Grants & Fundraising

The Fore Application Guide 2026: Eligibility, Process, and How to Win

The Fore Application Guide 2026: Eligibility, Process, and How to Win

The UK’s only venture philanthropy fund for small charities. Up to £45,000 unrestricted, plus pro bono support — but only one in twelve registrations get invited to apply.

Last reviewed: 19/06/2026 · By Ivan Siyanko, CEO, CharityIQ.

TL;DR. The Fore funds small UK charities with up to £45,000 unrestricted over 1-3 years (increased from £30k Autumn 2025). Plus pro bono training, skilled volunteers, peer networks, impact measurement support. Eligibility: UK charities, CIOs, CICs limited by guarantee, charitable CBSs with annual income under £500,000. Two-stage: register interest → selected orgs invited to apply. Three rounds/year. Summer 2026 registration was 25 March – 1 April 2026.

What The Fore is

The Fore is the UK’s only venture philanthropy fund focused exclusively on small charities. The model borrowed from venture capital: smaller number of grants, larger in size, intensive support, transformative outcomes expected.

What sets The Fore apart from typical grants: (1) Unrestricted funding — most major UK funders give restricted; (2) Multi-year — up to 3 years; (3) Pro bono support — skilled volunteers, training, peer networks, impact measurement; (4) Strategic partnership — actively wants to help your charity grow.

Eligibility

To register, you must be: UK registered charity, CIO, CIC limited by guarantee, OR charitable Community Benefit Society. AND annual income under £500,000.

You don’t qualify if: CIC limited by shares, unincorporated association, income £500k+, primarily international.

The Fore prioritises early-stage and overlooked charities — too small for institutional funders, or in areas with limited grant infrastructure.

What you can spend it on

Unrestricted, so: staff salaries (including new hires), premises, technology, programme delivery, marketing, strategic development (theory of change, evaluation framework), reserves building.

Can’t use for: outside charitable purposes, personal benefit of trustees/staff, activities not aligned with The Fore’s transformation mission.

The unrestricted nature is the killer feature. For a £200k charity, £45k unrestricted multi-year covers a 0.6 FTE coordinator role — often the difference between scaling and treading water.

The pro bono support package

In addition to cash, every funded organisation gets: 1. Skilled volunteer support — pro bono experts from law, finance, marketing, technology, HR. 2. Training programmes — workshops on impact measurement, theory of change, fundraising, governance. 3. Peer-to-peer networks — connection with other Fore-funded charities (often the most valuable element). 4. Impact measurement support — building theory of change, defining outcomes.

Calibrated to charity’s specific needs, not one-size-fits-all.

The two-stage process

Stage 1: Registration of Interest

Registration window one week, three times/year: Spring (registration usually November), Summer (late March/early April), Autumn (late September). For Summer 2026: 25 March – 1 April 2026.

Registration is short — basic details, brief description, current funding situation. The Fore reviews and selects organisations to invite. Approximately 1 in 12 registrations get invited.

Stage 2: Application by invitation

If invited: detailed organisational information, theory of change, 3-year financial projections, specific request, references. Then a panel interview with funding committee — experienced charity leaders, social investors, sector experts.

The panel interview is where many applications stand or fall. Don’t treat it as a formality.

How to maximise your registration

The Fore looks for: 1. Distinctive, focused work. Generalist charities with broad missions don’t fit as well as focused. 2. Strong leadership. The Fore funds people, not just programmes. 3. Growth potential. Where could your charity be in 3 years? Concrete answers (“doubling beneficiary numbers”, “moving from one site to three”) stronger than abstract.

Prioritise specificity over polish. The Fore reads many registrations; clear, concrete writing stands out.

How to win the full application

Six things matter: 1. Theory of change clarity (use our free template). 2. Specific use of unrestricted funding — “Year 1 funds 0.6 FTE coordinator; Year 2 invests in CRM upgrade and impact measurement; Year 3 enables London expansion”. 3. 3-year financial projections. Income diversification beyond their grant. 4. Strategic positioning. Why now? 5. Strong references. Current funders and partners. 6. Panel interview preparation. Practice. Get a trustee or peer charity to grill you.

From CharityIQ. Stores your charity’s theory of change, impact data, 3-year projections — drafting Fore applications and other strategic funder applications in hours instead of weeks. See grant writing →

Common reasons applications fail

1. Mission too broad. “We help disadvantaged communities” doesn’t communicate distinctive value. 2. Theory of change weak. Vague outcomes, no measurement. 3. Financial sustainability concerns. If finances suggest the charity won’t survive 3 years, the funding doesn’t help. 4. Leadership capability questions. Inexperienced or overstretched leaders raise flags. 5. Wrong fit for venture philanthropy. Some charities want money for the same kind of work; The Fore wants to fund transformation.

Alternatives if The Fore isn’t right

If unsuccessful: Lloyds Bank Foundation Specialist Programme (£75k over 3 years, 8 specific themes); Garfield Weston Foundation (rolling, £1k-£100k+); Henry Smith Charity (£20-60k/yr for up to 3 years); NLCF Awards for All (£300-£20k, more accessible); Local Community Foundations — often the highest-conversion option.

See our complete grants guide for the broader picture.

FAQ

Q: How likely to be invited? Approximately 1 in 12. Q: Apply more than once? Yes, can register for future rounds. Q: Non-charitable work? No. Even though CICs/CBSs eligible, work funded must be charitable. Q: How long is the full process? Registration (1 week) → invitation (~2 weeks) → application (~6 weeks) → interview (~2 weeks after) → decision (~2 weeks). Total: ~3 months. Q: Bridge a different funder’s gap? Yes — unrestricted means you can. Q: After 3-year grant ends? The Fore alumni network remains active. Q: Active across all UK regions? Yes, no regional restrictions.

Realistic timeline if you want to apply

This year (2026): June (now): start preparing; July: customise pitch for The Fore; August: peer feedback on pitch; September: register for Autumn 2026 round (window typically late September). If invited: October-November: full application + panel preparation; December: panel interview and decision; January 2027: funding starts.

What to do next

If The Fore looks like a fit: 1. Read The Fore’s official site. 2. Draft your theory of change. Use our free template. 3. Prepare your registration in advance. Submit on day one of the round.

Strategic funder applications, ready to register. Start a free 14-day CharityIQ trial. Theory of change, projections, impact framework — all in one place. Start free trial →

Written by Ivan Siyanko, founder of CharityIQ.

Related: Grants for Small UK Charities · Theory of Change Template · Winning Grant Application

Sources: The Fore — Official site · NICVA — The Fore funding programme update · Funding for All — The Fore profile