THE ULVERSCROFT FOUNDATION

Revenue grants, usually for under £10,000, are available for local and national UK and overseas not-for-profit organisations, including Community Interest Companies (CICs), libraries, schools, colleges and sports groups, for projects that benefit visually impaired people.
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Application deadline: SUNDAY 15th DECEMBER 2024.
o FunderThe Ulverscroft Foundation (founded 1972. Charity number: 264873. Total value of grants provided during the year ended 31 October 2023: £814,000 (2022: £481,000; 2021: £505,000)).
o Who can apply: UK registered charities, charitable organisations, Community Interest Companies, social welfare agencies, libraries, hospitals, schools, colleges and universities.
o Key wordsrevenue, visual impairment/defective eyesight, blindness, sick, handicapped, medical research, sport/leisure activities, Overseas, United Kingdom.
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The Ulverscroft Foundation is a significant funder of UK and overseas not-for-profit organisations that are working to improve the quality of life of people who are blind, partially sighted and visually impaired.

Its primary objects, as recorded in its original Trust Deed, are to

o Relieve, assist and provide treatment and education for sick or handicapped persons and in particular (but without prejudice to the generality of the foregoing) persons suffering from defective eyesight, and
o To promote or conduct medical research and to provide and assist in the provision of facilities for the treatment or alleviation of sick or handicapped persons.

Any organisation with (a) an appropriate safeguarding policy for vulnerable children and/or adults and procedures to implement and monitor the policy, and (b) an equal opportunities policy may apply for a grant of between £100 and £500,000 (although awards towards the upper end of this scale are extremely rare). The vast majority of grants made are for £10,000 or less.

Applications from public libraries managed by local authorities will be considered if these are additional to the local authority’s core service. Volunteer-run libraries may be grant funded if they are supported in cash or in kind by the local authority (libraries operated by private companies are not supported).

Grants can be used for (please note that this is not an exclusive list):

o Academic and clinical research.
o Purchase of equipment or materials.
o Staffing for specific time-limited projects (please note the Foundation will not support staff salaries or ongoing running costs),
 and
o Time-limited projects.

The Foundation likes to see evidence that applicants have sought and secured matched funding as part of their application.

During the year ended 31st October 2023, the Foundation awarded 39 grants totalling £814,000 (2022: 32 grants totalling £481,000).

A list of grants made during the year can be viewed on page 26 of the Foundation’s annual accounts. If this link isn’t working, go to the Charity Commission website, enter the charity number 264873 in the green ‘Find a Charity‘ box, and click on the ‘Accounts and Annual Returns‘ heading on the left-hand side to access the Foundation’s accounts.

Applications may be made by downloading, completing and posting the application form available on the Foundation’s website, where further information and guidance about the Foundation’s grants can also be found. Applications are also accepted by email.

The Foundation meets quarterly to consider applications: in January (deadline 15 December), April (deadline 15 March), July (deadline 15 June) and October (deadline 15 September).

The next application deadline is therefore on Sunday 15th December 2024.