Enterprise Ireland (EI) is Ireland's government agency for the development of Irish-owned businesses. In 2026, it manages one of the most comprehensive menus of business grants in Europe — covering everything from early-stage innovation to R&D-intensive scaling, overseas expansion, and lean operations.
The challenge is that EI's grant portfolio is large and the eligibility criteria vary significantly across programmes. Not every grant is right for every business. This guide maps the key programmes, explains who each is for, and helps you identify which to prioritise.
📋 Enterprise Ireland primarily supports manufacturing and internationally traded services companies. If you're a local services business (retail, hospitality, professional services for the domestic market), your first stop should be your Local Enterprise Office (LEO), not Enterprise Ireland directly.
Am I an Enterprise Ireland Client?
EI works with businesses that have the potential to export. Their core client profile is:
- Irish-owned (majority Irish ownership)
- Manufacturing or internationally traded services
- Employing or planning to employ 10+ people (for most programmes)
- With genuine export potential
Smaller businesses and startups often work with EI through specific early-stage programmes (Innovation Voucher, Competitive Start Fund) before graduating to core EI client status. If you're unsure whether you qualify, contact your regional EI office — they run regular "Is EI for you?" clinics.
| Innovation Voucher | €5,000 — for early-stage R&D with a knowledge provider |
| Competitive Start Fund (CSF) | Up to €50,000 equity — for high-potential startups |
| Agile Innovation Fund | Up to €300,000 — for rapid innovation projects |
| R&D Fund (Large Projects) | €300,000+ — for significant R&D investment |
| Lean Business Offer | Co-funded lean transformation support |
| Market Discovery Fund | Up to €35,000 — for export market research |
| Business Partners Programme | Mentoring and coaching for scaling businesses |
| Climate Action Voucher | €5,000 — for sustainability/energy transition work |
Enterprise Ireland Grant Profiles
The Innovation Voucher is Enterprise Ireland's most accessible grant and an excellent starting point for businesses new to EI's programmes. It provides €5,000 in funding for SMEs to work with a recognised Knowledge Provider — typically a university, IoT, or research centre — on a specific innovation challenge.
Use cases include: technical feasibility studies, product prototype testing, materials analysis, software architecture review, market research with an academic partner, or exploring whether a new technology could apply to your business.
The application is straightforward (a short online form). The main requirement is identifying a Knowledge Provider willing to work with you on a defined project. TU Dublin, UCC, NUI Galway, UCD, and the other institutes all have dedicated industry liaison offices to help match you with the right academic team.
View full details →The Competitive Start Fund is Enterprise Ireland's entry-level equity investment programme for early-stage, high-potential startups. EI takes a small equity stake in return for up to €50,000 in funding, plus access to EI's ecosystem of mentors, networks, and follow-on programmes.
CSF targets startups with a scalable product and clear international market ambition. Typical recipients are technology companies, deep tech ventures, and innovative manufacturing startups. The fund runs competitive calls — often themed (e.g., AgriTech, FinTech, MedTech, Female Founders) — so timing your application to a relevant call increases your chances.
View full details →The Agile Innovation Fund supports established EI client companies to rapidly develop and commercialise new products, services, or processes. Unlike the R&D Fund (which suits longer, more complex projects), the Agile Fund is designed for shorter innovation cycles — typically 6 to 18 months — with clear market validation at the end.
Grant intensity is up to 45% of eligible costs for SMEs (lower for larger companies). Eligible costs include personnel, R&D contractor fees, materials, and technology licensing. A strong application demonstrates a real commercial opportunity, a credible team, and a clear path to revenue from the innovation.
View full details →The R&D Fund for large projects is Enterprise Ireland's flagship grant for companies undertaking substantial, multi-year research and development programmes. It supports fundamental research, industrial research, and experimental development projects that push the technological frontier for the business.
These are complex applications requiring detailed technical and commercial justification. EI evaluates both the technical merit (is this genuinely novel R&D?) and commercial merit (does success create export revenue?). Applicants typically work with EI's technology advisors well before submitting a formal application.
Grant rates vary by company size and activity type — up to 80% for fundamental research, 50–65% for industrial research. Eligible costs are broad: staff, overhead, subcontract R&D, equipment, materials, IP costs.
