The date of the call is preliminary and may be revised. The call description will continue to be revised and made more precis until the call opens for applications.
This call welcomes researchers who have recently received a doctorate or who are at an early stage of their career. You can apply for funding to conduct your own research project, where you formulate your own research question, within Formas’ areas of responsibility: Environment, Agricultural Sciences, and Spatial Planning. We encourage interdisciplinary research questions.
This call welcomes researchers who have recently received a doctorate or who are at an early stage of their career. You can apply for funding to conduct your own research project, where you formulate your own research question, within Formas’ areas of responsibility: Environment, Agricultural Sciences, and Spatial Planning. We encourage interdisciplinary research questions.
The Career Grant for Early-career Researchers call gives you as an early-career researcher the possibility to improve your leadership skills, run your own project, and contribute to the clear advancement of the state of knowledge within Formas’ areas of responsibility. It is also meant to contribute to the next step in your career. The Career Grant aims to broaden your perspectives, help you to become more independent, and enable you to take the next step in your career. This is done by taking on a new or partially new focus for your research compared with your previous work.
To expand your opportunities for improved career development, your project should include national or international mobility to other research environments. The mobility is intended to improve your abilities and opportunities to contribute to research relevant to society and of the highest scientific quality. It should also contribute to new impressions, ideas, and perspectives, preferably in, for you, new or partially new subject areas. Your research mobility and the project in general should also expand your networks and your skills in cooperating and collaborating with others.
Knowledge creation is a complex process, created under widely varying conditions, timeframes, methods, and publication patterns. There are a variety of ways of pursuing a research career, all of which can lead to research of high scientific quality. As applicant, you are given wide-ranging flexibility to design the project and the mobility according to the conditions and needs of your field of research.
You can apply for a 3- or 4-year project with a budget of at most SEK 1.5 million per year on average over the years applied for.
The Career Grant for Early-career Researchers call supports researchers in two different critical stages in their career development and is conducted in two tracks:
- Research projects for career age 0–3 for individuals who have a doctorate issued from 1 January 2022 to 1 October 2025.
- Research projects for career age 4–7 for individuals who have a doctorate issued from 1 January 2018 to 31 December 2021.
Applications may only be for one track. This call text explains the framework for track 4–7. Note that granted projects can only be conducted by the applicant personally. Changing project leader is therefore not permitted.
Purpose and focus area
Society is in great need of individuals with a combination of teaching skills and qualified subject knowledge who can contribute to, and eventually lead efforts on, solving societal challenges, both nationally and globally.
The purpose of the call is to give promising early-career researchers appropriate opportunities for taking the next step in their careers, encouraging an interdisciplinary direction, developing independence, and contributing to innovative research environments. Projects are to support the development of expertise within Formas’ areas of responsibility Environment, Agricultural Sciences, and Spatial Planning (see below), and aim to contribute to the clear advancement in the state of knowledge. Ultimately, the call should strengthen researchers early in their careers and their opportunities to work in leading positions within academia, the public sector, civil society, or business. The aim of the call is to strengthen society’s access to expertise within Formas’ areas of responsibility and to contribute to continuous and long-term knowledge development. A range of skills are necessary for making science-based judgements, taking concrete measures, and solving societal challenges in the long run.
Formas supports research of the highest scientific quality. The research can include both different scientific methods and perspectives, as well as different disciplinary and interdisciplinary approaches. It can be useful in the short and/or long term and is to be of relevance for the ecological, economic, and/or social sustainable development of society. Granted research by Formas must belong to one of Formas’ areas of responsibility: Environment, Agricultural Sciences, and Spatial Planning. For a project to be considered within Formas’ areas of responsibility, it must be clearly demonstrated how the project can contribute to these areas. Research projects that are deemed to fall outside Formas’ areas of responsibility cannot be granted funding and will be rejected.
Formas’ areas of responsibility are described under three headings below, but they should not be considered as three separate areas. Knowledge needs often involve complex issues that are at the intersection of the environment, agricultural sciences, and spatial planning. The call encourages questions about policy instruments, regulations, and political decisions, but also about norms, values, and behaviours that touch on perspectives cutting across all of Formas’ areas of responsibility. This includes questions considering the conditions and needs of different groups, so that the project can contribute to knowledge that is reflective of and relevant to different groups in society. Common aspects for all three areas of responsibility include questions dealing with learning from different contexts and places and questions related to the past, present and future.
Environment
The area of responsibility Environment deals with the interaction between people and the environment and the promotion of sustainable societies and viable ecosystems. This includes issues relating to climate, the environment, biodiversity, ecosystem services, resource efficiency, and a chemical-safe future. The area also includes issues relating to the Earth system and soil, air, and water processes. Climate includes, for example, the climate system and changes to it, measures to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases, and improved understanding of the effects of climate change and/or climate adaptations. Environment also includes issues relating to more environmentally friendly and socio-economically sustainable ways of utilising existing resources as well as sustainable products, materials, and consumption. The area also includes issues relating to how people relate to nature and its values, and how these changes over time, as well as society’s ability to value and manage issues such as environmental pollution, climate risks, and environmental changes.
Agricultural Sciences
The area of responsibility Agricultural Sciences deals with forestry, agriculture, soil and land use, food, animal health, and animal welfare from a multitude of perspectives. This includes issues relating to the different uses and values of forests, and synergies and trade-offs between them. Issues relating to agriculture and food includes the entire food system, with production, processing, distribution, preparing, and consumption of food, and taking care of residues. This also includes the access of different societal groups to safe, nutritious, healthy, sustainable and tasty food. Animal health and animal welfare include sporting- and companion animals, laboratory animals, farm animals on land and in water, and their health and wellbeing. This includes the spread of disease between animals, and between humans and animals. The area Agricultural Sciences also includes issues relating to land use, soil health and land issues related to the extraction of strategic minerals and raw materials.
