Deadline: 23-Jul-2026
The Theatre Project Award Grant supports the development, creation, presentation, and production of high-quality theatre projects in the Republic of Ireland. The award helps professional theatre artists, collectives, and organisations bring creative ideas to audiences through paid opportunities and collaborative theatre-making.
Funding is available across four strands: up to €15,000 for Play Development, up to €26,000 for Theatre Creation, up to €80,000 for Theatre Presentation, and up to €175,000 for Theatre Production. Applicants must demonstrate a professional track record in theatre practice.
What is the Theatre Project Award Grant?
The Theatre Project Award Grant is a funding opportunity that supports theatre artists and organisations to develop, create, make, present, and produce theatre for audiences.
The award is designed for professional theatre practitioners and organisations with a demonstrable track record in theatre practice.
It supports projects at different stages, from early play development to full production and public presentation.
Main Purpose of the Award
The main purpose of the award is to support high-quality theatre projects that bring creative ideas to audiences.
The award aims to:
- Support the development of theatre work
- Enable the creation and making of theatre
- Support theatre presentation and production
- Provide paid opportunities for theatre professionals
- Encourage collaboration among artists and organisations
- Help professional theatre-makers reach audiences
- Strengthen theatre practice in Ireland
- Support projects that are separate from existing funded activities
Funding Strands
The award includes four strands.
Each strand supports a different stage or scale of theatre work.
Strand 1: Play Development
Strand 1 supports play development.
Funding is available up to €15,000.
This strand may support early-stage development of theatre writing, dramaturgical work, research, script development, creative exploration, and preparation for future theatre-making.
Strand 2: Theatre Creation
Strand 2 supports theatre creation.
Funding is available up to €26,000.
This strand may support the generation, development, and making of theatre work before final presentation or production.
It is suitable for projects focused on creative development, collaboration, and shaping new theatre ideas.
Strand 3: Theatre Presentation
Strand 3 supports theatre presentation.
Funding is available up to €80,000.
This strand may support projects ready to be presented to audiences, including public-facing theatre work delivered in collaboration with venues, arts centres, festivals, or theatre organisations.
Strand 4: Theatre Production
Strand 4 supports theatre production.
Funding is available up to €175,000.
This strand is suitable for larger-scale theatre projects involving production, presentation, professional collaboration, and significant audience engagement.
Funding Amount
Funding is available as follows:
- Strand 1: Play Development – up to €15,000
- Strand 2: Theatre Creation – up to €26,000
- Strand 3: Theatre Presentation – up to €80,000
- Strand 4: Theatre Production – up to €175,000
Applicants should choose the strand that best matches the project stage, scale, ambition, and delivery plan.
Who is Eligible?
The award is open to applicants based in the Republic of Ireland.
Eligible applicants may include:
- Individual professional theatre artists
- Groups of individuals working collaboratively
- Collectives
- Theatre organisations
Groups and collectives must apply through a lead applicant.
Professional Practice Requirement
Applicants must be professional artists actively pursuing theatre practice as their main career.
A professional theatre practitioner should:
- Actively pursue theatre practice
- Treat theatre as their main career or professional practice
- Have a demonstrable track record in theatre
- Be recognised by peers as a professional practitioner
Applicants must show clear evidence of professional theatre practice.
Priority Theatre Professionals
The award prioritises paid opportunities for theatre professionals who are not already in full-time salaried positions within funded organisations.
This may include:
- Theatre-makers
- Creative producers
- Playwrights
- Directors
- Designers
- Dramaturgs
- Performers
- Other theatre professionals
Projects should provide fair and meaningful professional opportunities for theatre practitioners.
Collaboration and Partnerships
The award encourages collaboration with other artists, theatre organisations, arts centres, or festivals.
Arts Council-funded organisations may support projects, but their involvement must be separate from and additional to their existing funded activities.
Applicants should clearly explain the role of each partner and how the collaboration supports the theatre project.
What Types of Projects Are Supported?
The award supports high-quality theatre projects at different stages of development and presentation.
Supported projects may include:
- Play development projects
- New theatre creation
- Collaborative theatre-making
- Theatre presentations
- Full theatre productions
- Projects involving playwrights, directors, designers, dramaturgs, and producers
- Theatre work presented through arts centres or festivals
- Projects that create paid opportunities for theatre professionals
Key Focus Areas
The Theatre Project Award focuses on theatre development, artistic quality, professional collaboration, and audience engagement.
Key focus areas include:
- Theatre development
- Play development
- Theatre creation
- Theatre presentation
- Theatre production
- Professional theatre practice
- Paid opportunities for theatre-makers
- Collaboration
- Audience engagement
- High-quality artistic work
- Creative idea development
- Theatre sector development
Key Concepts Explained
Play Development
Play development supports the early creative process of developing a script, idea, text, structure, or dramaturgical approach for future theatre work.
Theatre Creation
Theatre creation involves generating and shaping theatre work through research, collaboration, rehearsals, devising, writing, or artistic development.
Theatre Presentation
Theatre presentation refers to bringing theatre work to audiences through performances, events, festivals, venues, or other public-facing settings.
Theatre Production
Theatre production is the full process of preparing and delivering a theatre work for public performance, including creative, technical, rehearsal, design, and presentation elements.
Professional Track Record
A professional track record is evidence of previous theatre work, recognition, practice, experience, or contribution within professional theatre contexts.
Ineligible Applicants
Applications are not accepted from certain individuals and organisations.
