TLDR
Georgia nonprofits access state grants through five primary channels: agency-administered competitive programs (arts, human services, housing, economic development), federal pass-throughs (CDBG, HHS, DOJ, USDA Rural Development) routed through Georgia departments under 2 CFR 200, the July 1-June 30 state fiscal year cycle that drives most NOFA timing, private and community foundations headquartered in Georgia, and tribal or regional funders where applicable. The funding cycle starts with the governor's budget request, moves through legislative appropriation, then triggers agency RFAs typically released in the spring for awards effective at the start of the fiscal year.
What state grants are available to Georgia nonprofits, and how does the funding cycle work?
Georgia nonprofits draw from five funding channels that operate on overlapping but distinct calendars: state agency competitive grants funded by the legislature, federal pass-throughs administered through state departments under 2 CFR 200, private and community foundations headquartered in Georgia, tribal and regional funders where applicable, and occasional capital appropriations routed through state facilities or infrastructure agencies.
The state funding cycle begins each year with the governor’s budget proposal, moves through legislative appropriation during the session, and triggers Notices of Funding Availability (NOFAs) from individual agencies - typically clustered in the spring for awards effective at the start of the July 1-June 30 fiscal year. Federal pass-throughs follow the federal fiscal year (October 1-September 30), which means most Georgia nonprofits manage two parallel grant calendars at once.
This guide maps the Georgia state grant funder landscape: the major grantmaking agencies, federal pass-through context, top private and community foundations by assets, and tribal funders where relevant. Read the grant compliance 101 guide for the underlying federal compliance framework, and the Georgia nonprofit software page for tooling that fits this funder mix.
Major Georgia state grantmaking agencies
Georgia Department of Community Affairs (DCA)
Programs: CDBG, HOME, Emergency Solutions Grants, Community HOME Investment Program, Land Bank capacity grants.
Typical award size: $100,000-$5,000,000.
Cycle: Annual NOFA; state FY July 1-June 30.
Eligibility: Nonprofits, local governments, housing developers.
Where to apply: https://www.dca.ga.gov
Georgia Council for the Arts (GCA)
Programs: Partner Grants, Project Grants, Arts Education Program, Vibrant Communities.
Typical award size: $1,500-$25,000.
Cycle: Annual; deadlines typically January-March.
Eligibility: 501(c)(3) arts organizations and units of government.
Where to apply: https://gaarts.org
Georgia Department of Human Services (DHS)
Programs: Community Services Block Grant, Refugee Resettlement, child support enforcement contracts.
Typical award size: $50,000-$2,500,000.
Cycle: State FY; RFPs spring.
Eligibility: Human services nonprofits.
Where to apply: https://dhs.georgia.gov
Georgia Criminal Justice Coordinating Council (CJCC)
Programs: VOCA, VAWA STOP, Byrne JAG, Juvenile Justice.
Typical award size: $25,000-$500,000.
Cycle: Annual federal FY.
Eligibility: Victim services, criminal justice nonprofits.
Where to apply: https://cjcc.georgia.gov
Georgia Department of Public Health (DPH)
Programs: Title V Maternal and Child Health, Ryan White HIV/AIDS, opioid response.
Typical award size: $50,000-$1,500,000.
Cycle: Federal FY pass-through.
Eligibility: Public health and community-based organizations.
Where to apply: https://dph.georgia.gov
Federal pass-through context
Georgia state agencies receive substantial federal funding that is then subgranted to nonprofits as pass-throughs. The major federal funding streams routed through Georgia include:
- CDBG (HUD Community Development Block Grant) - administered through Georgia Department of Community Affairs for non-entitlement areas. Subject to 2 CFR 200 Uniform Guidance and HUD-specific compliance.
- HOME Investment Partnerships (HUD) - affordable housing development and rehabilitation, administered through the state housing finance or community affairs agency.
- Emergency Solutions Grants and Continuum of Care (HUD) - homeless services. Subject to ESG and CoC regulations on top of 2 CFR 200.
- Community Services Block Grant (HHS) - anti-poverty programming through Community Action Agencies and partner nonprofits.
- VOCA Victim Assistance and VAWA STOP grants (DOJ) - victim services, administered through the state’s criminal justice or attorney general’s office.
- Title V Maternal and Child Health Block Grant (HHS HRSA) - public health pass-through through Georgia’s health department.
- USDA Rural Development programs - rural-area infrastructure, housing, and community facilities funded through state offices and Cooperative Extension partners.
