Paste a grant description and instantly see what it means, who can apply, what the funder is looking for, and whether it may be worth pursuing.
Built primarily for nonprofits, but useful for anyone exploring grant opportunities.
GrantFlow is currently in early development. The Grant Interpreter is our first tool designed to make grants easier to understand.
Many grant descriptions are written in dense, technical language. Paste a grant description below and GrantFlow will translate it into a simple explanation.
Three simple steps to understand any grant opportunity.
Copy the grant description from any source — a government website, a foundation listing, or a forwarded email — and paste it into the interpreter.
GrantFlow analyzes the text and returns a structured summary including who can apply, key requirements, fit assessment, and potential red flags.
Use the summary to decide whether the grant is worth pursuing. Copy or download the report, and if you're ready, use the Starter Kit to begin your proposal.
Simple tools to help you understand and evaluate grant opportunities before committing time and resources.
Paste a grant description and get a plain-language explanation of what it means.
Quickly see the most important requirements such as applicant type, location, project focus, funding size, and deadline if available.
Get a simple educational assessment of whether the opportunity may fit a small nonprofit or beginner applicant.
Spot possible concerns such as strict eligibility, geographic limits, high competition, or heavy reporting requirements.
Generate a clean summary you can copy, download, or share with teammates.
Use templates and guides if you decide to move forward with an application.
Designed to simplify confusing grant language.
Built for organizations without dedicated grant writers.
Focused on clarity, not hype.
Helps users understand grants before spending time applying.
A grant is funding provided by a government agency, foundation, or company to support a project, mission, or program. Grants usually do not need to be repaid if the funds are used according to the rules.
Many grants are designed for nonprofits, schools, community organizations, and research institutions. Some grants are also available to small businesses or individuals.
A grant proposal is the application that explains what your organization does, what funding you need, how the money will be used, and what impact you expect to make.
Many organizations apply for the same opportunities. Funders often look for clear goals, measurable outcomes, and strong alignment with their priorities.
Once you find a grant worth pursuing, the Grant Proposal Starter Kit helps you move from "Where do we start?" to a structured application.
Pre-built outlines that guide you through each section of a standard grant proposal.
Real-world examples showing how to articulate community needs effectively.
A step-by-step framework for describing your program's goals, activities, and outcomes.
Templates for building a credible evaluation plan that funders look for.
A spreadsheet-ready tracker to manage deadlines, requirements, and submission status.
One-time purchase. Instant delivery. No subscription required.
Start using the Grant Interpreter for free. Upgrade when you need more.
Get started with the basics
For serious grant seekers
GrantFlow is starting with a Grant Interpreter to help users understand grant opportunities faster. Over time, GrantFlow will expand to help organizations:
Find grants that match your organization's mission, size, and location.
Get clearer guidance on whether your organization qualifies.
Use AI-assisted tools to structure and draft grant applications.
Track deadlines, manage team tasks, and monitor application status.
Try the Grant Interpreter and turn complex grant language into practical next steps.