Opportunity Information: Apply for PAR 17 237

The Centers for AIDS Research (CFAR) (P30) funding opportunity (PAR-17-237) is a National Institutes of Health (NIH) discretionary grant mechanism designed to strengthen and accelerate HIV/AIDS research by supporting centralized, shared infrastructure rather than funding a single research project. The core idea is to build or maintain an institutional hub that can serve many investigators at once by providing administrative coordination and shared scientific resources. CFAR awards are meant to fill gaps that individual investigator-initiated grants often cannot cover efficiently, such as specialized core facilities, shared services, technical expertise, research coordination, and other programmatic supports that make HIV research more productive, collaborative, and cost-effective across a whole institution or consortium.

A key emphasis of the CFAR program is interdisciplinary collaboration across the full spectrum of HIV/AIDS research. That typically includes basic, clinical, behavioral, social, translational, and implementation-oriented work, with the CFAR structure intended to make it easier for researchers from different disciplines to share tools, data, methods, specimens, and expertise. In practice, CFARs function like shared platforms that can lower barriers to entry for new investigators, improve the quality and consistency of research support services, and encourage cross-cutting projects that span departments, schools, and partner organizations. The program’s language highlights that these shared resources should be things that investigators cannot easily obtain through more traditional funding routes, underscoring that the P30 center grant is about enabling and multiplying the impact of multiple HIV-related research efforts.

Eligibility is broad and includes many types of domestic applicants, reflecting an intent to support CFAR infrastructure across diverse organizational settings. Eligible applicants listed include state, county, and city or township governments; special district governments; independent school districts; public and state-controlled institutions of higher education; private institutions of higher education; federally recognized Native American tribal governments; Native American tribal organizations other than federally recognized governments; public housing authorities/Indian housing authorities; nonprofits with or without 501(c)(3) status (when not an institution of higher education); for-profit organizations other than small businesses; small businesses; and other eligible entities. The announcement also explicitly calls out additional eligible categories such as Alaska Native and Native Hawaiian Serving Institutions, Asian American Native American Pacific Islander Serving Institutions (AANAPISIs), Hispanic-serving Institutions, Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), Tribally Controlled Colleges and Universities (TCCUs), faith-based or community-based organizations, regional organizations, eligible federal agencies, Indian/Native American Tribal Governments other than federally recognized, and U.S. territories or possessions. This breadth signals that NIH is open to CFAR proposals that can support HIV/AIDS research capacity and collaboration in a wide range of institutional contexts, including those serving populations disproportionately affected by HIV.

At the same time, the FOA draws clear boundaries around foreign involvement. Non-domestic (non-U.S.) entities (foreign institutions) are not eligible to apply as the applicant organization, and non-domestic components of U.S. organizations are not eligible to apply. However, the FOA allows "foreign components" as defined in the NIH Grants Policy Statement. This generally means a U.S.-based applicant can include certain foreign collaborations or performance sites when they are justified and appropriately structured under NIH policy, even though a foreign institution cannot be the primary applicant.

Administratively, this opportunity is a grant (funding instrument type: Grant) in the broad funding activity area that includes health as well as related categories (education; food and nutrition; income security and social services), reflecting the multidisciplinary and public-health nature of HIV/AIDS research. Multiple CFDA numbers are associated with the FOA (including 93.121, 93.233, 93.242, 93.279, 93.307, 93.393 through 93.399, 93.837 through 93.840, and others listed), which commonly indicates that multiple NIH Institutes, Centers, or programs may participate in or align with the announcement. The FOA record indicates an award ceiling of $3,000,000. The original closing date listed is 2019-08-17, and the creation date is 2017-03-30, which matters for anyone checking whether the announcement is still active or has been reissued, updated, or replaced by a newer FOA.

In plain terms, this CFAR P30 opportunity is about building a shared HIV/AIDS research engine: a structured center with administrative coordination and core resources that can serve many research teams, expand capacity, and encourage interdisciplinary work that would be harder to accomplish through isolated, single-project grants.

