Know Your Grant

Know Your Grantgrants → State Water Resources Control Board

Clean Water State Revolving Fund (CWSRF) Program

State Water Resources Control Board · Environment & Water

Under federal and state law the primary purpose of the CWSRF Program is to provide financing for eligible projects to restore and maintain water quality in the state. The SWRCB also seeks to reduce the effects of climate

Award amount
See notice
Deadline
Rolling
Who can apply
Nonprofits
Match required
Yes
Grant breakdown · $29

13 documents required — get the full breakdown

We read the entire official notice so you don't have to. Unlocks:

Ready to apply? · $699

We draft it, you fill in what's yours, we check it before you submit

  1. We write the first draft — structured to this notice's exact requirements.
  2. We mark exactly what's yours to fill in — your numbers, your narrative. Never a blank page.
  3. We review your finished version before you submit — completeness + competitiveness.

A grant writer for this runs $1,500–$5,000+. Flat fee, never a percentage of your award.

Clean Water State Revolving Fund (CWSRF) Program — frequently asked

Am I eligible for Clean Water State Revolving Fund (CWSRF) Program?

This opportunity lists Nonprofits among eligible applicants. The $29 breakdown spells out the exact eligibility rules — org type, location, size, and status — so you know for certain before you invest time.

What's the deadline for Clean Water State Revolving Fund (CWSRF) Program?

This opportunity is rolling or unspecified — see the official notice.

What do I need to apply?

13 documents are required. The $29 breakdown lists every form, attachment, narrative and certification, plus the scoring criteria and what gets applications rejected.

Can you write the application for me?

Our $699 draft-&-review service writes the first draft, marks exactly what only you can fill in (your numbers and narrative), and reviews your finished version before you submit — a fraction of a $1,500–$5,000 grant writer.

This report compiles and structures publicly available grant information from official federal and state sources. It is not legal, financial, or grant-writing advice, is not an endorsement by any grantor, and does not replace reading the official grant solicitation or consulting a grants professional. Eligibility, funding amounts, and deadlines are current as of the source’s publication date — always confirm against the official notice of funding opportunity before you apply. Many federal grants are not available to for-profit businesses or individuals; where that applies, the report says so.