The Florida Breast Cancer Foundation (FBCF), along with those who generously support us with their talent, time and resources, is working to better the lives of those facing Breast Cancer in the Florida community. Grants are awarded in support of innovative education and research programs throughout Florida.
The Florida Breast Cancer Foundation strives to fund breast cancer research projects that have the potential to make a significant impact on breast cancer, particularly in multidisciplinary and/or multi-institutional collaborations. The FBCF believes that collaborative research is the path to making extraordinary leaps in the future of breast cancer, and by working together, we will make a difference and change the breast cancer landscape.
As we work to end the suffering caused by breast cancer, FBCF continues to fund research that will reduce mortality rates, decrease chances of metastatis or relapse, improve current treatments, as well as provide pathways to discovering new therapies.
The Florida Breast Cancer Foundation is currently offering scientific grants for Pilot Program research projects, with a maximum of $100,000 for a one-year project. Preference will be given to new/first-time applicants, as well as to research applications that demonstrate a collaborative and integrated multidisciplinary approach. The committee reserves the right to place limitations on awards.Innovative projects can be in the areas of: basic, clinical, and translational breast cancer research and novel epidemiological studies of breast cancer, research on possible links between breast cancer and the environment, and psycho-immunological research as examples.
2026 Priority Areas
1. Basic, clinical (including novel diagnostic/therapeutic modalities), and translational breast cancer research.
2. Understanding the links between environmental factors and breast cancer in Florida.
3. Novel epidemiological studies to provide insight on opportunities for improving breast cancer detection and treatment in Florida.
4. Psycho-immunologic mechanisms and breast cancer progression: implications for improving outcomes.
5. Innovative awards and idea grants.
All applications must cover at least one of the priority areas.
2026 Special Emphasis Areas
Vulnerable/at-risk populations
Comorbidities/treatment-related adverse side effects
Novel targets
Cancer immunotherapy
Genetic screening and risk assessment
2026 Statement of Need
The Florida Breast Cancer Foundation supports unique research projects or ideas (from small- to large-scale) that specifically focus on scientific and clinical breast cancer issues, which, if successfully addressed, could ultimately revolutionize the understanding and/or treatment of breast cancer and move us closer to the goal of eradicating the disease.
The critical components of this award mechanism are as follows:
Impact: The most important aspect of the grant is the potential of the proposed research to have a radical, revolutionary impact on an area of paramount importance in breast cancer. The potential impact may be near-term or long-term, but it must be transformative. It is the responsibility of the applicant to clearly and explicitly articulate the potential impact on breast cancer, including how it would be transformative.
Research Question: Research proposed under the grant must address an underexplored issue of critical significance in breast cancer. The FBCF particularly encourages applications that focus on less explored or poorly understood areas that are of high importance in breast cancer, such as those related to prevention, susceptibility, protection, recurrence, and metastasis. The proposed work must be based on a sound overall research strategy and may be from any discipline or combination of disciplines.
New Investigators and multi-disciplinary research teams: New investigators are considered to be in the first three years of a tenure-track position, or an equivalent independent research appointment, at their institution. Multi-disciplinary research teams can be composed of investigators from all levels but should involve expertise from at least two or more different disciplines, such as a basic cancer biologist teamed with a medical oncologist or a chemist.
Important Dates:
| November 3, 2025 | Announcement of RFP |
| December 12, 2025 | Letter of Intent (LOI) due |
| February 13, 2026 | Proposal Due |
| June 2026 | Announcement Award Recipients |
| July 1, 2026 | Grant Cycle Begins |
| June 30, 2027 | End of Grant Cycle |
1️⃣ Strong Alignment With FBCF Mission
Your proposal must clearly address breast cancer scientific issues that, if successfully tackled, could advance detection, prevention, treatment, or understanding of the disease — especially with relevance to Florida populations. floridabreastcancer.org
Success predictor: Explicitly link your project aims to measurable outcomes in breast cancer research rather than broad scientific questions.
2️⃣ Innovation and Impact Potential
FBCF seeks innovative projects that go beyond incremental work. They prefer proposals that could “revolutionize understanding or treatment” of breast cancer in the long term. floridabreastcancer.org
Predictor: Highlight novel hypotheses, emerging technologies, or multidisciplinary angles that could lead to breakthrough insights.