Spatial Planning
The area of responsibility Spatial Planning deals with urban, rural, and regional planning, design, and construction of the built environment, as well as the use, management, recycling, and demolition of buildings, homes, places, landscapes, and infrastructures. It also deals with the relationships between places, buildings, and social functions, how they are used, and how people move from one place to another. Spatial Planning includes both cultural and natural environments and how communities and the built environment can be made inclusive, safe, and adapted to future challenges. Spatial Planning includes all aspects of sustainable development with a focus on meeting the need for good living environments for everyone, now and in the future. This includes balancing different interests and goal conflicts about which values should be decisive when planning and building sustainable societies for people and the environment.
All research funded within this call must have a clear connection to at least one of the call’s areas of responsibility described above: Environment, Agricultural Sciences, and Spatial Planning.
Technical solutions for sustainable energy
In this call, you cannot apply for funds for projects with the primary purpose of developing technical solutions for extraction, transformation, transmission and/or storage of energy, for energy efficiency, as well as for capture and storage of carbon dioxide, CCS, or capture and utilization of carbon dioxide, CCU. Technical solutions also include components, materials, models, and control and regulation systems for such solutions. This also includes biobased and nature-based technical solutions.
Human medicine
In this call, you may not apply for funds for projects within human medicine, except for projects that clearly contribute to Formas’ areas of responsibility.
Development projects
You cannot apply for development projects. Development projects are here defined as projects that do not aim to develop new scientific knowledge or do so only to a limited extent. Development projects could for example aim to develop new goods, services, processes, systems, and methods or improve already existing such, but in a way that does not contribute with new scientific knowledge.
Determining whether an application falls within the scope of the call can only be done based on a complete application. These types of determinations are thus only made after the call is closed. An application deemed to be outside Formas’ areas of responsibility will be rejected before processing.
The call is aimed at researchers early in their career and their home organisation which must be a Swedish higher education institution, research institute, or a government agency with a research mission. Applicants for grants within track 4–7 must have a degree certificate for the doctorate issued no earlier than 1 January 2018 and no later than 31 December 2021.
Researchers from all disciplines and combinations of disciplines are welcome to apply for funding, as long as the project falls within Formas’ areas of responsibility.
Before you apply
All information about requirements for applicants, your home organisation, your host organisation(s), the design of the project, and what topics you can apply for funding is found here.
In this call, individual researchers apply for grants together with their home organisation (administrating organisation).
Employment at the home organisation
You are to:
- be employed at the home organisation from the start of the grant period and throughout the grant period, including any additional availability period, in case this time is used to complete the project. This means that you are employed and pay taxes in Sweden even if your project includes stays abroad.
- discuss possible forms of employment and terms of employment with your intended home organisation well in advance of submitting the application. Your home organisation determines the form of employment, salary, and terms of employment. You do not need to be employed by the home organisation at the time of submitting your application, but you do need to have an agreement on employment if the application is granted.
Your home organisation is to:
- confirm the employment agreement, in its role as administrating organisation, through a letter of intent included with the application (read more under the section “Letter of intent”).
- sign the application via an authorised representative at the administrating organisation no later than seven calendar days after the closing date of the call (usually the head of department where the research is to be conducted).
As a general rule, Formas does not grant exceptions to the requirement that you be employed by your home organisation (the administrating organisation of the grant) during the entire project period. There may be circumstances preventing the home organisation from employing you when stationed abroad. If there are specific regulations in the country you are going to visit that require employment with an employer in that country, Formas may be able to grant exceptions to the employment requirement.
Formas strongly encourages applicants to contact their intended administrating organisation, such as the HR office, when beginning to plan their application to see about the potential of being employed with a stationing abroad (such as with a URA agreement or equivalent) and to the country(ies) you intend to visit as part of the project.
Read more in Swedish about working abroad at the Swedish Agency for Government Employers. External link.
Activity level
As the project manager, you have scientific responsibility for the project. The time you work in the project (your activity level) needs to be adapted for you to conduct the project within the project period and must correspond to at least 60 per cent and at most 100 per cent of a full-time position on average during the entire grant period.
As a rule, Formas does not allow exceptions from this requirement, for example to work on other research projects or to work on other types of assignments. Valid exceptions to the requirement are parental leave, sick leave, and other reasons that Formas may determine permissible. To ensure that the requirement is met, Formas conducts random checks of granted projects.
Co-applicants
It is not permitted to apply for funding for doctoral students and/or other participating researchers (co-applicants).
Career age – track 4–7 years
As an applicant in track 4–7 years, type of grant Research Projects for Career Ages 4–7 years, you must have a degree certificate for your doctorate issued no earlier than 1 January 2018 and no later than 31 December 2021. Your doctorate can be issued in Sweden or another country. A licentiate degree or other research qualification equivalent to a doctorate does not count as a doctorate.
The degree date is the date the degree certificate is issued. For applicants with a Swedish doctorate, this is the date registered in Ladok. For applicants with a foreign doctorate, the date on which your doctorate was issued by the university applies, usually with a stamp.
You will not be able to complete your application in Prisma if your doctorate was issued before the date indicated for the track. The exception is if you have not been gainfully employed for one or multiple longer periods after receiving your doctorate, and this has impacted your ability to acquire qualifications as a researcher, known as deductible time (read more under Deductible time below).
Deductible time – break from research
If you have not been able to conduct research in the time immediately after your doctoral degree, you can be exempted from the rule that the doctoral degree must have been completed after 1 January 2018 if you have an approved reason for deductible time.
