Deadline: 01-Jul-2026
The Seed Grant Program provides funding for early- and early-mid-career researchers to develop new knowledge and address critical gaps in stroke care. The programme focuses on improving prevention, diagnosis, treatment, and recovery outcomes for stroke patients in Australia.
It supports applied research that can improve real-world stroke care systems and patient outcomes.
Key Objectives
- Generate new evidence in stroke care
- Address gaps in stroke prevention and treatment
- Improve diagnosis speed and accuracy
- Support post-stroke recovery research
- Strengthen mental health and cognitive care after stroke
- Enhance communication and patient support systems
- Translate research into healthcare practice improvements
Priority Research Areas
- Stroke prevention strategies
- Rapid diagnosis and emergency treatment
- Brain recovery and rehabilitation
- Post-stroke fatigue management
- Mental health after stroke
- Communication difficulties following stroke
- Memory and cognitive impairment after stroke
- Health services and implementation research
Funding Details
- Maximum funding: up to $80,000 per project
- Duration: up to 18 months
- Project period: 1 January 2027 to 30 June 2028
- Funding supports research development and implementation
Eligible Applicants
- Early-career researchers
- Early-mid-career researchers
- Maximum 7 full-time equivalent years of research experience after graduation
- Must be supported by an Australian university or research institution
- No PhD requirement
Eligible Research Types
Ineligible Research Types
- Laboratory-based research
- Pre-clinical or animal studies
- Non-applied biomedical experiments
Geographic Requirement
- Research must be conducted in Australia
- Must be supported by an Australian institution
How the Program Works: Step-by-Step
- Identify a stroke care evidence gap or implementation problem
- Design a clinical, public health, or health services research project
- Secure institutional support from an Australian research body
- Prepare grant application within eligibility criteria
- Submit proposal for review
- Applications assessed for impact and feasibility
- Selected researchers receive funding
- Conduct research over 18-month period
- Deliver findings that improve stroke care outcomes
Evaluation Criteria
- Relevance to stroke care priorities
- Strength of research design
- Potential for clinical or system impact
- Innovation in addressing care gaps
- Feasibility within timeframe and budget
- Capacity of researcher and supporting institution
Why This Program Matters
- Improves stroke prevention and survival outcomes
- Supports early-career researcher development
- Addresses real-world healthcare gaps
- Strengthens Australia’s stroke care system
- Encourages translation of research into practice
- Enhances patient quality of life after stroke
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Submitting laboratory or pre-clinical research
- Exceeding career experience eligibility limit
- Not securing Australian institutional support
- Weak alignment with stroke care priorities
- Poorly defined implementation pathway
- Overly complex or unrealistic project scope
Pro Tips
- Focus on practical, patient-impacting outcomes
- Emphasise implementation in real healthcare settings
- Clearly define stroke care gap being addressed
- Align research with health system priorities
- Keep methodology feasible within 18 months
- Strengthen institutional and clinical partnerships
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
- Who can apply? Early- to early-mid-career researchers
- Is a PhD required? No
- What is the funding amount? Up to $80,000
- How long is the project duration? Up to 18 months
- Where must research be conducted? Australia
- What types of research are eligible? Clinical, public health, health services
- Are lab-based studies allowed? No
Conclusion
The Seed Grant Program strengthens stroke care research in Australia by funding early-career researchers working on practical, high-impact projects. By focusing on prevention, treatment, recovery, and system improvements, it aims to translate research into better outcomes for stroke patients and healthcare services.
For more information, visit Stroke Foundation.









































