Opportunity Information: Apply for HHS 2026 IHS EP1 0001

The Indian Health Service (IHS) is offering a discretionary cooperative agreement called the "Epidemiology Program for American Indian/Alaska Native Tribes and Urban Indian Communities" (Funding Opportunity Number HHS 2026 IHS EP1 0001; CFDA 93.231). The core purpose is to build and strengthen public health and epidemiology capacity for Tribal Epidemiology Centers (TECs) and for the Tribes, Tribal Organizations, Urban Indian organizations, and Intertribal Consortiums that TECs support. The program is designed to help TECs carry out the seven TEC functions established in the Indian Health Care Improvement Act (IHCIA), specifically at 25 U.S.C. 1621m(b). While applicants may propose additional objectives or activities, the application must cover all required activities tied to those statutory TEC functions.

A key program intent is geographic and community coverage. IHS states it intends to fund enough TECs to serve Tribes and Urban Indian communities across all 12 IHS administrative areas, with Urban Indian populations treated as a consolidated "Area" for service purposes. In practical terms, this opportunity is meant to ensure that epidemiology and public health infrastructure supporting American Indian and Alaska Native communities is available broadly and consistently, rather than being limited to a few regions.

Eligible applicants include federally recognized Indian Tribes, Tribal Organizations, and other eligible Native entities listed in the announcement (including "others" as specified by the NOFO), with eligibility definitions anchored in federal statute. "Indian Tribe" is defined at 25 U.S.C. 1603(14) and includes Alaska Native villages or groups and Alaska Native corporations recognized as eligible for federal programs and services due to their status. "Tribal organization" is defined at 25 U.S.C. 1603(26) and further references the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act definition at 25 U.S.C. 5304(l), covering recognized tribal governing bodies as well as legally established, tribally controlled or sanctioned Indian organizations. If an applicant proposes to provide services benefiting more than one Tribe, the announcement notes that each Tribe must approve the arrangement, consistent with the statutory language.

The NOFO also includes a pathway for Urban Indian Organizations, as defined at 25 U.S.C. 1603(29), but with specific conditions. These organizations must be nonprofit corporate bodies located in urban centers, governed by an urban Indian-controlled board, and structured to maximize participation by interested Indian groups and individuals. They must also be capable of legally cooperating with other public and private entities to carry out activities under 25 U.S.C. 1653(a). The funding notice indicates that Urban Indian Organizations must provide proof of nonprofit status, and entities proposing to serve Tribes must submit letters of support or Tribal Resolutions from the Tribes they will serve, signaling that IHS expects clear documentation of consent, partnership, and service relationships.

From a funding and competition standpoint, the opportunity anticipates making 12 awards, aligning with the intent to support coverage across IHS administrative areas. The listed award ceiling is $3,500,000. Applications are due by July 13, 2026, and the announcement is administered by the Indian Health Service under a cooperative agreement structure, which generally implies substantial federal involvement or partnership during project implementation compared with a standard grant.

  • The Indian Health Service in the health sector is offering a public funding opportunity titled "Epidemiology Program for American Indian/Alaska Native Tribes and Urban Indian Communities" and is now available to receive applicants.
  • Interested and eligible applicants and submit their applications by referencing the CFDA number(s): 93.231.
  • This funding opportunity was created on 2026-05-14.
  • Applicants must submit their applications by 2026-07-13. (Agency may still review applications by suitable applicants for the remaining/unused allocated funding in 2026.)
  • Each selected applicant is eligible to receive up to $3,500,000.00 in funding.
  • The number of recipients for this funding is limited to 12 candidate(s).
  • Eligible applicants include: Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized), Native American tribal organizations (other than Federally recognized tribal governments), Others.
Apply for HHS 2026 IHS EP1 0001

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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

1) What is the name of this funding opportunity?

The opportunity is the Indian Health Service (IHS) discretionary cooperative agreement called "Epidemiology Program for American Indian/Alaska Native Tribes and Urban Indian Communities."

2) What is the Funding Opportunity Number (FON) and CFDA listing?

The Funding Opportunity Number is HHS 2026 IHS EP1 0001 and the CFDA number is 93.231.

3) What is the overall purpose of this cooperative agreement?

The core purpose is to build and strengthen public health and epidemiology capacity for Tribal Epidemiology Centers (TECs) and for the Tribes, Tribal Organizations, Urban Indian organizations, and Intertribal Consortiums that TECs support.