Formas approves the following reasons for deductible time:
- parental leave
- longer illness (sick leave or care of child/relative)
- military service
- appointed or elected position within a political organisation, trade union, or student organisation
Note that we do not accept other employment, unemployment, or vacation as deductible time.
In the application, you may claim deductible time and specify an approved reason and the length of the time. The period of the break should be calculated based on full-time and entered rounded to whole calendar months. You need to ensure that the date of your doctoral degree falls within the approved time interval for the track before you apply.
We conduct random checks. This means that we can request certificates that confirm your reasons for deductible time. Your application will be rejected if no certificate is available that can substantiate the deductible time.
Number of applications and ongoing project grants at Formas
You may only have one application submitted and registered in the Career Grant for Early-career Researchers call when it closes. Even if you consider yourself eligible in both career age tracks, you may only submit your application to one of the tracks. If you have more than one registered application for the Career Grant for Early-career Researchers call in Prisma after the call has closed, all your applications will be rejected.
You may not apply for funding in the Career Grant for Early-career Researchers call if you are a project manager for an ongoing project granted in one of Formas’ researcher-initiated calls that has a grant period that includes 2025. Formas’ decision states in which calendar year the project funds will be paid out and how the funds may be used. A project is considered ongoing during the years when funds are being paid out to the administrating organisation by Formas. Formas’ researcher-initiated calls include:
- Mobility Grants for Early-career Researchers
- The Annual open call – both Research projects and Research projects for early-career researchers
- The Career grant for early-career researchers
- Explore – Formas’ open call for research projects.
Applications the applicant is a project manager for an ongoing project from one of Formas’ researcher-initiated calls and a grant period which includes 2026 will be rejected.
It is however permitted to apply for funds in the call if the project’s grant period, i.e., the payout period, has passed but the availability period includes 2026. You may also apply for grants in the Career Grants for Early-career Researchers call if you are a project manager for or participate in an ongoing project awarded a grant from one of Formas’ other calls. However, Formas cannot fund a researcher with more than 100 per cent of a full-time position. Please note that this call requires the project manager to work on the project at least 60 per cent of a full-time position on average during the project period.
The project is to include national and/or international researcher mobility to other research environments, such as higher education institutions, research institutes, or other research organisations. In addition to visits to one or more of these research environments, you can also include mobility to other types of organisations. For example, this can include the private sector, public sector, civil society, advocacy groups, research-based policy institutes, think tanks, or international organisations, both intergovernmental and-non-governmental.
As an applicant, you have great flexibility to plan mobility stays according to your own and the project’s needs. Choose the university(ies), research institutes, and/or organisations, and design mobility stays in such a way that they contribute to your career development.
Length of stays
The total length of mobility stay(s) with a visit to at least one host organisation (other national or international research environment) is to be:
- Three-year projects: At least four (4) months and at most 24 months.
- Four-year projects: At least five (5) months and at most 32 months.
Stays with one or more host organisations can be divided into several periods. Formas does not make requirements for how long each individual stay should be. In addition to the requirement for the total length of the mobility stay, the following also applies:
- the total time at each host organisation is to be at least one (1) month if you visit multiple host organisations. This applies regardless of whether your host organisations are in Sweden or abroad.
- the length of the stays and the number of stays are to be adjusted to what is best for the project and for you to be able to take the next step in your career.
- the stays are to take place in physical form. Once the length requirements are met, digital elements may be used when suitable for the project.
- any stays with a host organisation that is not a research organisation may be at most 6 months.
Home organisation
The home organisation is the administrating organisation of the awarded grant and pays your salary throughout the project period. The home organisation also provides infrastructure and other necessary conditions for you to be able to conduct the project and is to provide you (the project manager) with good opportunities to develop your research and take the next step in your career development. You and your project are to also be part of and contribute to your home organisation’s activities. Your home organisation may be the same or a different organisation from the one where you received your doctorate.
In this call, the home organisation is to be a Swedish higher education institution, research institute, or government agency with a research mission. The organisation must also meet Formas’ requirements to be a generally approved administrating organisation when the application is submitted. External link. Other organisations that are generally approved as administrating organisations may not act as administrating organisations in this call. The home organisation is referred to in the application system Prisma as “Administrating organisation”.
Read more about the role of the home organisation/administrating organisation in this call:
FAQ for the Career Grant for Early-career Researchers call External link.
What counts as government agency with a research mission?
Formas defines a government agency with a research mission as all government agencies that, according to their ordinance, are to carry out research, and university hospitals in regions included in the ALF agreement.
Clinical research in the ALF regions External link.
Host organisation(s)
A basic requirement in the call is that you are to include at least one host organisation that you will visit during the project period. The host organisation is to be a national or international research environment at another higher education institution, research institute, or equivalent research organisation. In addition to the requirement to visit another research environment, you may also visit another organisation suitable for the project to conduct your research (see below).
The host organisations should not charge any fees for office space or similar during your stay, and you may not apply for funding in the application for the host organisation’s premises costs (known as “bench fees”).
- Application requirements: Include at least one physical stay at a national or international host organisation. Approved host organisations are higher education institutions, research institutes, or other research organisations abroad and/or in Sweden. The host organisation is to be a different organisation from your home organisation (administrating organisation). There is no upper limit to the number of host organisations.
- Possibilities for the application: Include a stay of at most 6 months at another organisation suitable for conducting the project (international, state, or municipal organisation, business organisation, civil society organisation). During the stay, you will need to continue conducting research within the framework of the project. You are to be employed by the project’s administrating organisation throughout the stay. Note that you also need to include visits to at least one other research environment in addition to this stay.