Every federal pass-through carries the original federal compliance terms: Single Audit threshold ($1,000,000 in federal expenditures triggers a Single Audit under 2 CFR 200 Subpart F for fiscal years ending September 30, 2025 or later), procurement standards, conflict-of-interest rules, and time-and-effort documentation. State agencies typically add additional state-specific reporting on top.
For nonprofits managing pass-through dollars, the grant compliance 101 guide covers the underlying Uniform Guidance framework that applies regardless of which state agency holds the contract.
Top Georgia-headquartered private and community foundations
The largest private and community foundations headquartered in Georgia, by approximate assets:
- The Robert W. Woodruff Foundation - Atlanta, statewide focus.
- The Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation - Atlanta-based.
- Community Foundation for Greater Atlanta - metro Atlanta community foundation.
- The Joseph B. Whitehead Foundation - Atlanta-based.
- Georgia Power Foundation - corporate foundation, statewide.
These are drawn from publicly available IRS Form 990-PF filings and aggregated foundation data. Asset levels and giving patterns shift year over year - verify current figures against the foundation’s most recent 990-PF before treating any number as authoritative. The top five typically represent a meaningful share of Georgia-originated philanthropic capital, but smaller family and corporate foundations also fund mission-aligned work in specific regions or program areas.
Use the funder prospecting research template to qualify each foundation against your mission, geography, and program type before investing in a full LOI.
Tribal and regional funders
No federally recognized tribes are headquartered in Georgia following 19th-century removals. Georgia state-recognized tribes do not access federal tribal pass-through funding.
Where tribal-led programs apply, the major federal funding streams include HHS Administration for Native Americans (ANA) Social and Economic Development Strategies (SEDS) grants, HUD Indian Community Development Block Grant (ICDBG), and BIA Tribal Government Services. State-level tribal partnerships vary by state.
How the calendar works
The recurring deadlines table in this guide’s frontmatter shows the major Georgia state grant submission windows. Three calendar realities shape how Georgia nonprofits plan:
- Two parallel fiscal years. State-funded programs follow July 1-June 30; federal pass-throughs follow October 1-September 30. Renewal and reporting deadlines collide.
- Spring-heavy NOFA cycle. Most state agency RFAs and NOFAs publish March through May for awards effective at the start of the next state fiscal year. A development director who is not pipeline-ready by February misses the cluster.
- Federal pass-throughs lag federal allocation. State agencies cannot release a CDBG or HOME NOFA until HUD finalizes the state’s allocation, which can push pass-through cycles later than state-funded equivalents.
Use the grant pipeline forecasting worksheet to model award timing across both calendars before the NOFA cluster hits.
What this means for grant management practice
A Georgia nonprofit running a representative grant mix - one CDBG pass-through, one state arts council award, two foundation grants from in-state community foundations, and a federal direct grant - manages four reporting cadences, three audit perspectives (state, federal, foundation), and two fiscal year calendars. The compliance overhead is real and grows non-linearly with each new restricted fund.
Three practical implications:
- Build the calendar before the funder list. Mapping deadlines and report cycles is the work that catches the slips. A pipeline without a calendar is a wishlist.
- Track restricted balances per grant, per fund, per FY. GAAP-aligned restricted fund accounting under FASB ASC 958 is non-negotiable once federal expenditures cross $1,000,000 for fiscal years ending September 30, 2025 or later and a Single Audit is triggered.
- Document the audit trail before you need it. Time and effort, procurement, conflict-of-interest, and subaward monitoring documentation must exist contemporaneously, not be reconstructed at audit time.
GrantPipe is built around exactly this scenario - multiple funders, multiple fiscal year calendars, restricted fund balances tracked per award, and a unified compliance calendar that surfaces both state and federal deadlines in the same view. See the Georgia nonprofit software page for context on local fit, or the grant management software guide for the broader tooling category.
Next steps
- Pull the Georgia state grant calendar into your pipeline using the grant pipeline forecasting worksheet.
- Qualify the top in-state foundations using the funder prospecting research template.
- Verify federal pass-through compliance posture against the grant compliance 101 guide.
- Evaluate whether your current tooling can carry the calendar, restricted fund tracking, and audit trail this funder mix demands - see grant management software for nonprofits.
The Georgia funder landscape rewards organizations that treat grant management as recurring infrastructure rather than per-award scrambles. The agencies, deadlines, and compliance terms above repeat year over year. The work is to build the system once and let it run.
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