
  • "mental health and chronic illness"
  • "health education and awareness grants"
  • "underserved health communities"
  • "virtual health programs" (if you operate online)

Combine these with your location (e.g., "chronic illness support grants California") or population focus (e.g., "LGBTQ+ health equity funding") to narrow results.


Final thought: Grant-seeking as a chronic illness support group requires strategy, not just hustle. Focus on fit, build relationships with funders over time, and remember that every "no" gets you closer to the right "yes." Start with Zeffy's Grant Finder to cut through the noise — and give yourself permission to apply only where you truly belong.

Frequently Asked Questions

Confirm that grants exist for nonprofits supporting chronic illness communities, including disease-specific foundations, health-focused funders, and government programs. Keep tone reassuring and practical—emphasize that support groups are fundable, but eligibility varies by disease, location, and org structure.

List common grant categories: disease-specific funds (PAN Foundation, HealthWell, EveryLife), health disparities programs, rural health initiatives, and general nonprofit grants. Use plain language and include examples of what each type funds (copay assistance, support group operations, education programs).

Walk through discovery options: disease-specific foundations, Grants.gov, state health departments, and grant databases. Emphasize the importance of filtering by eligibility (location, org type, cause) to avoid wasted applications. Mention Zeffy as a tool that streamlines this search.

Explain common criteria: 501(c)(3) status, disease focus alignment, geographic location, org size, and insurance/financial thresholds (for patient-facing grants). Note that requirements vary widely by funder and suggest checking each grant's details upfront to save time.

List typical uses: support group operations, patient education, transportation assistance, medication copay support, mental health services, and community outreach. Keep examples scannable and relevant to both nonprofit operations and direct patient support.

Explain that application effort varies widely—some grants are simple online forms (light effort), others require detailed narratives, financials, and board resolutions (heavy effort). Suggest filtering by application heaviness upfront to prioritize high-impact opportunities and avoid burnout.

Outline typical requirements: 501(c)(3) letter, nonprofit tax return (Form 990), board resolutions, organizational budget, program descriptions, and proof of community need. Emphasize that having these documents ready saves time and increases application quality. Mention reusable profiles as a time-saver.

Address this real pain point: many local/state grants require a physical address, but remote or virtual support groups can access disease-specific foundations, federal grants, and online-friendly funders. Suggest filtering by location requirements and looking for funders that explicitly support virtual programs.