Letter of intent
Separate letters of intent from the home organisation and each host organisation are to be attached to the application. The letters of intent are to include a description of how you and your project fit into their organisation, how the organisation will support you in implementing your project and in the development of your career, and how you will be able to contribute to the organisation and its development (see information for the letters of intent under What to include in your application).
Consider the following when preparing your application:
- Formulate a project idea with a new or partially new focus for your research compared with your previous work.
- Design your project so that it enables you to take the next step in your career.
- Discuss possible forms of employment with your intended home organisation/administrating organisation, including the choice of project period, before planning your project and submitting your application.
- Choose one or more host organisations to visit that can contribute to your particular project and career development.
- Formas does not allow the host organisation to be another institution at the same higher education institution as your home organisation (administrating organisation).
- The choice to conduct national and/or international mobility is not in itself a ground for assessment.
- No quantitative indicators, such as university rankings, will be used in assessing the selection of home and host organisations.
- Contact your home organisation, such as the HR office, to discuss existing opportunities for you to be employed with a stationing abroad (such as with a URA agreement or equivalent).
- Plan your mobility stay(s) so that they meet the length requirements of the call.
- For a project duration of three years (36 months), at least four months and at most 24 months of the total time is to be spent at one or more host organisations.
- For a project duration of four years (48 months), at least five months and at most 32 months of the total time is to be spent at one or more host organisations.
- In the case of visits to several host organisations, the total time at each organisation is to be at least one month.
- Discuss your opportunities for support in your career development with your intended home organisation and what contributions they can make. This is the basis for the letter of intent that the home organisation is to write, and which is to be attached to the application (see instructions for letters of intent from the home organisation under Letter of intent).
- Make sure that your host organisation(s) write letters of intent for you to attach to the application and that this is done well before the call closes (see instructions for letters of intent from host organisation(s) under Letter of intent).
The grant may be used for salary, for indirect costs, for direct premises costs in accordance with the home organisation’s practice, for running costs, for travel to and from the mobility stays, for accommodation costs during the mobility stays, for per diem, and for additional cost supplement according to URA’s rules or corresponding costs for you and your accompanying family members (read more about which costs are eligible for funding under Budget).
Formas assumes that the home organisation, as the responsible employer and administrating organisation, covers any expenses to implement the project and the planned mobility in addition to the grant.
Salary costs
You can apply for your estimated salary costs at the standard level for your home organisation. Please note that the total amount of salary received may not exceed 100 per cent of a full-time position. For researchers with other funding, this means that funds for their own salary cannot be granted if the total salary funding exceeds 100 per cent. In this call, it is not permitted to apply for funds for doctoral students. It is also not allowed to include participating researchers in the application.
Indirect costs
You can apply for funding for indirect costs for your project and for direct premises costs from the home organisation as per the current practice. Indirect costs, also called overhead costs, are costs that are shared with others within the organisation, such as costs for administration, IT, and rent. Your home organisation, which will manage the grant, can help you calculate these details.
Running costs including travel costs and mobility stays
Running costs refer to costs that arise in connection with the project implementation. This can be:
- funding for interviews, analyses, fieldwork, publication in journals and databases that use Open Access, etc
- participation in conferences, which fall within the project
- travel to and from stays at host organisations
- accommodation costs during the mobility stay(s), per diem, or additional cost supplement according to URA’s rules or equivalent costs for you and your accompanying family members.
Read more about eligible costs in Formas’ Terms and Conditions for Grants. External link.
Research collaborations with Russia and Belarus
Due to the war in Ukraine, it will not be possible to receive funding for projects involving research collaboration with state or federal research institutions in Russia and Belaris. Formas is monitoring and acting on the developments in Ukraine.
Grant amount
You can apply for at most SEK 1.5 million per year on average over the years that apply to the application. A calendar year is the period that runs 1 January to 31 December. This means that you can apply for more than SEK 1.5 million for a calendar year if the amount applied for in another year of the project period is lower than SEK 1.5 million.
Project duration
You can apply for funding for 3-year (36 months) or 4-year (48 months) projects.
The project start is 1 January 2026. In Prisma, the start date is preselected and cannot be changed. The project has an additional 12-month availability period beyond the project period. The availability period can be used to conclude the project. You can also use the availability period to postpone the start of the project by 12 months. This allows you to start the project in calendar year 2025 and still have time to complete your project within the project’s availability period. Formas’ decision and project-specific conditions specify the period during which project funds will be paid out and the availability period. Note that a delayed project start is not a valid reason for extending the availability period.
You should write your application in English, as the review panel that will assess your application is international. If you write your application in Swedish, Formas will only translate the section “project description” in Prisma. The translation is done by a professional translator. You will not have the opportunity to see or change the translated text before the application is sent for assessment by the review panel.
To facilitate the processing of applications, we ask you to inform us if you have written your application in Swedish.
The popular science description, however, is to be written in Swedish, while the summaries are to be both in Swedish and English. Your budget specification, your academic profile, and your letters of intent will not be translated. For this reason, make sure that these are written in English.
According to Swedish law, your application (including appendices) is considered a public document once it is submitted. This means that anyone can request and access your application. Information can only be kept confidential if it is covered by confidentiality according to the Public Access to Information and Secrecy Act (2009:400).
Formas is very limited in its ability to assign confidentiality to personal data. For this reason, the application should only contain personal data for the applicant.
The Swedish and English popular science descriptions and the project summaries will, if the project is awarded a grant, be published in open project databases without checking confidentiality. For this reason, the content of these fields should not contain sensitive information.
Formas does not currently have any restrictions on that you as applicant use AI as support when preparing your application. Also, you do not have to state whether you have used AI. However, it is you as applicant that is responsible for that all information in your application is correct. You certify this when you register your application. You as applicant must also follow the principles on good research practice, which means that plagiarism, falsification or fabrication of the content of the application must not occur.