Ineligible applicants include:
- Organisations currently funded under Strategic Funding
- Organisations currently funded under Arts Centre Partnership Funding
- Organisations currently funded under Partnership Funding
- Individuals or organisations receiving Arts Grant Funding 2027
- Individuals without a demonstrable track record as professional artists
- Members of the Council of National Cultural Institutions directly funded by the Department of Culture, Communications and Sport
- Full-time undergraduate students during the award period
- Other full-time students during the award period
Organisations funded under Strategic Funding, Arts Centre Partnership Funding, or Partnership Funding may participate as partners, but they cannot apply directly.
How the Award Works
Applicants apply under one of the four strands depending on the project’s stage and funding need.
Applications should clearly explain:
- The theatre idea or project
- The chosen strand
- Artistic objectives
- Professional track record
- Collaborators and partners
- Paid opportunities for theatre professionals
- Audience engagement
- Budget and timeline
- How the project will be delivered
- How any funded organisation’s support is additional to existing funded work
How to Apply
Applicants should prepare a strong proposal that demonstrates artistic quality, professional practice, project feasibility, and audience benefit.
Suggested Application Steps
- Confirm that the applicant is based in the Republic of Ireland.
- Confirm that the applicant has a professional theatre track record.
- Choose the correct funding strand.
- Define the theatre project, idea, or production.
- Identify collaborators, partners, venues, arts centres, or festivals where relevant.
- Explain how the project will provide paid opportunities for theatre professionals.
- Confirm that any support from funded organisations is additional to existing funded activities.
- Prepare a realistic project timeline.
- Prepare a detailed budget within the relevant strand limit.
- Check all ineligible applicant categories.
- Submit the application according to the official award requirements.
Assessment Considerations
Applications should demonstrate strong artistic quality, practical planning, and clear benefit to theatre practice and audiences.
Assessment may consider:
- Artistic quality of the theatre project
- Strength of the creative idea
- Professional track record of the applicant
- Suitability of the chosen strand
- Quality of collaborators and partners
- Paid opportunities for theatre professionals
- Feasibility of the project plan
- Budget clarity
- Audience engagement potential
- Added value of partnerships
- Compliance with eligibility requirements
Expected Results
Funded projects should support theatre development, professional practice, and public engagement.
Expected results may include:
- New theatre ideas developed
- Plays advanced through development
- Theatre work created and shaped
- Theatre projects presented to audiences
- Full productions delivered
- Paid opportunities for theatre professionals
- Stronger collaboration across the theatre sector
- Greater audience access to high-quality theatre
- Development of professional theatre practice in Ireland
Why It Matters
Theatre depends on time, collaboration, experimentation, production support, and meaningful engagement with audiences.
The Theatre Project Award Grant helps professional theatre artists and organisations move creative ideas from development to presentation.
By supporting different stages of theatre-making, the award strengthens the wider theatre ecosystem and helps ensure that artists, producers, playwrights, directors, designers, dramaturgs, and other professionals can contribute to high-quality work.
Tips for Strong Applications
A strong application should clearly match the project to the right strand and demonstrate professional theatre practice.
Applicants should focus on:
- Clear artistic vision
- Strong theatre track record
- Appropriate funding strand
- Realistic project plan
- Strong collaborators and partners
- Clear paid roles for theatre professionals
- Strong audience engagement
- Detailed and realistic budget
- Evidence of feasibility
- Clear separation from existing funded activities where relevant
Applicants should avoid broad or unclear proposals that do not explain the project’s stage, artistic value, or delivery plan.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Applicants should carefully check the award’s eligibility and funding restrictions.
Common mistakes include:
- Choosing the wrong strand
- Applying without a professional theatre track record
- Submitting a project without clear audience plans
- Not explaining collaborator roles
- Providing unclear budgets
- Requesting funding above the strand limit
- Applying while receiving Arts Grant Funding 2027
- Applying as an organisation currently funded under excluded schemes
- Including work that duplicates existing funded activities
- Not showing paid opportunities for theatre professionals
- Applying as a full-time student during the award period
FAQ
What is the Theatre Project Award Grant?
It is a grant that supports the development, creation, presentation, and production of high-quality theatre projects in the Republic of Ireland.
Who can apply?
Individuals, groups, collectives, and organisations based in the Republic of Ireland may apply if they meet the professional theatre practice requirements.
What are the four funding strands?
The four strands are Play Development, Theatre Creation, Theatre Presentation, and Theatre Production.
How much funding is available?
Funding is available up to €15,000 for Play Development, up to €26,000 for Theatre Creation, up to €80,000 for Theatre Presentation, and up to €175,000 for Theatre Production.
Can funded organisations participate as partners?
Yes. Organisations funded under Strategic Funding, Arts Centre Partnership Funding, or Partnership Funding may participate as partners, but they cannot apply directly.
Who is not eligible to apply?
Ineligible applicants include organisations currently funded under excluded funding schemes, individuals or organisations receiving Arts Grant Funding 2027, people without a professional track record, directly funded National Cultural Institutions, and full-time students during the award period.
What should applications prioritise?
Applications should prioritise artistic quality, professional theatre practice, paid opportunities for theatre-makers, collaboration, public presentation, and audience engagement.
Conclusion
The Theatre Project Award Grant supports professional theatre artists, collectives, and organisations in developing, creating, presenting, and producing high-quality theatre work in Ireland. With four funding strands ranging from Play Development to Theatre Production, the award supports projects at different stages and scales.
Strong applications will demonstrate a clear theatre focus, professional track record, appropriate strand selection, paid opportunities for theatre professionals, strong collaboration, realistic planning, and meaningful engagement with audiences.
For more information, visit The Arts Council.
























