You did not leave your last career because you were bored. You left because something shifted — maybe slowly, maybe all at once — and the work you were doing stopped fitting the person you were becoming. Or the person you had always been finally got tired of pretending it fit.
Either way, you are here now, staring at a second chapter that requires money you may not have sitting in a savings account, and the distance between where you are and where you want to be feels like it has a price tag stapled to every inch of it.
This post is about a different number. It is about the money that exists specifically for people making the pivot you are making — money allocated by the federal government, by state agencies, by private foundations, and by industries that need you more than you know. Money that does not have to be repaid. Grants.
Before anything tactical, read this
The word “grant” carries a strange weight. It sounds institutional. It sounds like something reserved for researchers, nonprofits, organizations with 501(c)(3) status and grant writers on staff. It does not sound like something available to a woman sitting at her kitchen table at eleven o’clock at night, looking at community college program pages and calculating how many semesters stand between her and a nursing license.
But a grant is just money given for a purpose. The purpose, in this case, is you — retrained, re-employed, and earning in a new field.
The federal government funds career-change grants because when you retrain successfully, you fill a workforce gap, you earn more, and you pay more in taxes. The states fund them because their labor markets have shortages they cannot fill with eighteen-year-olds alone. The foundations fund them because someone who once sat where you are sitting decided that the cost of the pivot should not fall entirely on the person brave enough to make it.
You are not asking for charity.
You are applying for an investment that happens to be structured in your favor.
Treat it that way.
Grant 1:
WIOA Workforce Development Grants

The Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act — WIOA — is the federal government’s primary workforce development program, and it is one of the most underapplied-for funding sources in the country. I want you to read that sentence again. Underapplied-for. Not underfunded. Not oversubscribed. Underapplied-for. The money is sitting in local offices waiting for people to walk in and ask for it.
WIOA funds are administered through local American Job Centers. You can find yours at careeronestop.org. These centers exist in every state, and their job is to connect adults with training and education funding for in-demand fields.
The funding can cover tuition, fees, books, and — this is where WIOA separates itself from almost every other grant on this list — transportation and childcare costs during your training.
That last part matters. Most scholarships and grants cover tuition. They do not cover the bus fare to get there or the cost of someone watching your children while you are in class. WIOA does, in many states, because the program was designed by people who understood that the barrier to retraining is rarely just the tuition bill. It is everything around the tuition bill.
WIOA is not a competitive scholarship. It is an allocated program.
Eligibility criteria vary by state, but in general you must be unemployed or underemployed and training for a job in a demand occupation. Income guidelines apply in some states.
To apply, visit your local American Job Center with documentation of your income and employment history and ask specifically about Individual Training Accounts — ITAs. These are the WIOA-funded vouchers used for education and training. The staff at the center will walk you through the rest.

Grant 2:
The Federal Pell Grant
The Pell Grant is not marketed to career changers, and that is part of the problem. Most people associate the Pell Grant with eighteen-year-olds filing the FAFSA for the first time. But the Pell Grant is one of the most accessible grants available to any adult making a career transition — especially if that transition involves a reduction in income.
For the 2025–2026 award year, the maximum Pell Grant is $7,395. That is money the federal government gives you. You do not pay it back. As an independent adult student, your eligibility is calculated on your own income and family size — not your parents’. Career changers who have left higher-paying positions, taken pay cuts, or reduced hours to return to school often find themselves newly eligible for a grant they assumed was not for them.
The mechanism is the FAFSA — the Free Application for Federal Student Aid. If you have not filed one, start there. If you filed one years ago and assumed you did not qualify, file again. Your eligibility can change dramatically year over year depending on your income, your enrollment status, and the formula the Department of Education uses for that award year. Never assume last year’s answer is this year’s answer.
I wrote a full guide on filing the FAFSA as an independent student — read it [here].
The short version: file every year, link the IRS Data Retrieval Tool, and if your current financial situation does not match the tax return the FAFSA pulls from, file a Professional Judgment appeal with your school’s financial aid office. That appeal can be worth thousands of dollars.
Grant 3:
State Workforce and Career Transition Grants

Here is something worth sitting with for a moment: your state government has already decided which careers it needs people to enter. It has published a list. And in most states, it has set aside grant money specifically to move adults into those roles. The question is not whether the money exists. The question is whether the career you are pivoting into appears on your state’s list — and the answer, more often than not, is yes.
These state programs go well beyond what WIOA provides at the federal level. They are structured as grants, not loans, and they target adults entering high-need fields — healthcare, technology, education, skilled trades. Connecticut runs the CSCU Career Accelerator Grant. California funds career education through its Strong Workforce Program. New York and Texas each maintain their own versions. Every state has something, and the names and structures change often enough that the only reliable way to find yours is to go directly to your state’s Department of Labor website.
I am telling you to do a ten-minute search instead of listing every program here because third-party lists go stale the month they are published. Type your state’s name plus “career transition grant” or “workforce development grant” into a search engine. Read what comes back from the .gov domain, not from the blog post ranking above it. The authoritative source is the only source that matters when money is on the line.
The pattern underneath all of these programs is the same: the state identified a gap, decided it was cheaper to fund your retraining than to leave the position vacant, and allocated dollars to make it happen. You are not applying for a favor. You are filling a seat the state already built and budgeted for.
Grant 4: Sector-specific and professional association grants

