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Hispanic & Latino Business Grants 2026

7 programs in the GrantCompass catalog specifically prioritize Hispanic and Latino founders, combining for up to $455,000. That is a smaller, honest number -- most "Hispanic grant" roundups pad their count with broad minority programs that mention Hispanic founders only as one example among several. To see which of these you actually qualify for alongside the rest of the catalog, use the free interactive eligibility map -- it checks your eligibility across all 631 programs in about 60 seconds.

7 Hispanic/Latino-specific programs · $455K Combined maximum funding · $250K Largest single amount (LEDC loan) · 2 Rolling, no fixed deadline
Grants 6 of 7 Loans 1 of 7
Quick Answer

7 programs specifically prioritize Hispanic and Latino founders, combining for up to $455,000: Camelback Ventures Fellowship ($25,000), digitalundivided BREAKTHROUGH ($5,000, Black & Latina women in TX/GA/MI), LEDC Small Business Loans (up to $250,000), LISC Small Business Relief Grants ($5,000-$25,000), PepsiCo's two Juntos Crecemos programs ($10,000 and $20,000+$100,000), and California's CUSP climate-relief grants (up to $40,000). The single best starting point for most applicants is LEDC's rolling small-business loan program -- no fixed deadline, first-time-applicant friendly, and it accepts pre-launch businesses through its SEED Loan tier. If you want a cash grant specifically, apply to whichever PepsiCo Juntos Crecemos track fits your business as soon as the next cycle opens.

7programs specifically prioritizing Hispanic/Latino founders
$455Kcombined maximum funding across all 7 programs
$250Klargest single amount available (LEDC loan ceiling)
2programs with rolling, no fixed deadline (LEDC, CUSP)

What Is Actually Active in 2026

3 of the 7 programs are accepting applications right now on a rolling or open basis; the other 4 are between annual intakes with no confirmed 2026 reopening date as of July 2026. This guide covers only programs with confirmed status, cross-referenced against the GrantCompass catalog of 631 US funding programs.

Hispanic/Latino-Specific Programs: Status at a Glance (July 2026)
ProgramAmountStatus
LEDC Small Business Loans$500-$250,000Active, rolling
digitalundivided BREAKTHROUGH$5,000Active (TX/GA/MI cohorts)
California CUSPUp to $40,000Active, rolling/quarterly (CA only)
Camelback Ventures Fellowship$25,000Between cohorts, 2026 dates TBA
LISC Small Business Relief Grants$5,000-$25,000Between intakes, opens in waves
PepsiCo Greenhouse Accelerator$20,000 + up to $100,000Between cycles, 2025/26 dates TBA
PepsiCo Jefa-Owned Business Grant$10,000 (20 winners)Between cycles, 2025/26 dates TBA

Where 7 dedicated programs sits among ownership groups

GrantCompass tags 79 programs in the national catalog by ownership group; the rest of the 631-program catalog is open to all businesses. Minority-owned businesses (an umbrella that includes Hispanic and Latino founders alongside Black, Native American, Asian American, and other groups) have the deepest bench at 48 dedicated programs. Women-owned businesses have 25. Veteran-owned businesses have 10. Hispanic/Latino-specific programs -- meaning programs that name Hispanic or Latino founders as an explicit, not incidental, priority -- number 7. Black-owned-specific programs number 5. Every founder is also fully eligible for the 552 national and state programs open to all businesses regardless of ownership.

48 programs
25 programs
10 programs
Hispanic/Latino-specific
7 programs
5 programs

If you're a Latina-owned food and beverage founder, both PepsiCo Juntos Crecemos tracks are worth checking before anything else on this page -- one targets CPG accelerator-stage companies, the other targets small "jefa-owned" food businesses directly, and the eligibility criteria do not overlap (see the comparison below).

All 7 Hispanic/Latino-Specific Programs, in One Sortable Table

The GrantCompass catalog tracks 7 programs that specifically prioritize Hispanic or Latino founders (not merely list them as one example within a broader diversity definition). Click any program for its full profile, eligibility rules, and application steps.

