General Grant
Please note: the Fund was paused in May 2021 due to high demand, but it hopes to restart at the end of January 2022.
The Pixel Fund is a small charity which distributes grants to other charities in its field of interest. Its focus is the mental health and wellbeing of children and young adults.
The Fund aims to support improvement in mental health by providing grants to UK charities involved in the mental health and wellbeing of children and young adults. The Fund prefers to target its grant-giving to specific projects that will provide a measurable difference to the charities' users.
The Fund generally offers first grants of between £500 and £5,000. However, no single grant is ever more than 5% of annual income.
Applications will only be accepted from registered charities and registered community interest organisations based in the UK. Organisations not on the respective charity register of any of the UK nations cannot be granted to.
The Fund's focus is the mental health and wellbeing of children and young adults, and it will not grant to projects or organisations that are not core-focused on mental health related matters.
The following criteria apply:
- The Fund defines young adults as those aged under 26 years old at the start of any granted project or work stream. Where a project includes over 25s, the Fund will consider granting an appropriate percentage of the total costs.
- The Fund only makes grants to charities and community interest organisations registered in England and Wales, Scotland or Northern Ireland.
- Established charities must have:
- Fixed trustee term limits beyond which sitting trustees cannot remain in post.
- Considered organisational risk policies.
- No, or at least declared and recognised, conflicts of interest within the governance structures.
- A sustainable pension scheme.
- New charities will be expected to provide at least a first full set of accounts before the Fund will consider granting to the organisation.
Trustees have a strong preference for organisations with annual income of under £10 million.