RHTP funding is coming.
Are you “shovel ready”?
GrantBridges helps tribal health programs, CCBHCs, and FQHCs get shovel-ready for RHTP and other federal funding — before the window closes.
Insights
RHTP Application Checklist: Everything You Need Before Your State Opens
The compliance prerequisites that appear in nearly every RHTP solicitation — SAM.gov, cost allocation, Single Audit, accounting systems, reimbursement capacity. Based on patterns across 30 published solicitations. Get ready before the window opens.
How to Apply for RHTP Funding: A Provider's Guide to Your State's Process
RHTP funds flow through states, not CMS. This guide explains the three distribution models, how to find your state's process, what compliance gates to clear before the solicitation drops, and realistic timelines from application to first dollar.
The RHTP Capital Expense Trap: How One-Time Investments Become Permanent Liabilities
RHTP's structure pushes states toward capital investments — technology, facilities, equipment — that create ongoing operating costs the funding was never designed to cover. Organizations that take the money without a post-2030 revenue plan are building liabilities, not assets.
RHTP Eligible Entities: Who Can Apply, State by State
Comprehensive breakdown of RHTP eligibility by entity type across all 50 states. Data from 30 solicitations shows 86% include catch-all categories — learn who qualifies, how to position your application, and what your entity type means for scoring.
Where the money is — state by state
Every state got RHTP funding. Not every state is moving it to providers. We track who's open, who's planning, and who hasn't started — updated weekly.
Funding you've earned is sitting on the table.
The Rural Health Transformation Program represents a generational shift in how federal health funding reaches rural, tribal, and underserved communities. Your organization likely qualifies. The question is whether your compliance infrastructure can demonstrate it.
Most organizations that miss federal funding don't miss it because they do bad work. They miss it because cost allocation is undocumented, time-and-effort records are inconsistent, or a single audit finding from three years ago is still unresolved. Administrative gaps, not clinical gaps.
Multi-framework compliance
Tribal programs, CCBHCs, and FQHCs routinely manage 4–8 funding streams under incompatible federal, state, and tribal compliance frameworks simultaneously.
Cost allocation requirements
2 CFR 200 requires documented, consistently applied allocation methods for every shared cost. Most organizations have methods — few have documentation.
Audit readiness
A single audit finding can freeze future awards for years. The organizations most dependent on federal funding are often least resourced to prevent findings.
The RHTP window is open.
Is your organization ready?
Administrative gaps are the only thing standing between your organization and funding it has already earned.