We at Formas are very keen for funded projects to be conducted in a way that maximises positive and minimises negative impacts on the environment and climate. To this end, we encourage applicants to design their projects so that travel to host organisations is conducted as environmentally friendly as possible. Formas also encourages grant recipients to conduct collaborations and cooperations through online seminars and conferences. We also suggest that, already in the project planning stage, you include measures that minimise energy use and other resource consumption, emissions, and waste. However, this is not part of the assessment of your application.
Read about Sustainability at Formas External link..
Formas is tasked with working towards achieving a sustainable development of society. Crucial to such a development are equal opportunities and inclusion. We therefore encourage applicants to, to the extent possible, design the project so that it can provide knowledge that reflects and is relevant to different groups in society.
How to apply
All information about what to include in your application and how to apply can be found here.
You apply for a grant to Formas in our application system Prisma. There, you enter the information needed for your application. For this, you need a personal account.
Apply in Prisma External link.
Your home organisation must be a Swedish higher education institution, research institute, or government agency with a research mission for you to register your application.
Become an administrating organisation for all types of calls External link.
All limits for maximum number of characters include spaces. Please select the default font (Verdana) for the information entered in all text boxes. Please note that text written in a word processer and then pasted into your application in Prisma may lose formatting. Tables and figures with advanced formatting or formulas should be uploaded as attachments to avoid the risk of losing valuable information.
The application is to include a clear description of the project using the following sections:
Basic information
- Number of calendar years applied for.
- Start month January 1, 2026. The start month is pre-selected in Prisma and cannot be changed.
- Project title in Swedish and English (200 characters each, including spaces)
- Popular science description in Swedish (4,500 characters including spaces). Describe what the project is about, why the topic is important to investigate, and in what ways it will contribute to the chosen question, including how it will enable you to take the next step in your career development. Write so that even a non-researcher can understand what the project is about. If the application is granted funding, the popular science descriptions will be published in open project databases without checking for confidentiality. For this reason, the content of this fields should not contain sensitive information.
- Summary in Swedish and English (maximum 1,500 characters including spaces). Write so that even non-researchers can understand what the project is about. Describe the goals and purpose, how the project will be conducted, and why it is important that the project be conducted. If the application is granted funding, the project summaries will be published in open project databases without checking for confidentiality. For this reason, the content of these fields should not contain sensitive information.
Project description
- Knowledge contributions (max. 8,000 characters including spaces)
Describe the project’s question. Describe the state of knowledge within the research field. Explain what the project will be able to contribute scientifically, including how it develops or challenges the state of knowledge, understanding, or methodology within your research field. Describe how the project is designed to incorporate the needs and conditions of different groups.
- Skills, qualifications and career development (max. 8,000 characters including spaces)
Describe how you will be able to take the next clear step in your career with the project. Also describe how the project relates to what you have done in the past in terms of science, pedagogical skills, networks, and collaboration. Describe how, with this project, you are laying the foundation for your career by expanding your skillset and independence, your ability to lead your own project and convey your knowledge, and your ability to broaden your perspectives.
- Implementation (max. 8,000 characters including spaces)
Describe the project’s implementation plan, such as divided into work packages if that is appropriate for the project, and the project’s timeline. Describe the project’s risk management plan and ethical considerations.
- Home and host organisations (max. 8,000 characters including spaces)
Describe and explain the choice of home organisation and host organisation(s). Describe how practical arrangements and access to necessary resources, such as infrastructure, opportunities for seminars, teaching, communication, translation to practical applications, and networks, at the home and host organisations contribute to the implementation of the project. Also describe how the organisations will contribute to your career and how you and your project will contribute to the environments of your home organisation and host organisation(s). In this section, explain the length and structure of your stay(s) at host organisations and how these are adapted to the project and your continued career development.
If you include a stay at another organisation (for example government agency, municipal office, business, civil society, advocacy group, research-based policy institute, think tank, or international organisation), explain why this is appropriate and how it contributes to the project and your continued career.
- Societal relevance (max. 8,000 characters including spaces)
Describe the project’s benefit to society. It is important explain how the project is relevant for knowledge building and society at large, in the near term or in the future. Describe how the project could potentially meet societal needs and how it is designed to incorporate different stakeholder and user needs. Explain the most important areas where the results could be used and describe plans to make the results available to disseminate, such as through open science and shared data. Also explain the project’s relevancy for Formas’ areas of responsibility: Environment, Agricultural Sciences, and Spatial Planning.
- List of references (max. 8,000 characters including spaces)
List the references included in the project description.
Budget
You report the project’s budget in Prisma. Please note that the budget and budget specification should be written in English; budgets written in Swedish will not be translated and will be reviewed by the international review panel as is.
In Prisma, you write the entire requested amount in numbers, for example SEK 1 million is written: SEK 1,000,000
The budget is divided into:
- Activity level in the project refers to what percentage of a full-time position you will work in the project. Note that this call requires that your activity level is at least 60 per cent on average throughout the project period.
- Salaries including social fees. In this call, you may only apply for a salary for you as the main applicant. It is not permitted to apply for funding for doctoral students or participating researchers. The amount that can be granted for salary to you as an individual researcher may never exceed 100 per cent of a full-time position. If you have full salary funding from another source, you cannot receive additional salary funding.
- Percentage of salary refers to the percentage of your full-time salary that you are applying for.