4) What is a Tribal Epidemiology Center (TEC) expected to do under this program?

The program is designed to help TECs carry out the seven TEC functions established in the Indian Health Care Improvement Act (IHCIA), specifically at 25 U.S.C. 1621m(b). Applications must cover all required activities tied to those statutory TEC functions, even if proposing additional objectives or activities.

5) Are applicants allowed to propose additional objectives or activities beyond the required items?

Yes. Applicants may propose additional objectives or activities, but the application must still cover all required activities tied to the statutory TEC functions.

6) What does IHS mean by emphasizing geographic and community coverage?

IHS states it intends to fund enough TECs to serve Tribes and Urban Indian communities across all 12 IHS administrative areas. For service purposes, Urban Indian populations are treated as a consolidated "Area." The intent is broad, consistent availability of epidemiology and public health infrastructure rather than support limited to a few regions.

7) How many awards does IHS expect to make?

The opportunity anticipates making 12 awards, aligning with the intent to support coverage across IHS administrative areas.

8) What is the maximum award amount (award ceiling)?

The listed award ceiling is $3,500,000.

9) When is the application due?

Applications are due by July 13, 2026.

10) What type of federal funding mechanism is this?

This opportunity is a cooperative agreement administered by the Indian Health Service. A cooperative agreement generally implies substantial federal involvement or partnership during project implementation compared with a standard grant.

11) Who is eligible to apply?

Eligible applicants include federally recognized Indian Tribes, Tribal Organizations, and other eligible Native entities listed in the announcement (including "others" as specified by the NOFO), with eligibility definitions anchored in federal statute.

12) How does the NOFO define "Indian Tribe" for eligibility purposes?

"Indian Tribe" is defined at 25 U.S.C. 1603(14) and includes Alaska Native villages or groups and Alaska Native corporations recognized as eligible for federal programs and services due to their status.

13) How does the NOFO define "Tribal organization" for eligibility purposes?

"Tribal organization" is defined at 25 U.S.C. 1603(26) and further references the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act definition at 25 U.S.C. 5304(l). This includes recognized tribal governing bodies as well as legally established, tribally controlled or sanctioned Indian organizations.

14) Are Urban Indian Organizations eligible to apply?

Yes. The NOFO includes a pathway for Urban Indian Organizations as defined at 25 U.S.C. 1603(29), subject to specific conditions described in the funding notice.

15) What conditions apply to Urban Indian Organizations under this NOFO?

Urban Indian Organizations must be nonprofit corporate bodies located in urban centers, governed by an urban Indian-controlled board, and structured to maximize participation by interested Indian groups and individuals. They must also be capable of legally cooperating with other public and private entities to carry out activities under 25 U.S.C. 1653(a).

16) What documentation must Urban Indian Organizations provide related to nonprofit status?

The funding notice indicates Urban Indian Organizations must provide proof of nonprofit status.

17) If an applicant proposes to serve more than one Tribe, is Tribal approval required?

Yes. If an applicant proposes to provide services benefiting more than one Tribe, the announcement notes that each Tribe must approve the arrangement, consistent with the statutory language.

18) What evidence of Tribal consent or partnership does the NOFO expect when serving Tribes?

Entities proposing to serve Tribes must submit letters of support or Tribal Resolutions from the Tribes they will serve. This signals that IHS expects clear documentation of consent, partnership, and service relationships.

19) What communities does this program aim to support?

The program is intended to support American Indian and Alaska Native communities through TECs serving Tribes, Tribal Organizations, Urban Indian organizations, and Intertribal Consortiums.

20) Where are the TEC functions referenced in federal law?

The seven TEC functions are established in the Indian Health Care Improvement Act (IHCIA) at 25 U.S.C. 1621m(b).

21) What does it mean that Urban Indian populations are treated as a consolidated "Area"?

For the purpose of service coverage, IHS treats Urban Indian populations as a single consolidated "Area," alongside the 12 IHS administrative areas, to support broad access to TEC-related epidemiology and public health capacity.

22) Does the NOFO limit applications to certain regions?

The NOFO expresses an intent to fund coverage across all 12 IHS administrative areas (with Urban Indian populations treated as a consolidated "Area"), indicating the program focus is comprehensive geographic coverage rather than limiting service to a small number of regions.

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