ProgramOrganizationTypeMax fundingStatus / deadline
LEDC Small Business LoansLatino Economic Development CenterLoan$500-$250,000Rolling, year-round
PepsiCo Greenhouse Accelerator (Juntos Crecemos)PepsiCoGrant$20,000 + up to $100,000Between cycles, 2025/26 TBA
Camelback Ventures FellowshipCamelback VenturesGrant$25,000Between cohorts, 2026 TBA
LISC Small Business Relief GrantsLocal Initiatives Support CorporationGrant$5,000-$25,000Between intakes, opens in waves
California CUSPCalifornia Dept. of Food and AgricultureGrantUp to $40,000Rolling/quarterly, CA only
PepsiCo Jefa-Owned Business GrantPepsiCo Foundation / Hello AliceGrant$10,000 (20 winners)Between cycles, 2025/26 TBA
digitalundivided BREAKTHROUGHdigitalundividedGrant$5,000Active, TX/GA/MI cohorts
  • Grants 6
  • Loans 1

Median max award across these 7 programs is $25,000; the spread runs from digitalundivided's $5,000 grant to LEDC's $250,000 loan ceiling. 5 of the 7 are rated first-time-applicant friendly in the GrantCompass catalog. See our grants vs. loans vs. tax credits guide for how to weigh a loan ceiling against a grant amount before applying.

Top 3 by Maximum Award Size
ProgramMax amountType
LEDC Small Business Loans$250,000Loan
PepsiCo Greenhouse Accelerator$100,000 grand prizeGrant
California CUSP$40,000Grant
Verdict

The best Hispanic/Latino-specific program for most applicants is LEDC Small Business Loans (up to $250,000) because it accepts applications year-round with no fixed deadline, its SEED Loan tier is one of the few CDFI products in the country that lends to pre-launch businesses before a single dollar of revenue, and it is rated first-time-applicant friendly. Everyone else should watch the PepsiCo Juntos Crecemos reopening dates for the highest-dollar grant on this list.

Federal Paths: MBDA Business Centers and 8(a)/SDB Certification

The strongest federal support for Hispanic and Latino founders is not a grant -- it is free advising through MBDA Business Centers and certification into SBA's disadvantaged-business contracting programs. Neither counts toward the 7 dedicated programs above because both serve minority founders broadly rather than naming Hispanic or Latino founders as the specific target, but both are real and worth pursuing.

Quick Answer: MBDA Business Centers

The MBDA Business Center Program, run by the Minority Business Development Agency at the U.S. Department of Commerce, provides free consulting, contract-access support, and capital-connection services through a national network of 40+ Business Centers. There is no cash grant and no application deadline -- Hispanic and Latino business owners contact their nearest center directly at mbda.gov/businesscenters to request an intake meeting. Centers prioritize clients who can close a contract or deal within 6-12 months.

SBA 8(a) and SDB Certification: What Hispanic Americans Should Know

The SBA's 8(a) Business Development Program is a 9-year certification that unlocks sole-source federal contracts (up to $4.5 million for most industries) and set-aside competitions for socially and economically disadvantaged business owners. Under SBA regulation 13 C.F.R. 124.103, Hispanic Americans are one of several groups presumed to be socially disadvantaged -- defined to include persons with origins in Mexico, Puerto Rico, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, or Central or South America. That presumption means a Hispanic American owner does not need to individually document social disadvantage, only economic disadvantage (personal net worth under $850,000 excluding home and business equity, among other tests).

Small Disadvantaged Business (SDB) status is a related, narrower designation: it can qualify a firm for price-evaluation adjustments and contracting-goal credit in specific procurements, and since a 2020 rule change it uses a self-certification process rather than a separate SBA review. SDB and 8(a) overlap in the disadvantaged-owner presumption but are not identical programs -- 8(a) is the full 9-year development program with sole-source authority; SDB status alone does not include sole-source contracts.

Source: sba.gov/8a; 13 C.F.R. Part 124 (8(a) Business Development Program); 13 C.F.R. Part 124 Subpart B (SDB self-certification, effective 2020)
MBDA, 8(a), and SDB: Key Differences
PathWhat it unlocksCash grant?
MBDA Business CenterFree advising, contract-readiness support, capital connectionsNo
SBA 8(a)Sole-source and set-aside contracts up to $4.5M; 9-year programNo
SDB self-certificationPrice-evaluation adjustments, contracting-goal creditNo

None of these three paths pays a check directly, which is why they sit outside the 7-program count above -- but for a Hispanic or Latino-owned business that sells (or wants to sell) to the federal government, 8(a) certification is frequently worth more than any single grant on this page. Compare the tradeoffs in our 8(a) vs. WOSB certification guide before committing to the 9-year program.