- Running costs refers to, for example, consumables, travel, conferences, publication in open access journals and databases, etc. Formas only grants funds for some publication costs. Read more under Publishing costs External link.. Running costs can also include accommodation costs during mobility stay(s), per diem, or additional cost supplement according to URA’s rules or equivalent expenses for you and your accompanying family members. This item can also include costs for administrative/technical staff to a limited extent, research services, technical expertise, consulting services, and equivalent services purchased or licensed from external providers used exclusively for the project. Purchased services are reported excluding VAT. List running costs as per the administrating organisation’s standard procedure.
- Equipment and depreciation costs. List equipment and depreciations for equipment if relevant to the application. You cannot apply for equipment or depreciations at host organisations.
- You can apply for funds for premises costs if they are not already included in the indirect costs (overhead) in the project budget. List premises costs as per the administrating organisation’s standard procedure. You cannot apply for premises costs at host organisations.
- Total applied /Subtotal refers to costs already included in the previous budget tables and that will automatically be transferred to these items.
- Indirect costs refers to overhead costs.
Universities and colleges may apply surcharges for indirect costs according to the full cost principle they apply. Universities and colleges only need to separately account for eligible costs corresponding to the grant amount in their accounting.
The following organisations, when participating in the project with non-academic activities, may include actual indirect costs up to an amount corresponding to a maximum of 45% of their eligible salary costs:
- Research organisations that are
- limited companies or partnerships where the state directly or indirectly exercise legal control, or
- foundations in which the government appoints one or more board members
- Government agencies (other than universities and colleges) that, according to their instructions, conduct their own research.
The condition of a maximum of 45% applies provided that the organization receives funds by government decision to conduct independent research. If the organization also conducts economic activities such as contract research, the activities must be reported separately.
The total overhead cost for the project should be listed in the budget table. Formas does not award funds for overhead on depreciations for premises or other indirect costs at the host organisation.
- Other costs refers to funds that are not applied for but are relevant to conducting the project. An example is co-funding from the administrating organisation or partners. Also state if the project receives funds from other sources.
- Total cost refers to a budget total.
- Budget specification is a description and justification of the requested budget and is included in evaluation of the project. State how the applied for grant is divided in amounts per year. Provide a brief explanation for the salary costs listed in the budget. All other costs must be explained, such as travel to the host organisation(s), operating costs, equipment, and depreciations, etc. Also describe the project’s total budget, including funding from other sources. (Max 7 000 characters including spaces).
Mobility
- Host organisation: State the host organisation(s) you will visit. Add a new line if you will be visiting more than one host organisation. Enter the total time you will spend at each host organisation in whole months.
- Mobility to other organisations: If the project includes a stay at an organisation other than a research organisation, specify it here. Indicate the country of the stay, the name of the organisation, and the total time you will spend at the organisation(s) (maximum 6 months).
Ethics
Ethical aspects that require ethical review (max. 2,000 characters including spaces)
Some research may only be conducted if it has been approved through an ethical review. If you are conducting research on humans, human tissue, or personal data, you must submit an application for ethical review to the Swedish Ethical Review Authority and have it approved.
Animal experiments may only be conducted when there are no alternative methods and must follow the principles of 3R – to replace, reduce and refine animal experiments. If your project includes experiments on animals, you must have approval from an ethics committee for animals. You can apply for this through the Swedish Board of Agriculture’s e-services.
You must state in your application whether you have a valid ethical approval or not. If you do not have one and your application is granted funding, you must have ethical approval before starting the part of the research that requires this approval.
If no approvals or permits are needed, you need to motivate why this is the case.
Ethical considerations (max. 4,000 characters including spaces)
Reflect on your project from a research ethics perspective. This includes both questions related to people who are researched or affected by the research, other stakeholders and about the researcher’s relationship to the project’s research task. This could be about animal experiment ethics, privacy issues, how findings are used, whose interests are considered in the research, and how research material and findings are made accessible.
Describe which ethical issues are relevant for your project. Describe how you plan to handle the ethical aspects of the project. Describe how you balance different legitimate interests, such as the interest in knowledge and the interest in privacy.
If you are unsure of what is meant by research ethics and ethical issues, you should familiarise yourself with this before writing this section, for example by reading the Swedish Research Council’s guide on conducting ethical research External link. and the Codex rules and guidelines for research External link..
If no ethical issues are relevant, you must motivate why this is the case.
Classifications
Formas uses the project’s classifications in analyses and documents on an overall level and when assessing your application. These classifications are determined by the applicant specifying subject area, research subject (SCB code), at least one global goal for sustainable development to which the project can contribute, and keywords.
- Subject area. Select at least one and at most three subject areas and add a subheading.
- Research subject (SCB code). Select, in order of priority, a minimum of one and up to a maximum of three SCB codes with two sub-levels that together form the entire code.
- Global goals for sustainable development. Select at least one and up to three global sustainability goals to which the project can contribute in order of priority according to degree of relevance. Read more about the Sustainable Development Goals on the UN Development Programme website External link..
- Select at least one and up to three key words that describe the project.
Administrating organisation – the organisation receiving the grant
In this call, the administrating organisations must be a Swedish higher education institution, research institute, or government agency with a research mission. The administrating organisation also needs to be approved for all Formas’ calls. Other organisations that are approved for all Formas’ calls, may not act as administrating organisation in this call.
- Select your administrating organisation (home organisation) from the drop-down menu.
- Select project site from the drop-down menu.
Review panels
In this call, there are no pre-defined review panels. Instead, review panels will be formed inductively, also called bottom-up, based on the submitted applications.
CV and academic profile
In this call, parts of your CV are to be entered into Prisma’s My profile External link. and parts into the Academic profile form in Prisma. The information you have entered to My profile is then added to your application.
Fill in the academic profile well in time before the call closes and ensure that the CV in Prisma in complete and up-to-date.
