For many business owners, the conversation about growth funding often begins and ends with debt and equity, but many miss the benefits of grants.
Both loans and outside investment have a legitimate place in a well-structured funding strategy, but grants can offer a different approach to scaling your business.
According to smallbusiness.co.uk, more than 150 grants are currently available to UK businesses, spanning a diverse range of sectors, activities and business sizes.
The funding landscape
The available grants cover an extensive range of purposes from research and development and innovation to energy efficiency and export development.
Funding bodies include central government departments, local and regional authorities, devolved governments, the UK Shared Prosperity Fund and a number of sector-specific organisations, all of whom offer many different schemes.
The landscape of grant funding in the UK is ever-changing, as new projects open and close.
Beyond the headline grabbing schemes, a large number of more targeted funds exist at local, regional and sector level for businesses to claim.
The case for grant funding
The primary advantage of grant capital is structural. It does not create financial obligations or require the transfer of owners’ equity to others.
There is no debt to service, no cash flow impact from monthly repayments and no interest accruing in the background.
For a business investing in a specific project or capability, this reduces financial risk at a critical point.
The comparison with equity finance is equally compelling for many owner-managed businesses.
Grant funding preserves full ownership and control, as there is no requirement to cede equity, share future profits or accommodate the governance expectations of an external investor.
For business owners focused on protecting the long-term value and ethos of what they have built, this distinction often matters the most.
Beyond the direct financial benefit, grant funding carries strategic advantages that are often underestimated.
A successful application demonstrates that a project met independently assessed criteria, which can enhance credibility with lenders and investors and, in some cases, actively improves access to complementary sources of finance by positioning the business as lower risk.
Understanding the conditions
Grant funding is competitive and subject to specific conditions, with many schemes require applicants to provide matched funding.
Claims also often require owners to demonstrate clear public or economic benefit and satisfy defined eligibility criteria relating to sector, size, location or activity type.
The application process demands careful preparation and a compelling grant application typically requires a well-structured business case, a detailed project plan and a comprehensive assessment of the applicant’s current financial position.
The investment of time and resource in the application process is typically the main thing that puts many businesses off, especially as there is no guarantee that you will be accepted.
Where grant funding is available to your business, you need to make sure it is part of a broader funding strategy.
Grants are often not designed to be the sole source of capital for a significant growth initiative, so they should function alongside the business’s own reserves, debt finance and/or equity.
How we can help
Identifying and securing the right grant requires a thorough understanding of your business’s sector, scale, location and objectives, as well as current knowledge of the funding landscape.
We can help you to identify relevant opportunities, assess eligibility and develop the high-quality applications that competitive grant processes demand.
If grant funding is something you would like to explore as part of your growth strategy, please speak to our team.