View full details →The Market Discovery Fund helps EI client companies research and validate new export markets. It covers market research, customer discovery activities, pilot market visits, and the cost of engaging local market expertise.
This is the right grant for a company that has validated its product in Ireland and one or two markets, and now wants to expand into new geographies (e.g., DACH region, Nordics, Asia-Pacific). The fund won't pay for trade fair attendance (there are separate supports for that) but it does cover structured market validation activity.
View full details →The Lean Business Offer is Enterprise Ireland's operational excellence programme — helping companies implement lean manufacturing and lean service principles to reduce waste, improve productivity, and build international competitiveness. EI co-funds access to lean consultants, training, and diagnostic assessments.
This isn't a cash grant in the traditional sense — it's subsidised access to external lean expertise. For companies in manufacturing or complex services, lean transformation can deliver significant cost reductions and quality improvements that strengthen export competitiveness. EI often recommends this as a precursor to applying for larger investment grants.
View full details →The Business Partners Programme connects scaling EI client companies with experienced senior business mentors — typically retired MDs, VP-level executives, or serial entrepreneurs — who work with your leadership team on strategic challenges. EI subsidises the cost of engagement.
Business Partners is best used for CEOs and leadership teams navigating significant transitions: entering a new market, building a sales function, preparing for Series A fundraising, or restructuring the organisation for scale. Mentors are matched based on relevant sector and geographic expertise.
View full details →The Climate Action Voucher is EI's sustainability equivalent of the Innovation Voucher. It provides €5,000 to work with a Knowledge Provider on a specific climate action challenge — energy efficiency assessment, decarbonisation roadmap, circular economy opportunities, or sustainability reporting frameworks.
With increasing customer and investor scrutiny on sustainability credentials, and growing EU regulatory requirements (CSRD, EU Taxonomy), the Climate Action Voucher is increasingly relevant for any EI client company. It's a low-barrier entry point for companies that haven't yet formalised their sustainability strategy.
View full details →How Enterprise Ireland Applications Work
Enterprise Ireland is not like applying to most grant bodies. Most EI programmes require you to work with your assigned EI Development Adviser before submitting a formal application. The DA is your relationship manager inside EI and they play a key role in:
- Advising whether your project fits the criteria for a specific grant
- Helping you scope a grant application that will score well
- Ensuring your project is commercially viable enough for EI to back
- Connecting you with other relevant EI supports alongside the primary grant
✏ Before You Apply
Contact Enterprise Ireland's regional office to request a first meeting with a Development Adviser before spending time on any formal application. EI is relationship-driven — a strong briefing conversation with your DA makes a better application more likely. Find your regional contact at enterprise-ireland.com.
EI Eligibility Basics — Common Pitfalls
- Irish ownership — EI requires majority Irish ownership for most programmes. Majority foreign-owned companies are supported by IDA Ireland, not EI.
- Manufacture or internationally traded services — EI does not support companies whose revenues are primarily domestic and non-tradeable.
- State Aid rules — EI grants are subject to EU State Aid regulations (de minimis rules or block exemptions). Your DA will advise on applicable limits, but be aware that combining multiple EI grants for the same cost base has limits.
- Full economic cost — EI grants are typically a contribution to project costs, not full cost coverage. Budget for your own co-funding contribution from the outset.
💡 Enterprise Ireland grants can be combined with R&D tax credits (Section 766). The grants reduce your qualifying expenditure for the credit, but claiming both is standard practice and EI advisers factor it into project financial models.
Write a Stronger EI Grant Application
TenderAI helps Irish businesses draft compelling grant applications — from Innovation Vouchers to full R&D Fund proposals. Upload your project brief and get a first draft in minutes.
Related Resources
- Full Irish Grants Database — Browse all Enterprise Ireland grants and 80+ other Irish funding programmes
- Grants Guide — How to identify the right grant for your business
- Irish Government Grants for SMEs (2026) — Broader guide covering LEO, SEAI, and EU schemes
- EI Supports Finder — Enterprise Ireland's own grant finder tool
- Local Enterprise Office — For companies not yet EI clients, or below EI's typical scale
Written by the TenderAI team. Last updated April 2026. Enterprise Ireland grant programmes, amounts, and eligibility criteria are subject to change. Always verify current details at enterprise-ireland.com or with your Development Adviser before applying.