CV
On the CV page, entries for Educational history, Professional history, Publications and Merits and awards can be added to the application via Prisma. The list of your most important publications, merits, and other contributions to knowledge development from your academic career, and how these relate to your project, are then described further in the Academic Profile form in Prisma.
Information about educational history, professional history, publications and merits and awards is retrieved from My profile in Prisma and added to the application. The following information should be added to the application:
- Educational history
- Doctoral education
- Bachelor’s and master’s education
- Professional history
- Current employment and longer relevant previous employment(s).
- Interruptions in research. Any longer breaks in research (for example, parental leave, illness, military service, or political appointments).
- Publications
- Any publications relevant to the application (maximum 10).
- Merits and awards
- Other merits. This can include experiences such as supervision, teaching, presentations, awards, honours, grants received in competition, and so on (maximum 10).
- Please note that the CV entries in My profile regarding docentur, supervised persons, research grants awarded in competition, and awards and distinctions cannot be added to your application. Instead, list these merits as other merits and include them in your application.
Academic profile
- Academic profile: In the academic profile form in Prisma, you describe your experiences, skills, and contributions that are relevant to the project. The list of merits and publications is added to your application through My profile in Prisma. The academic profile form is only available in English and must be written in English.
- Deductible time: Enter any longer breaks you have had in active research after completing your doctorate and resulting from any of the reasons approved by Formas. The period of the break should be calculated based on full-time, rounded to whole calendar months. See list of approved reasons under Deductible time.
Letter of intent
Letter of intent from the home organisation (Appendix 1)
The application needs to include a letter of intent from the intended home organisation where you will be employed. The letter of intent is to be addressed to you as the applicant and show that you are welcome to conduct your planned research there. In the letter, the home organisation describes how they, as an employer, will support you as a researcher during the project. The letter of intent also needs to have a description of how and in what ways the home organisation will support you in your career development during the project. This is a good opportunity for the home organisation to describe any long-term ambitions for your continued development and career path at the home organisation.
A letter of intent supports the project and is part of the assessment of the application. The letter of intent is to be addressed to you as the applicant and applies to the project period of this call. The letter is to come from the head of department or equivalent for the home organisation where the research will be conducted.
It is to be written in English.
The letter of intent is to include the following:
- an assurance that the home organisation (administrating organisation) will approve your application and manage the project funds.
- an assurance that you can conduct your planned research at the home organisation throughout the duration of the project and that they will give you access to premises, equipment, appropriate tools, and networks needed to be able to conduct the project. The letter also needs to explain what form your employment will take. You need to discuss and agree on the terms of your employment with your home organisation.
- a description of the home organisation’s position and ambition in the research and innovation landscape nationally and internationally.
- a description of how you and your project will contribute to the research environment in which you will work and how you will participate in knowledge creation together with others in the environment.
- a description of how the home organisation will contribute to your career development during the project and how they can facilitate your continued career development after the end of the project.
- a signature from the sender of the letter of intent, i.e. head of department or equivalent for the home organisation.
The letter of intent may also contain:
- a brief continuing professional development plan.
- commitments for voluntary co-funding for the project and similar.
- access to research and environment building activities, such as joint projects, seminars, writing workshops, strategic work with applications, career and skills development programmes, etc.
At most one appendix (pdf) of 4 MB can be uploaded. The appendix is to include all the documents.
Letter of intent from the host organisation(s) (Appendix 2)
The letter of intent is to be addressed to you and show that you are welcome to conduct your research at the host organisation. The invitation is to apply to the project period defined in this call. The letter is to come from the head of department or equivalent for the host organisation where the research will be conducted. Letters of intent are to be written in English.
You need one letter of intent for each host organisation you will be visiting. The letter of intent is to include the following:
- a statement that you are welcome to conduct your planned research there and that they will be your host organisation.
- a description of the organisation’s academic position and its collaborations and of its ambition for continued collaboration with the researcher.
- a statement on how the researcher and the planned research will contribute to and be part of the research and expertise of the research group/institution concerned.
- an assurance that the necessary facilities, resources, and other infrastructure will be made available to the applicant.
- a signature from the sender of the letter of intent, i.e. head of department or equivalent for the host organisation.
- name and contact details of the person who drew up the document (first name, last name, telephone number, and email address).
- the host organisation’s faculty and postal address.
The letters of intent from all host organisations are to be combined into one document (PDF). At most one appendix (PDF) of 4 MB can be uploaded.
Optional Appendix – Illustrations (Appendix 3)
If maps, figures, tables, or images are needed to describe the project idea, these are attached as an appendix (PDF). At most one appendix (PDF) of 4 MB can be uploaded.
After submitting your application
You can make changes to your registered application (unregister it and register again) until the call closes at 14:00 CET on Wednesday March 19, 2025. After this, the status of your application will change from “registered” to “finally registered”. As long as no technical errors have been detected in Prisma, no changes may be made to the final registered version of the application. You may not make any additions, e.g. by email or by telephone. The application will be assessed as is.
When the call closes, the final registered version of your application is automatically sent to the administrating organisation for signature.
When the call is closed, Formas will check whether your application falls within the scope of the call. If so, it goes on to the review panel for assessment. If the application is outside the scope of the call, it will be rejected and will not be sent for assessment.
The following requirements will be checked in this call:
- that the administrating organisation has signed the application within seven calendar days after the close of the call.
- that the application has not been rejected by the home organisation.
- that the focus of the application is within Formas’ areas of responsibility.
- that the focus of the application is within the scope of the call.
- that the applicant fulfils the requirement for an issued doctorate within the specified timeframe. Applicants who, at the time of application, have not received a doctorate must submit a copy of the degree certificate by 1 October 2025, according to the guidelines in the call description.
- that you have submitted the requested information when claiming deductible time.