3️⃣ Collaborative & Multidisciplinary Approaches
Preference is given to proposals that demonstrate integrated, multi-institutional or multidisciplinary collaboration, meaning teams that bring together complementary expertise (e.g., clinical, epidemiological, molecular). floridabreastcancer.org
Predictor: Show how team members’ roles and expertise enhance feasibility and scientific power.
4️⃣ Feasibility and Milestones Within One Year
Because FBCF research awards are often one-year pilot funds, reviewers look for well-scoped projects with clear milestones and achievable deliverables during that timeframe. floridabreastcancer.org
Predictor: Provide a timeline with specific, measurable goals tied to the budget.
5️⃣ Relevance to Florida or Underserved Populations
Although not always explicitly stated in RFAs, emphasis on breast cancer in Florida residents or challenges facing underserved or vulnerable populations in Florida can strengthen impact narratives, especially if your study involves local data or outreach components. floridabreastcancer.org
Predictor: Tailor your significance section to highlight relevance to Florida’s communities or health systems when possible.
6️⃣ Clear Budget Justification
Proposals should include a well-justified, realistic budget, focused on direct research costs appropriate for a one-year, pilot project (~$100K). floridabreastcancer.org
Predictor: Tie each budget item directly to project milestones and explain why it is essential for success.
7️⃣ New or First-Time Applicant Encouragement
FBCF explicitly prefers new/first-time applicants, suggesting that early career investigators or groups without prior FBCF funding are particularly competitive. floridabreastcancer.org
Predictor: Emphasize how the grant will catalyze your research trajectory or enable future funding.
If you’re applying to the education grant program:
✅ Community Reach & Design:
Projects should clearly show how they will educate and engage target audiences (e.g., women at risk, underserved communities). floridabreastcancer.org
✅ Measurable Outcomes:
Describe expected reach (e.g., number of participants, increase in awareness metrics) and how you will monitor progress. floridabreastcancer.org
✅ Partnerships:
Collaboration with local clinics, community groups, or health departments strengthens applications.
| Predictor | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Aligned with FBCF mission | Must directly address breast cancer research or education goals. floridabreastcancer.org |
| Innovative and impactful | Distinguishes proposals with potential for meaningful change. floridabreastcancer.org |
| Collaborative multidisciplinary teams | Enhances scientific rigor and breadth. floridabreastcancer.org |
| Realistic scope with clear milestones | Ensures feasibility within one year. floridabreastcancer.org |
| Budget directly tied to deliverables | Demonstrates responsible use of funds. floridabreastcancer.org |
| Preference for new/first-time applicants | Encourages emerging investigators. floridabreastcancer.org |
| Measured educational outcomes (for education grants) | Shows community impact. floridabreastcancer.org |
📌 Read the latest RFA carefully: FBCF periodically updates priority areas (e.g., environmental links, comorbidities, disparities). Tailor your aims to current emphases. us.fundsforngos.org
📌 Emphasize collaboration: Especially for research grants, multidisciplinary proposals typically score better. floridabreastcancer.org
📌 Build measurable metrics: For education awards, include evaluation strategies (pre/post surveys, engagement tracking).
Only Florida-based non-profit community-based organizations that are tax-exempt under Internal Revenue Code section 501(c)(3), Florida governmental entities, Florida-based tax-exempt educational institutions, and Indian tribes within the State of Florida are eligible to apply for funding. Organizations registered as 501(c)(3) entities outside of Florida are eligible to apply if a physical presence is maintained within the state of Florida that is open and fully operating for 12 months a year. All activities funded through this competition must occur in Florida. All work must occur, and all funds must be spent in Florida at the applicant organization and any collaborating entities within Florida. Applications must be submitted in English.
Restrictions
Sponsor Institute/Organizations: Florida Breast Cancer Foundation
Sponsor Type: Corporate/Non-Profit
Address: 11900 Biscayne Blvd, Suite 288 North Miami, FL 33181
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Feb 13, 2026
Feb 13, 2026
$10,000
Affiliation: Florida Breast Cancer Foundation
Address: 11900 Biscayne Blvd, Suite 288 North Miami, FL 33181
Website URL: https://www.floridabreastcancer.org/our-programs/Scientific-Research-Grants
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