  • The National Institutes of Health in the education, food and nutrition, health, income security and social services sector is offering a public funding opportunity titled "Centers for AIDS Research (P30)" and is now available to receive applicants.
  • Interested and eligible applicants and submit their applications by referencing the CFDA number(s): 93.121, 93.233, 93.242, 93.279, 93.307, 93.393, 93.394, 93.395, 93.396, 93.399, 93.837, 93.838, 93.839, 93.840, 93.847, 93.855, 93.856, 93.859, 93.865, 93.866, 93.989.
  • This funding opportunity was created on 2017-03-30.
  • Applicants must submit their applications by 2019-08-17. (Agency may still review applications by suitable applicants for the remaining/unused allocated funding in 2026.)
  • Each selected applicant is eligible to receive up to $3,000,000.00 in funding.
  • Eligible applicants include: State governments, County governments, City or township governments, Special district governments, Independent school districts, Public and State controlled institutions of higher education, Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized), Public housing authorities/Indian housing authorities, Native American tribal organizations (other than Federally recognized tribal governments), Nonprofits having a 501 (c) (3) status with the IRS, other than institutions of higher education, Nonprofits that do not have a 501 (c) (3) status with the IRS, other than institutions of higher education, Private institutions of higher education, For-profit organizations other than small businesses, Small businesses, Others.
Apply for PAR 17 237

[Watch] Creating a grant proposal using the step-by-step wizard inside the applicant portal:

CFAR (P30) PAR-17-237 FAQ

What is the CFAR (P30) funding opportunity (PAR-17-237)?

The Centers for AIDS Research (CFAR) (P30) opportunity (PAR-17-237) is an NIH discretionary grant mechanism designed to strengthen and accelerate HIV/AIDS research by supporting centralized, shared infrastructure at an institution or consortium. Rather than funding a single research project, it supports an institutional hub that provides administrative coordination and shared scientific resources for many investigators.

What is the primary purpose of a CFAR award?

The primary purpose is to build or maintain a shared HIV/AIDS research "engine" that can serve multiple research teams by providing core facilities, shared services, technical expertise, research coordination, and other supports that increase productivity, collaboration, and cost-effectiveness across an institution or consortium.

Does CFAR funding support one specific research project?

No. The CFAR P30 mechanism is focused on shared infrastructure and centralized resources that support many investigators at once, not on funding a single, stand-alone research project.

What kinds of activities and resources does CFAR funding typically support?

Based on the description provided, CFAR awards typically support things like specialized core facilities, shared services, technical expertise, research coordination, administrative coordination, and other programmatic supports that help multiple HIV-related research efforts succeed.

Why does the CFAR program emphasize shared infrastructure?

The program is intended to fill gaps that individual investigator-initiated grants often cannot cover efficiently. Shared resources can provide services or capabilities that are difficult for individual projects to obtain on their own and can multiply the impact of multiple HIV research efforts.

What is the CFAR program's emphasis regarding collaboration?

A key emphasis is interdisciplinary collaboration across the full spectrum of HIV/AIDS research. The CFAR structure is intended to make it easier for researchers across disciplines to share tools, data, methods, specimens, and expertise.

What research areas are typically included in the CFAR interdisciplinary scope?

The opportunity description indicates that interdisciplinary work can include basic, clinical, behavioral, social, translational, and implementation-oriented HIV/AIDS research.

How can a CFAR lower barriers for investigators?

In practice, CFARs can function as shared platforms that lower barriers to entry for new investigators by making specialized tools, services, and expertise available through centralized cores and coordination rather than requiring each investigator to build these capacities independently.

How does a CFAR improve research efficiency and quality?

The shared model can improve the quality and consistency of research support services across an institution or consortium, while also encouraging cross-cutting efforts and reducing duplication of expensive or specialized resources.

Who is eligible to apply for this CFAR opportunity?

Eligibility is broad for domestic applicants. Eligible applicant types listed include state, county, and city or township governments; special district governments; independent school districts; public and state-controlled institutions of higher education; private institutions of higher education; federally recognized Native American tribal governments; Native American tribal organizations other than federally recognized governments; public housing authorities/Indian housing authorities; nonprofits with or without 501(c)(3) status (when not an institution of higher education); for-profit organizations other than small businesses; small businesses; and other eligible entities.

Are minority-serving institutions and community-based organizations included in the eligible categories?

Yes. The announcement explicitly calls out additional eligible categories such as Alaska Native and Native Hawaiian Serving Institutions, Asian American Native American Pacific Islander Serving Institutions (AANAPISIs), Hispanic-serving Institutions, Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), Tribally Controlled Colleges and Universities (TCCUs), and faith-based or community-based organizations, among others.

Are U.S. territories or possessions eligible?

Yes. The eligibility description explicitly includes U.S. territories or possessions.

Can a foreign (non-U.S.) institution apply as the main applicant?

No. Non-domestic (non-U.S.) entities (foreign institutions) are not eligible to apply as the applicant organization for this opportunity.

Can a non-domestic component of a U.S. organization apply as the applicant?