- that the application is complete, i.e. that it contains all the information that is required in the application form and in the appendices.
- that you only have one application submitted and registered in the Career Grant for Early-career Researchers call when it closes. If you consider yourself eligible in both career age tracks, you may only submit your application to one of the tracks.
- that the requirements for the project manager and organisations under Requirements for you and your organisation are fulfilled.
- that you have submitted the required reports on time for other projects or activities funded by Formas and under your responsibility.
All applications with associated CVs, academic profiles, and letters of intent are assessed by national and international scientific experts and public representatives in one of the calls review panels. For this call, there are no pre-defined review panels. Instead, review panels will be formed inductively, also called bottom-up, based on the submitted applications Each review panel has wide-ranging expertise that covers all of Formas’ areas of responsibility. Qualifications to review multi- and interdisciplinary research projects will be present in all review panels. Each review panel will be composed of active researchers, individuals with experience in assessing potential for academic career development, and users of research findings who are qualified to assess the project’s and the researcher’s potential for societal benefit.
The application assessment process External link.
Your application will only be assessed based on the content described in the application, including the letters of intent and your academic profile. As such, it is important that the content of the application is as clear as possible and that all important and relevant information is included. Note that citation indexes and university rankings are not to be included and will not be used in the assessment.
Your application, including the letters of intent and academic profile, is assessed using four grounds of assessment.
The expected knowledge contribution
- Is the project’s problem formulation clear, logical, and appropriate for the project’s research field and what the project wants to contribute to?
- Can the project contribute innovative perspectives and methods that can challenge the current state of knowledge, understanding, or approaches within the selected research field?
- Does the project incorporate the needs and conditions of different groups into its design and expected findings?
Skills, qualifications, and career development
- How well does the planned project fit with the applicant’s previous qualifications and experience? (scientific, educational, networks, collaborations)
- Does the researcher have the potential to widen their perspectives with the project and take the next clear step in their career?
- Does the researcher have the potential to increase their skills, qualifications, and scientific independence through the project?
- To what extent does the project improve the potential of the applicant to continue developing their abilities to lead, collaborate, and build networks?
- To what extent does the project improve the potential of the applicant to develop their ability to use and convey knowledge and experience to others?
Implementation plan with participating organisations and stakeholders
- Is the implementation plan suitable and appropriate for implementing the proposed project?
- Is the project’s timeframe and budget realistic and appropriate for the project’s purpose and goals?
- Are the ethical considerations and how they are dealt with necessary and relevant to the project?
- Is the choice of home and host organisations appropriate for the research and the advancement of the researcher’s career?
- Are the length and design of the stay(s) at the host organisation(s) justified and appropriate for the implementation of the project?
- Can the researcher, via their project, be integrated into and contribute to the activities of the home and host organisations?
Societal relevance
- To what degree can the project’s findings contribute to societal needs in the near or long term, and is the research relevant to Formas’ areas of responsibility?
- To what degree has the project identified the most important fields where the results could be used and how this could be done?
- Are the planned efforts to disseminate and make the results available relevant, feasible, and appropriate?
All four grounds of assessment are to be addressed in the application, and applicants must clearly relate the application to the grounds of assessment.
All four grounds of assessment will be weighted equally in the initial assessment. To differentiate applications of comparable quality in the final assessment, the skills, qualifications, and career development ground of assessment will be given more weight than the others.
Using AI as support in the review process
Formas' reviewers are currently not allowed to use AI tools to support the review of applications. There are several reasons for this. On the one hand, there is a great risk that information that is uploaded will be disseminated further. There are also risks related to secrecy and handling of personal data. Uploading an application or information from an application to any kind of AI tool means an unauthorized dissemination of information. This applies not only to AI tools but also to many other services and tools for storing and sharing data.
Using AI tools in the review of applications can also be difficult to comply with the principles of responsible assessment. The European Commission, together with the countries within the European Research Area, ERA, and other stakeholders has launched Guidelines for the responsible use of generative AI in research and innovation. External link. The guidelines state that the use of AI tools should be avoided in peer review.
AI as support in other parts of the review process
In this call, Formas will test two AI tools to support the clustering of applications into review panels for the call. The AI tools make use of semantic analysis to identify similarities across applications based on their content.
Formas will decide which applications are awarded grants on 21 October 2025. Decisions are published no later than the following day on Formas’ website and an email with information about the decision will be sent out later from Prisma. The decision will be available in Prisma. Grant decisions cannot be appealed.
The final financial and scientific reports for granted projects are to be submitted to Formas within three months of the end of the availability period. A financial status report is to be submitted to Formas annually. All reporting is submitted through Prisma.
How to report expenses and results External link.
Formas may impose requirements on how projects are to be reported in terms of content and results to enable dissemination and utilisation. This will be noted in the project decision should a grant be awarded.
This call does not permit changing the project leader.
Granted projects are also expected to participate in network meetings, seminars, and discussions organised by Formas, such as Formas’ Career Day. The purpose is to create synergies and platforms for learning and knowledge sharing.
Results from research funded by Formas are to be published using open access.
You are also to have a data management plan for the data produced in the project. If you receive funding from us, you need to develop a plan for data management. The plan should not be sent into us, but you should be able to present the plan upon request. By signing our grant terms and conditions, you certify that a data management plan will be in place before the research begins and that it will be maintained.
Formas shares information about awarded grants with SweCRIS, a national database of grant-funded research that was instituted by request of the Government. (www.swecris.se External link.).
Digital information event about the call
Recording and presentation from the information event, 5.2 MB. External link. about the call.
Revision history
Any post-publication revisions to the call text are listed below.
Contact
For questions regarding the content of the call and administrative questions: careergrant@formas.se