PepsiCo Juntos Crecemos: Two Programs, Different Targets

PepsiCo runs two separate "Juntos Crecemos" ("together we grow") programs for Hispanic-owned businesses, and they are frequently confused because they share a name. They target different stages and different ownership profiles.

PepsiCo Greenhouse Accelerator vs. Jefa-Owned Business Grant
FeatureGreenhouse AcceleratorJefa-Owned Grant
TargetHispanic-owned CPG food/beverage startupsLatina-owned food & beverage small businesses
Amount$20,000 each + up to $100,000 grand prize$10,000 (20 winners)
Format5-month mentorship cohort, 8-10 companiesCash grant + digital coaching, no cohort
RestrictionIneligible if product overlaps a PepsiCo brandNone disclosed beyond ownership criteria

PepsiCo Greenhouse Accelerator (Juntos Crecemos Edition) is an annual accelerator for Hispanic-owned CPG food and beverage startups. 8-10 companies receive $20,000 each plus 5 months of mentorship, and one company wins an additional $100,000 grand prize -- the 2024 grand-prize winner was ¡Ya Oaxaca!. The hard exclusion: if a product overlaps any PepsiCo brand (Gatorade, Tropicana, Lay's, Quaker, Pepsi, and others), the business is ineligible. The 2025/2026 cycle dates had not been announced as of May 2026; monitor greenhouseaccelerator.com.

PepsiCo Juntos Crecemos Jefa-Owned Business Grant, run through the PepsiCo Foundation and Hello Alice, is a separate $10,000 grant for 20 Latina-owned ("jefa," Spanish for a female boss) food and beverage small businesses, plus accelerator access and digital coaching for all 20 recipients. The 2024 cycle ran August 20 to September 27, 2024, with recipients announced in November 2024. Building a Hello Alice profile before the window opens gives you a head start when the next cycle is announced at helloalice.com.

Verdict

The best PepsiCo program for an early-stage Hispanic-owned CPG brand is the Greenhouse Accelerator because the $100,000 grand prize and 5-month mentorship exceed what any single grant on this page offers, provided your product does not compete with a PepsiCo brand. The best PepsiCo program for a small, established Latina-owned food business is the Jefa-Owned Business Grant because $10,000 with 20 winners has better odds than a single grand prize, and the digital coaching is included at no extra cost.

Regional Standouts: LEDC (DC/MD/VA) and California CUSP

Two of the 7 programs are geographically restricted but disclose the deepest funding ceilings on this page. Both are worth a founder's time only if the business operates in the qualifying region.

Latino Economic Development Center (LEDC) Small Business Loans serve Latino and underserved entrepreneurs in the DC, Maryland, and Virginia (DMV) metro area with CDFI loans from $500 to $250,000, tiered from pre-launch through established businesses, at rates from 6.5%. Applications are accepted on a rolling basis via an online Airtable form at ledcmetro.org/lending. The SEED Loan (up to $5,000) is one of the few CDFI products in the country that lends to pre-launch businesses -- founders can apply within 3 months of their intended launch date, before generating a single dollar of revenue, which makes LEDC unusually accessible to immigrant entrepreneurs building their first US business.

California's Underserved and Small Producer Program (CUSP), run by the California Department of Food and Agriculture, provides climate-relief grants of up to $20,000 for drought impacts and up to $20,000 for extreme-weather impacts (stackable to $40,000 within a 12-month period) for small and underserved California farmers and ranchers. CUSP's authorizing materials explicitly name Hispanic producers among the socially disadvantaged farmers the program prioritizes. Funding is distributed through regional technical-assistance providers rather than CDFA directly, with application windows that vary by provider (recent windows: September 1-October 31, 2025 and February 15-April 15, 2026) within a January 2024-December 2026 project period.

LEDC vs. CUSP: Region-Specific Programs
ProgramRegionMax amountDeadline
LEDC Small Business LoansDC, MD, VA$250,000Rolling, year-round
California CUSPCalifornia only$40,000Rolling/quarterly by provider
Verdict

If your business operates in the DC-Maryland-Virginia metro area, LEDC's rolling loan program is the single most accessible dedicated option on this page because it has no fixed deadline, funds pre-launch businesses, and its ceiling ($250,000) is the highest of the 7. If you farm or ranch in California and were hit by drought or extreme weather in the last 12 months, contact your county's CUSP technical-assistance provider directly rather than CDFA -- the relief is distributed through regional partners, not the state agency.

Beyond These 7: The Broader Minority-Owned Catalog

7 programs specifically prioritize Hispanic and Latino founders. That is the honest number, and it excludes programs where Hispanic or Latino is listed only as one illustrative example within a broader "minority group" or "people of color" definition. Hispanic and Latino founders remain fully eligible for those broader programs -- there are 48 minority-owned-specific programs in the GrantCompass catalog in total. Rather than duplicate that full list here, this section names the top few by award size; see the complete table on minority-owned business grants.

Top Broader Minority-Owned Programs (Not Hispanic/Latino-Exclusive)
ProgramMax amountNote
SBA 8(a) Business Development ProgramSole-source to $4.5MHispanic Americans presumed eligible (see above)
New Markets Tax Credit (NMTC)$2M-$20M below-marketReal estate/expansion in low-income census tracts
Black Ambition PrizeUp to $1,000,000Includes Hispanic-founded ventures as one of several qualifying traits
LISC Entrepreneurs of Color FundUp to $500,000+Names Latino as one illustrative example of "communities of color"

The MBDA Business Center Program (covered above) and the USDA Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development Program (which funds organizations serving Hispanic-Serving Institutions, not Hispanic farmers directly) also came up in our matching but were excluded from the 7-program count above for the same reason: the Hispanic/Latino connection is incidental to eligibility, not the target of the program.

Which Program to Prioritize First

Match the program to your situation. Each branch below is the highest-value first move for that profile.

If you operate in DC, Maryland, or Virginia

LEDC Small Business Loans ($500-$250,000, rolling, pre-launch eligible via the SEED Loan tier).

If you run a Hispanic-owned CPG food or beverage startup

→ watch for the next PepsiCo Greenhouse Accelerator cycle ($20,000 + up to $100,000 grand prize) at greenhouseaccelerator.com.

If you are a Latina-owned small food/beverage business ("jefa-owned")

→ build a Hello Alice profile now for the next PepsiCo Jefa-Owned Business Grant cycle ($10,000, 20 winners).

If you're building a social-impact venture in education, health, or economic mobility

→ watch for the next Camelback Ventures Fellowship cohort ($25,000, prioritizes Black, Latinx, and Indigenous founders).

If you're an incorporated Black or Latina woman founder in Texas, Georgia, or Michigan

→ apply to digitalundivided BREAKTHROUGH ($5,000, revenue-generating businesses only).

If you farm or ranch in California and were hit by drought or extreme weather

→ contact your county's CUSP technical-assistance provider (up to $40,000 stacked).

If you sell (or want to sell) to the federal government

→ contact your nearest MBDA Business Center and evaluate 8(a) certification given the Hispanic American presumption of disadvantage.

If none of the 7 dedicated programs fit exactly

→ check the 48 broader minority-owned programs or run the free eligibility map against all 631 programs.

How to Apply: Sequencing Your Hispanic/Latino Funding Stack

With only 3 of the 7 programs open right now, sequencing matters more here than on broader demographic pages.

  1. Map your eligibility first. Run the free GrantCompass eligibility check (~6 questions) to see every Hispanic/Latino, broader minority, and national program your business matches before spending time on any single application.

  2. Apply to the 3 active programs this month. LEDC (rolling, DMV region), digitalundivided BREAKTHROUGH (active TX/GA/MI cohorts), and California CUSP (rolling/quarterly, CA agriculture) do not require waiting on an announcement.

  3. Set reminders for the 4 between-intakes programs. Camelback Ventures, LISC Small Business Relief, and both PepsiCo Juntos Crecemos tracks reopen on annual or episodic cycles with no fixed calendar date -- subscribe to each organization's mailing list now.

  4. Evaluate MBDA and 8(a)/SDB in parallel. These take longer to pay off (weeks to months for MBDA intake, up to a year for 8(a) certification review) but are not competing for the same limited application windows as the grants above.

  5. Layer in the 48 broader minority-owned programs at minority-owned business grants -- particularly the SBA 8(a) program and New Markets Tax Credit if you need six- or seven-figure financing beyond what the 7 dedicated programs offer.

Three mistakes Hispanic/Latino applicants make

Hispanic & Latino Business Grants FAQ

How many grants specifically target Hispanic and Latino founders?

GrantCompass tracks 7 programs in its 2026 catalog that specifically prioritize Hispanic or Latino founders: Camelback Ventures Fellowship ($25,000), digitalundivided BREAKTHROUGH ($5,000, Black & Latina women in TX/GA/MI), LEDC Small Business Loans (up to $250,000), LISC Small Business Relief Grants ($5,000-$25,000), PepsiCo Greenhouse Accelerator ($20,000 + up to $100,000), PepsiCo Jefa-Owned Business Grant ($10,000), and California's CUSP climate-relief grants (up to $40,000). Combined, these 7 programs represent up to $455,000 in available funding. A larger number of broader minority-owned programs (48 total) also list Hispanic/Latino as one example within an open definition -- see the broader-catalog section above.

What is the SBA 8(a) program, and are Hispanic Americans presumed eligible?

The SBA 8(a) Business Development Program is a 9-year certification unlocking sole-source federal contracts up to $4.5 million and set-aside competitions for socially and economically disadvantaged owners. Under 13 C.F.R. 124.103, Hispanic Americans (defined to include persons of Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban, Dominican, Central American, or South American origin) are one of several groups presumed socially disadvantaged, meaning an applicant does not need to individually document that element -- only economic disadvantage (personal net worth under $850,000 excluding home and business equity, among other tests).

What does the MBDA Business Center Program offer Hispanic-owned businesses?

The Minority Business Development Agency, part of the US Department of Commerce, funds a national network of 40+ Business Centers offering free consulting, contract-readiness support, and capital-access connections. There is no cash grant and no application deadline -- contact your nearest center directly at mbda.gov/businesscenters. Centers prioritize clients who can close a specific contract or deal within 6-12 months, so bring a concrete opportunity rather than a general request for help.

What is PepsiCo's Juntos Crecemos program, and how do the two tracks differ?

PepsiCo runs two separate programs under the "Juntos Crecemos" name. The Greenhouse Accelerator targets Hispanic-owned CPG food and beverage startups with $20,000 per company (8-10 companies) plus a 5-month mentorship and up to a $100,000 grand prize; a hard exclusion applies if the product competes with any PepsiCo brand. The Jefa-Owned Business Grant, run through the PepsiCo Foundation and Hello Alice, awards $10,000 to 20 Latina-owned food and beverage small businesses plus digital coaching, with no accelerator cohort. Both had 2025/2026 cycle dates unannounced as of May 2026.

Are there Hispanic/Latino grants specifically for farmers or agricultural producers?

Yes. California's Underserved and Small Producer Program (CUSP), run by the California Department of Food and Agriculture, provides climate-relief grants up to $20,000 for drought and up to $20,000 for extreme weather (stackable to $40,000 within 12 months) for small and underserved California farmers, with Hispanic producers explicitly named among the prioritized socially disadvantaged groups. This program is California-only; the federal USDA Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development Program funds organizations building training programs (not individual farmers directly), and its Hispanic-Serving Institution eligibility is incidental rather than a farmer-ownership target.

What if none of the 7 dedicated programs fit my business?

Check the 48 broader minority-owned programs at minority-owned business grants, which include the SBA 8(a) program (sole-source contracts to $4.5M), the New Markets Tax Credit ($2M-$20M below-market financing), and other programs where Hispanic/Latino founders qualify alongside other underrepresented groups. Every business is also eligible for the 552 national and state programs in the GrantCompass catalog open to all businesses regardless of ownership -- run the free eligibility map to see your full matched list in about 60 seconds.

What this means for your Hispanic or Latino-owned business

7 programs specifically prioritize Hispanic and Latino founders, but the most accessible move right now is LEDC's rolling loan program if you're in the DC-Maryland-Virginia region, or watching the PepsiCo Juntos Crecemos reopening dates if you run a Hispanic-owned food or beverage business anywhere in the US. Layer in MBDA advising, evaluate 8(a) certification, and check the 48 broader minority-owned programs for anything the dedicated list doesn't cover. Check your eligibility across all 631 programs in about 60 seconds with the free GrantCompass eligibility map.

See every program you qualify for — free →

Methodology & sources. Program data comes from the GrantCompass catalog of 631 US funding programs, updated July 2026 -- 7 programs that specifically prioritize Hispanic or Latino founders and 48 broader minority-owned programs, each verified against the administering organization (Camelback Ventures, digitalundivided, LEDC, LISC, PepsiCo/Hello Alice, the California Department of Food and Agriculture, MBDA, and the SBA). The SBA 8(a) and SDB disadvantaged-group presumption is per 13 C.F.R. Part 124. Programs where Hispanic/Latino ownership was one incidental example within a broader diversity or institutional-type definition were excluded from the 7-program count and disclosed separately in the broader-catalog section above.
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