No. Non-domestic components of U.S. organizations are not eligible to apply as the applicant organization.

Are any kinds of international collaborations allowed under this FOA?

Yes, the FOA allows "foreign components" as defined in the NIH Grants Policy Statement. In general terms, a U.S.-based applicant may include certain foreign collaborations or performance sites when they are justified and structured in accordance with NIH policy, even though a foreign institution cannot be the primary applicant.

What is the funding instrument type for this opportunity?

The funding instrument type is a Grant.

What is the overall focus or funding activity area?

The broad funding activity area includes health and also references related categories (education; food and nutrition; income security and social services), reflecting the multidisciplinary and public-health nature of HIV/AIDS research described in the opportunity.

What is the award ceiling listed for this FOA?

The FOA record indicates an award ceiling of $3,000,000.

What are the CFDA numbers associated with this opportunity?

Multiple CFDA numbers are associated with the FOA, including 93.121, 93.233, 93.242, 93.279, 93.307, 93.393 through 93.399, 93.837 through 93.840, and others listed in the record. This commonly indicates that multiple NIH Institutes, Centers, or programs may participate in or align with the announcement.

What are the key dates shown in the FOA record?

The creation date listed is 2017-03-30, and the original closing date listed is 2019-08-17.

Why do the listed dates matter for applicants?

The dates matter for anyone checking whether the announcement is still active or whether it has been reissued, updated, or replaced by a newer FOA.

What is the plain-language takeaway of this CFAR P30 opportunity?

It is about building and sustaining a shared HIV/AIDS research center with administrative coordination and core resources that can serve many research teams, expand capacity, and encourage interdisciplinary work that is difficult to accomplish through isolated, single-project grants.

Browse more opportunities from the same agency: National Institutes of Health

Browse more opportunities from the same category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services

Next opportunity: School Doors: Bringing out-of-school children back into the classroom

Previous opportunity: FY 2017 Notice of Funding Opportunity for NGO programs benefiting refugees in Ethiopia and Kenya

Applicant Portal:

Are you interested in learning about about how to apply for this government funding opportunity? You can create a free applicant account and receive instant access to our applicant portal that many business owners like you have benefited from.

Apply for PAR 17 237

 

Applicants also applied for:

Applicants who have applied for this opportunity (PAR 17 237) also looked into and applied for these:

Funding Opportunity
Diet and Physical Activity Assessment Methodology (R21 Clinical Trial Optional) Apply for PAR 18 112

Funding Number: PAR 18 112
Agency: National Institutes of Health
Category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services
Funding Amount: $200,000
Exploratory/Developmental Clinical Research Grants in Obesity (R21 Clinical Trial Optional) Apply for PA 18 104

Funding Number: PA 18 104
Agency: National Institutes of Health
Category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services
Funding Amount: $200,000
Mentored Patient-Oriented Research Career Development Award (Parent K23 - Clinical Trial Required) Apply for PA 18 374

Funding Number: PA 18 374
Agency: National Institutes of Health
Category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services
Funding Amount: Case Dependent
Mentored Quantitative Research Development Award (Parent K25 - Clinical Trial Required) Apply for PA 18 395

Funding Number: PA 18 395
Agency: National Institutes of Health
Category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services
Funding Amount: Case Dependent
NIH Pathway to Independence Award (Parent K99/R00 - Clinical Trial Required) Apply for PA 18 397

Funding Number: PA 18 397
Agency: National Institutes of Health
Category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services
Funding Amount: Case Dependent
Opportunities for Collaborative Research at the NIH Clinical Center (U01 - Clinical Trial Optional) Apply for PAR 18 646

Funding Number: PAR 18 646
Agency: National Institutes of Health
Category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services
Funding Amount: Case Dependent
Research on the Health of Women of Understudied, Underrepresented and Underreported (U3) Populations An ORWH FY18 Administrative Supplement (Admin Supp - Clinical Trial Optional) Apply for PA 18 676

Funding Number: PA 18 676
Agency: National Institutes of Health
Category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services
Funding Amount: $200,000
Exploratory/Developmental Clinical Research Grants in Obesity (R21 Clinical Trial Optional) Apply for PA 18 720

Funding Number: PA 18 720
Agency: National Institutes of Health
Category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services
Funding Amount: $200,000
Rare Diseases Clinical Research Consortia (RDCRC) for Rare Diseases Clinical Research Network (U54 Clinical Trials Optional) Apply for RFA TR 18 020

