Working With Londoners
Our criteria and priorities
We receive many more applications than we are able to fund. We
usually only support work which most closely measures up to our
published priorities. In all cases priority is given to projects
which tackle the greatest deprivation or disadvantage.
To find out more about our current grant programmes, follow the
links below:
Accessible London
Bridging Communities
Improving Londoners’ Mental Health
London’s Environment
Older Londoners
Positive Transitions to Independent Living
Strengthening the Third Sector
There are no closing dates for applications for the above.
Greening the Third Sector, provides advice, training and an
eco-audit and is additional to any grant which you may hold on any
of our grants programmes.
Special editions
Occasionally we run ‘special edition’, time-limited programmes
with a specific closing date. These are usually around a specific
theme and are publicised accordingly.
Exceptional grants
Very occasionally we make grants outside our published
priorities.
These can include organisations which show that they are:
• responding to new needs and circumstances which may have
arisen since the Trust fixed its priorities, such as a major
catastrophe impacting upon London; or
• projects requiring short-term assistance to cope with
unforeseen circumstances enabling them to adapt to change and move
forward. Need arising from poor planning will not be
considered.
Only a small number of grants are likely to be made in this
category and you should speak to the Trust before applying.
Strategic work
As well as responding to applications sent to us, we are also
involved in a number of strategic initiatives where we work
proactively. We believe a charitable trust can add value by
disseminating widely the knowledge it has gained through its
grant-making to the third sector, other funders and policy
makers.
Current strategic initiatives include working with partners
to:
• improve the quality of impact measurement in the third
sector
• improve communications skills in the third sector
• improve access advice for developing buildings
• reduce the third sector’s carbon footprint
• promote philanthropy in the City and beyond.
Who can we fund?
• We fund third sector organisations, predominantly
registered charities and only for charitable activity.
How much will we fund?
• We have no minimum or maximum revenue grant.
• Grants over £500,000 need the approval of the City of London
Corporation’s Court of Common Council and are very
exceptional.
• Applications over £25,000 need to be accompanied by a
detailed proposal. Large grants to small organisations are unlikely
to be made.
• Grants to large charities will not usually be more than 50%
of the total project costs.
• Grants for large capital projects will usually not exceed
£50,000.
• Capital grants in excess of £50,000 may be awarded
occasionally to small organisations or local projects. Please
contact the Trust for advice on this.
Other funding
We expect organisations to have secured some other source of
revenue funding and to have a track record, including accounts
which comply with Charity Commission requirements. We are unlikely
to award a grant if we will become an organisation’s largest single
revenue funder.
We cannot fund:
• political parties
• political lobbying
• non charitable activities
• work which does not benefit the inhabitants of Greater
London.
We do not fund:
• individuals
• grant-making bodies to make grants on our behalf
• schools, PTAs, universities or other educational
establishments
• medical or academic research
• churches or other religious bodies where the monies will be
used for religious purposes
• hospitals
• projects which have already taken place or building work
which has already been completed
• statutory bodies, such as local authorities
• profit making organisations, except social enterprises
• charities established outside the UK.
Grants will not usually be given to:
• work where there is statutory responsibility to provide
funding
• organisations seeking funding to replace cuts by statutory
bodies, except where that funding was explicitly time-limited and
for a discretionary purpose
• organisations seeking funding to top up on under-priced
contracts
• work where there is significant public funding available,
including funding from sports governing bodies.
• You must complete our application form, using our format
only, available in hard copy or downloadable from this website. It
is also available on disk, on tape, in Braille or large print
formats.
• Applications sent by fax or e-mail will not be
considered.
• Please read our guidelines and consult our website before
submitting an application. If you need further clarification,
please contact a Grants Officer.
The process
• Your application will be assessed by one of our Grants
Team and then considered by the Grants Committee. Your form may be
included in the papers for a public committee meeting. You should
ensure that the completed form provides a sufficient summary of
what is proposed.
• All applications will be acknowledged. Before the
application is considered by the committee it will have been
assessed – and we may need to visit you.
• Any grant agreed by the Trust will be subject to certain
terms and conditions and monitoring requirements.
• We will undertake various checks to establish the
authenticity of your organisation and application.
What type of grants do we give?
• We give grants for either running (revenue) costs or
capital costs. Grants for running costs can be for up to three
years.
• A tapering funding approach, if appropriate, may be applied
when awarding revenue grants.
• Projects of an exceptionally strategic nature may make an
application for a further two years, a maximum of five years in
all. Please discuss this with us before applying.
• Grants of up to £5,000 may be awarded for disability access
audits and disability equalities training or consultancy to help
organisations obtain the best advice to develop their proposed
projects.
Organisations may usually hold only one grant at a time
except:
• charities with branches or running discrete activities in
different parts of London, which can hold up to three grants; you
are advised to speak to us if you think this might apply to your
organisation. In such cases the national or regional office of the
applicant charity should co-ordinate applications; or
• if you hold a grant on any of our programmes and if
environment work is not your main focus you can apply for an
additional grant on our environment programme.
Core costs
• We recognise that core costs are incurred in the delivery
of good services and are willing to consider supporting such costs
providing the work supported meets the Trust’s stated funding
criteria.
Policy on reserves
• We do not apply rigid criteria on what constitutes a
reasonable level of reserves. Applicants must justify their level
of reserves in relation to their obligations.
Exit strategy
• Organisations must identify how they see the work being
funded, if continuing, after the lifetime of our grant.
Timetable
• The Grants Committee meet regularly and applications are
accepted throughout the year. It usually takes about four months
from receiving your complete application until a final decision is
reached. Please take this into account when planning your
project.
When can you re-apply?
• At the end of your revenue grant you may apply for a
further grant for a different purpose one year after the receipt of
a final satisfactory monitoring and evaluation report on the
original grant.
• If you wish to apply for the same purpose, you can do so
three years after the monitoring report is satisfactorily
received.
• In the case of capital grants a year must have elapsed since
the final payment of that grant and receipt of a satisfactory
monitoring and evaluation report.
Re-applications
• Our staff and Grants Committee give careful consideration
to all applications. Unfortunately demands for assistance always
exceed funds available. This means that some good applications,
whilst meeting our criteria, still have to be rejected. You can
re-apply one year after the date that a rejected application was
submitted.