If you have already chosen the field you are moving into, stop searching general scholarship databases and start searching inside that field. This is the advice I give every woman who tells me she has been applying to grants for months with nothing to show for it. She is looking in the wide, crowded places. The money is in the narrow ones.
Industries with workforce shortages do not wait for the federal government to solve their hiring problem. They fund their own pipeline.
Healthcare is the clearest example — it is cheaper for a hospital system to pay for your nursing degree than to pay a staffing agency $150 an hour to fill the vacancy you would have filled. Hospitals, health systems, and nursing associations fund grants specifically for career changers entering their field. The applications are targeted, the pools are small, and the odds are better than anything you will find on Fastweb.
But healthcare is not the only field doing this. The TEACH Grant provides up to $4,000 per year for students who commit to teaching in high-need schools for at least four years. The HRSA behavioral health workforce grants fund adults pursuing mental health credentials — a field so short-staffed that the federal government is paying people to enter it. Technology has a growing number of programs funding bootcamp and degree completion for adults making the switch. Skilled trades fund training through union apprenticeship programs that most applicants do not know about until they are already enrolled.
The professional associations, regional hospital systems, and trade organizations in your target career are often the most generous and least competitive funding source available to you.
The information is scattered across industry websites rather than collected in one searchable place, which is exactly why most applicants never find it.
That is not a flaw in the system.
For the woman willing to do the digging, it is an advantage.
Grant 5: Private foundation career development grants
Private foundations fund education for specific populations making career changes, and these grants are among the lowest-competition opportunities available. They are not well-publicized because foundations do not have marketing budgets the way universities do. The money sits there, awarded year after year to a smaller applicant pool than the grant committee wishes it had.
The AAUW Career Development Grant is for women who hold a bachelor’s degree and are preparing to advance or change careers. The Jeannette Rankin Women’s Scholarship Fund is for women 35 and older pursuing education for career change. PEO International offers scholarships for women returning to education after a gap. The Hispanic Scholarship Fund awards career development grants for Hispanic students in any field. These are real programs distributing real money to real people — the kind of people reading this post.
Community foundations deserve their own paragraph. Nearly every city and county in the country has a community foundation, and many of them maintain unrestricted career development awards that receive a fraction of the applications they are funded to support. The Foundation Center — now Candid — maintains a searchable database of foundation grants filtered by location, eligible recipient, and purpose. A thirty-minute search on Candid often surfaces funding I have not found anywhere else. Thirty minutes. That is less time than you spent researching tuition costs last week.
How to write a strong grant application as a career changer

You have the list now. Five categories, dozens of programs, real money attached to each one. But finding the grant is only half the work. The other half is convincing a committee — people who have never met you, who will spend four minutes reading what you wrote — that you are the person their money was meant for.
Most career-change grants ask some version of the same question: why are you making this change, and what will you do with the education? The committees reading your application are not looking for a dramatic transformation narrative. They are looking for evidence that their money will do something specific in the hands of someone who has thought this through.
Here is the structure that works.
Start with the specific moment of decision — not the general aspiration, but the conversation or the afternoon or the realization that told you it was time. A committee member who reads two hundred applications can spot a generic opening in the first sentence. Give them yours.
Name the gap between where you are and where you are going. Be concrete about the credential or skill you are acquiring and why that particular program is the bridge. Vague ambition does not get funded. Specific plans do.
Connect your past experience to your future field. Career changers consistently underestimate how transferable their skills are. The project management you did in retail is relevant to healthcare administration. The communication skills you built in customer service are relevant to social work. Name the connections explicitly — the committee will not draw them for you.
State the community impact. Who benefits when you complete this transition? Patients, students, families, a community that currently lacks access to the service you will provide? Grant committees are funding impact, not ambition. Show them the impact.
And be specific about how this grant makes the transition possible. Committees want to know their money is doing work that would not happen without it. If the grant is the difference between enrolling this fall and waiting another year, say so. If it covers the childcare cost that makes attending class possible, say so. Specificity is not weakness. It is the reason they funded the grant in the first place.
The honest counter-argument
I am not going to tell you that grants will fund your entire career change. They probably will not. The Pell Grant maximum does not cover full-time tuition at most four-year institutions. WIOA funding is subject to whatever your local workforce board has been allocated that year. Foundation grants are typically one-time awards of a few thousand dollars. State programs have eligibility criteria that you may or may not meet.
Grants are one layer of a funding strategy, not the whole strategy. They work best alongside the FAFSA, employer tuition assistance, scholarships, and — for most career changers — some amount of strategic borrowing. The goal is not to find one source that covers everything. The goal is to stack enough sources that the gap between what school costs and what you can pay is manageable rather than paralyzing.
The other honest thing: applying for grants takes time. Each application requires documentation, essays, sometimes interviews. If you are already working full-time and managing a household, adding grant applications to the pile can feel like one more system designed for people with more hours in the day than you have. I understand that. The counterweight is that every dollar you receive in grant funding is a dollar you do not borrow, and the interest you do not pay on the dollar you did not borrow is where the real savings compound over years.
The women who fund their career transitions successfully are almost always the women who applied to more opportunities than felt reasonable at the time.
The bottom line
Career change is expensive. It usually involves some period of reduced income running alongside new tuition costs, and the financial pressure alone can derail a transition before it starts. Grants — money that does not come back out of your future paychecks — reduce that pressure directly.
The five categories in this post are not exhaustive. They are starting points. For each one, the real work is finding the specific program in your state, your field, and your circumstances — and then applying. Not once. Consistently. The system does not reward the person who finds one perfect opportunity. It rewards the person who builds a pipeline and treats the search like the professional task it is.
You are not leaving a career because you failed at it. You are leaving because you outgrew it, or because it was never the right fit, or because something in you finally insisted on being heard. That insistence is not irresponsible. It is the beginning of everything that comes next. The money is there to help you get there. Go find it.
— Kristen Amendola, founder of Get Funded HQ