Funding Number: RFA TR 18 020
Agency: National Institutes of Health
Category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services
Funding Amount: $100,000
Time-Sensitive Obesity Policy and Program Evaluation (R01 Clinical Trial Not Allowed) Apply for PAR 18 854

Funding Number: PAR 18 854
Agency: National Institutes of Health
Category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services
Funding Amount: Case Dependent
Discovery of Biomarkers, Biomarker Signatures, and Endpoints for Pain (R61/R33 Clinical Trial Optional) Apply for RFA NS 18 041

Funding Number: RFA NS 18 041
Agency: National Institutes of Health
Category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services
Funding Amount: Case Dependent
Discovery and Validation of Novel Targets for Safe and Effective Pain Treatment (R21 Clinical Trial Not Allowed) Apply for RFA NS 18 042

Funding Number: RFA NS 18 042
Agency: National Institutes of Health
Category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services
Funding Amount: $200,000
Analytical and/or Clinical Validation of a Candidate Biomarker for Pain (R61/R33 Clinical Trial Optional) Apply for RFA NS 18 046

Funding Number: RFA NS 18 046
Agency: National Institutes of Health
Category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services
Funding Amount: Case Dependent
Discovery and Validation of Novel Targets for Safe and Effective Pain Treatment (R01 Clinical Trial Not Allowed) Apply for RFA NS 18 043

Funding Number: RFA NS 18 043
Agency: National Institutes of Health
Category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services
Funding Amount: Case Dependent
Predoctoral Training in Advanced Data Analytics for Behavioral and Social Sciences Research (BSSR) - Institutional Research Training Program [T32] Apply for RFA OD 19 011

Funding Number: RFA OD 19 011
Agency: National Institutes of Health
Category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services
Funding Amount: Case Dependent
Optimization of Non-addictive Therapies [Small Molecules and Biologics] to Treat Pain (UG3/UH3 Clinical Trial Not Allowed) Apply for RFA NS 19 010

Funding Number: RFA NS 19 010
Agency: National Institutes of Health
Category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services
Funding Amount: Case Dependent
HEAL Initiative: Translational Development of Devices to Treat Pain (U18 Clinical Trial Not Allowed) Apply for RFA EB 18 003

Funding Number: RFA EB 18 003
Agency: National Institutes of Health
Category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services
Funding Amount: $500,000
HEAL Initiative: Translational Devices to Treat Pain (UG3/UH3 Clinical Trial Optional) Apply for RFA NS 19 016

Funding Number: RFA NS 19 016
Agency: National Institutes of Health
Category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services
Funding Amount: Case Dependent
HEAL Initiative: Optimization of Non-addictive Therapies [Small Molecules and Biologics] to Treat Pain - (U44 Clinical Trial Not Allowed) Apply for RFA NS 19 020

Funding Number: RFA NS 19 020
Agency: National Institutes of Health
Category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services
Funding Amount: Case Dependent
HEAL Initiative: Translational Devices to Treat Pain (U44 Clinical Trial Optional) Apply for RFA NS 19 017

Funding Number: RFA NS 19 017
Agency: National Institutes of Health
Category: Education, Food and Nutrition, Health, Income Security and Social Services
Funding Amount: $1,000,000

 

Grant application guides and resources

It is always free to apply for government grants. However the process may be very complex depending on the funding opportunity you are applying for. Let us help you!

Apply for Grants

 

Inside Our Applicants Portal

  • Grants Repository - Access current and historic funding opportunities with ease. Thousands of funding opportunities are published every week. We can help you sort through the database and find the eligible ones to apply for.
  • Applicant Video Guides - The grant application process can be challenging to follow. We can help you with intuitive video guides to speed up the process and eliminate errors in submissions.
  • Grant Proposal Wizard - We have developed a network of private funding organizations and investors across the United States. We can reach out and submit your proposal to these contacts to maximize your chances of getting the funding you need.
Access Applicants Portal

 

Premium leads for funding administrators, grant writers, and loan issuers

Thousands of people visit our website for their funding needs every day. When a user creates a grant proposal and files for submission, we pass the information on to funding administrators, grant writers, and government loan issuers.

If you manage government grant programs, provide grant writing services, or issue personal or government loans, we can help you reach your audience.

Learn More

 

 

Request more information:

Would you like to learn more about this funding opportunity, similar opportunities to "PAR 17 237", eligibility, application service, and/or application tips? Submit an inquiry below:

Don't forget to subscribe to our grant alerts mailing list to receive weekly alerts on new and updated grant funding opportunities like this one in your email.

 

Ask a Question: