Vertical Farming Grants & CEA Funding Database 2026

Vertical farming grants and CEA funding programs can help indoor farming, plant factory and controlled environment agriculture projects access public subsidies, research funding, tax incentives and non-dilutive funding. This database lists official funding sources by region and is designed as a practical starting point for founders, growers, technology providers and CEA investors.

How to use this vertical farming grants database

Funding programs change constantly. Budgets, deadlines, cost-share ratios and eligibility are updated every cycle, and calls open and close throughout the year. Every entry here links to the official source. Always confirm the current status there before you rely on it.

A few things worth flagging up front:

  • Not every “grant” is a grant. Some programs (for example Canada’s AgriInnovate) are repayable contributions or zero-interest loans, not free money. Where that is the case, it is noted.
  • United States: as of April 2026, the USDA paused loan-note guarantees across its Rural Business and Cooperative Service programs for projects involving CEA, including vertical farming, hydroponics, aeroponics and aquaponics. Grant programs (REAP, UIE, USDA Business Programs and others) are not affected, but the loan-guarantee route for CEA is currently on hold. Check the USDA Rural Development site for the latest.
  • Most national agri programs require the applicant to be based in that country. EU programs additionally require a cross-border consortium for the large collaborative calls.

Data current as of July 2026.

Related resources: If you are planning a funded CEA or indoor farming project, you may also want to read our guides on
how much it costs to start a vertical farm,
controlled environment agriculture systems,
why vertical farming projects fail


European Union (multi-country programs)

These are open to entities across EU member states and associated countries. The large collaborative calls need a consortium; the EIC route is for single companies.

Program For whom Type and focus Official link
Horizon Europe, Cluster 6 (Food, Bioeconomy, Natural Resources, Agriculture, Environment) Consortia of companies, universities, research institutes (min. 3 entities from 3 countries) Grants, typically 3 to 15 million EUR per project, mostly at 100% of costs. The 2026-27 programme has a dedicated CEA call (“Advanced innovative solutions for improved competitiveness and sustainability in controlled environment agriculture”) Official source
EIC Accelerator (European Innovation Council) Single SMEs and startups with a deep-tech innovation Blended finance: grant plus optional equity investment. The route for single companies rather than consortia (verify current ceilings) Official source
LIFE Programme Companies, public bodies, NGOs Co-funded grants for environment and climate action projects, relevant for resource-efficient and low-emission production Official source
CAP Rural Development and EIP-AGRI Operational Groups Farmers, producer groups, rural businesses Support delivered through each member state, funds practical innovation partnerships between farmers and researchers Official source
EU Funding and Tenders Portal (central entry point) All of the above Search and apply for all EU calls in one place Official source

Germany

Program For whom Type and focus Official link
BMLEH Innovationsförderung (framework programme), delivered by BLE Companies (especially SMEs), universities, research institutes based in Germany Grants for R&D in the agri-food sector. Indoor Farming, Vertical Farming and CEA are explicitly covered under “Zukunftsweisende Produktionssysteme”. Ongoing calls plus the DIP (Deutsche Innovationspartnerschaft Agrar) with twice-yearly deadlines (15 Feb and 15 Aug) Official source
Landwirtschaftliche Rentenbank, innovation and startup support Agri-related startups and businesses Promotional loans and dedicated support for innovative, agriculture-related startups Official source
EXIST (BMWK) University spin-offs and academic founders Startup grants for knowledge-based founders, general but applicable to agtech spin-offs Official source
ZIM, Zentrales Innovationsprogramm Mittelstand SMEs Grants for R&D projects, technology-open, applicable to agtech hardware and software Official source
Förderdatenbank des Bundes (central search) All of the above Searchable database of all federal and state (Länder) funding programs Official source

Netherlands

One of the strongest CEA and greenhouse ecosystems in the world, with matching support instruments.

Program For whom Type and focus Official link
WBSO (R&D tax credit), via RVO Companies doing R&D in the Netherlands Reduces R&D wage and cost burden through a tax credit, widely used in greenhouse and horticulture tech Official source
Innovation Box Companies with profit from innovative activities Lower corporate tax rate on profits from innovation, pairs with WBSO Official source
Topsector Agri and Food / Tuinbouw and Uitgangsmaterialen Companies and researchers in public-private partnerships Co-funded innovation projects across the agri-food and horticulture value chain Official source
Green Deal Stedelijke Landbouw (Urban Agriculture) Urban and vertical farming projects Policy framework with incentives and subsidy eligibility for sustainable urban food production Official source

United Kingdom

Program For whom Type and focus Official link
DEFRA Farming Innovation Programme, delivered by Innovate UK (UKRI) Farmers, growers, businesses and researchers, benefiting England Flagship programme, at least 200 million GBP committed to 2030. Grant competitions across R&D stages Official source
Farming Futures R&D Fund (within FIP) Collaborative projects Larger grants for longer-term R&D toward productivity and low-emission farming Official source
ADOPT Fund (within FIP) Farmer-led, on-farm trials Smaller grants (including a support grant) to trial and demonstrate technologies on working farms Official source
Farming Innovation Investor Partnership SMEs with private investment lined up Grant that must be matched with aligned private investment from an approved investor pool Official source

United States

Grant programs are active. The loan-guarantee route for CEA is currently paused (see caveats above).

Program For whom Type and focus Official link
Urban, Indoor, and Emerging Agriculture (UIE) Program, via NIFA State agricultural experiment stations, colleges and universities, university research foundations, research institutions and organizations, federal agencies, national laboratories, private organizations, foundations or corporations, individuals, or groups consisting of two or more eligible entities Competitive grant program supporting research, education and extension work that helps solve key problems for urban, indoor and emerging agricultural systems. The programme covers food value chain stages including production, harvesting, transportation, aggregation, packaging, distribution and markets. Official source
Rural Energy for America Program (REAP) Agricultural producers and rural small businesses Grants and loan guarantees for energy efficiency and renewable energy. Grants up to 25% of costs, relevant for CEA lighting and climate energy loads Official source
USDA Rural Development Business Programs Individuals, businesses, cooperatives, farmers and ranchers, public bodies, nonprofit corporations, Native American Tribes and private companies in rural communities Overview of USDA Rural Development business support, including financial backing and technical assistance for business creation and growth. The programs include loans, loan guarantees and grants for rural business development, capital, equipment, facilities, job training and entrepreneurship. This section includes the Value-Added Producer Grant (VAPG), which supports agricultural producers in value-added processing and marketing activities. Official source
USDA SBIR and AFRI (via NIFA) Small businesses and researchers Competitive research and commercialization grants across plant production and food systems Official source
Specialty Crop Block Grant Program Specialty crop producers (via state departments) Funds research, marketing and food safety for fruits, vegetables and horticulture Official source
State programs (e.g. California CDFA) Producers in that state State-level grants, often less competitive than federal ones Check your state department of agriculture

Canada

Program For whom Type and focus Official link
AgriInnovate (Sustainable CAP) For-profit agri-food companies Repayable contributions, up to 5 million CAD per project at 0% interest, for commercialization and adoption. Not a grant, must be repaid Official source
Provincial SCAP cost-share programs (e.g. BC On-Farm Technology Adoption) Farmers in that province Non-repayable cost-share grants, often more accessible than federal programs Check your provincial agriculture ministry

Singapore

Strong state backing tied to the “30 by 30” food-security goal (30% of nutritional needs produced locally by 2030).

Program For whom Type and focus Official link
Agri-Food Cluster Transformation (ACT) Fund 2 SFA-licensed local farms New tranche of 70 million SGD from 2026. Co-funding for technology adoption, technology upscaling and infrastructure, with higher co-funding for commonly consumed produce Official source
Productivity Solutions Grant (PSG) for the agri-food sector Local farms Funding for pre-scoped, ready-to-use farming solutions and equipment Official source

Japan

Japan is one of the more relevant public-funding environments for controlled environment agriculture, plant factories and smart-agriculture technologies. However, the funding landscape is fragmented: the practical route is usually a mix of MAFF smart-agriculture measures, prefectural or municipal application routes, certification-based tax and finance support, and general SME/startup subsidy portals.

Important correction: Japan’s SBIR Phase 3 Fund should not be treated as an active open grant route. It is still highly relevant as a past CEA funding example, but the official SBIR3/JATAFF page states that all calls have ended and that no further calls are currently planned.

Program / route For whom Type and focus Official link
MAFF Smart Agriculture measures
スマート農業
Agricultural corporations, producers, smart-agriculture service providers, technology developers and local implementation models. Support for smart-agriculture adoption, production-system transformation, agricultural support services, R&D, field implementation and technology supply. Relevant for CEA when the project is framed around automation, labour saving, climate control, data use, energy efficiency or production-system innovation. This is not a plant-factory-only grant, so applicants should check the current MAFF call pages, budget documents and prefectural routes. MAFF Smart Agriculture
Agricultural Structural Transformation Intensive Measures
農業構造転換集中対策
Producers, production regions, facility operators and local agricultural projects, usually through specific sub-programmes and local application channels. Broad FY2026 agricultural transformation framework. Relevant where CEA or plant-factory projects connect to productivity improvement, smart technology, facility modernisation, regional production capacity or food-security goals. The concrete application route depends on the matching sub-programme, prefecture and project structure. MAFF budget information
Strong Agriculture Development Comprehensive Support Grant
強い農業づくり総合支援交付金
Producer groups, regional agricultural actors, food-system projects and facility-related initiatives, depending on the current call type. Facility, production-base and food-system support. Potentially relevant for CEA-related infrastructure if the project fits the specific call requirements and local policy priorities. This should not be presented as automatically available to every plant factory. MAFF programme notices
Smart Agriculture Technology Utilization Promotion Act certification
スマート農業技術活用促進法
Certified producers, agricultural organisations, smart-agriculture technology developers, service providers and related business partners. Certification route that can unlock tax and finance-related support measures for approved plans. Useful for CEA projects where the technology adoption is tied to a broader production-system innovation plan. This is not a grant by itself, but an enabling route for tax, finance and priority positioning. MAFF law overview
MIDORI investment tax incentive
みどり投資促進税制
Producers and businesses with approved environmental-load-reduction plans or related certified equipment and business plans. Tax incentive for eligible equipment and facilities. Current MAFF materials describe special depreciation for eligible machinery and buildings under approved plans. This is not a cash grant; eligibility is technical and time-sensitive. MAFF MIDORI tax information
SBIR Phase 3 Fund, MAFF
中小企業イノベーション創出推進事業
Deep-tech startups and SMEs selected under past SBIR Phase 3 calls. Large-scale R&D and demonstration funding. A relevant CEA example is PLANTX, which announced roughly 1.2 billion yen in support for a smart plant factory project focused on labour and resource savings. Treat this as a past case study, not an active open grant route. SBIR3/JATAFF
PLANTX case
JGrants
Jグランツ
Companies, SMEs, startups, agricultural businesses and other eligible applicants searching for Japanese government subsidy calls. Central online portal for finding and applying to subsidy programmes. Useful search terms include smart agriculture, plant factory, agriculture DX, energy saving, regional revitalisation, startup and manufacturing. This is a portal, not a funding programme. JGrants subsidy search
J-Net21
中小企業ビジネス支援サイト
SMEs, founders, startups and regional businesses looking for support information, calls, events and advisory resources. SME support information portal operated by SME Support Japan. Useful for monitoring new subsidy calls, startup support, productivity programmes and prefectural or sector-specific support information. Use it as a discovery and monitoring source. J-Net21

Practical note for CEA and vertical farming applicants: Japan’s funding environment is attractive, but most programmes are designed for Japan-based entities, certified plans, local implementation models or domestic consortia. Foreign companies usually need a Japanese subsidiary, local partner, local demonstration site or Japanese customer project.

For plant factories, the strongest angle is usually not “vertical farming” alone, but a combination of labour saving, energy efficiency, stable domestic food production, smart-agriculture technology, reduced environmental load and regional food-system resilience.


Latin America

Thinner and more accelerator-driven than the regions above, but with real public instruments, especially in Chile and Brazil. This section is the most expandable.

Program Country Type and focus Official link
Start-Up Chile (CORFO) Chile Equity-free grants roughly 15,000 to 100,000 USD across Build, Ignite and Growth tracks, plus a work visa. Open to foreign founders Official source
CORFO R&D tax credit and seed programs Chile 35% R&D tax credit for companies with a tax presence in Chile, plus seed and technology-transfer grants Official source
FINEP Brazil Federal innovation agency, grants and finance for technology-based companies and R&D Official source
EMBRAPA Brazil State agricultural research body, technology development and transfer partnerships Official source
BNDES and InovAtiva Brasil / SEBRAE Brazil Development-bank finance and startup acceleration and SME support programs Official source
Regional: IDB Lab, CAF Latin America wide Development-bank funds and grants for priority sectors including agtech Official source

Further funding programs

Additional funding programs, subsidies and public support instruments for vertical farming, controlled environment agriculture and adjacent agri-food innovation exist in many countries and regions. They have not all been included in this first version yet.

This page is maintained as a living database and will be updated at irregular intervals as new official sources, programs and country sections are reviewed.


Sources

Program details in this database were compiled from official government and agency sources, including the European Commission (research-and-innovation.ec.europa.eu, ec.europa.eu), the German BLE and Förderdatenbank des Bundes, the Netherlands Enterprise Agency (RVO), UK DEFRA and Innovate UK (farminginnovation.ukri.org), USDA Rural Development and NIFA, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, the Singapore Food Agency, Japan’s MAFF, and Chile’s CORFO. Figures and deadlines reflect the situation as of July 2026 and should be verified on each official page before use.

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