NIH Grant Search by PI — Funded Principal Investigator Finder

Search NIH grants by PI name or research area. Look up funded principal investigators, see their NIH RePORTER awards, institutions, and project details.

Search NIH grants by research area to find funded PIs

Enter a research topic, disease, or technology to find principal investigators with NIH funding in that area. To look up a specific PI by name, use the PI Funding Status check.

Search Results

Found 0 principal investigators from 0 displayed projects for "F33" (20212026)

Opportunity Digest

Heuristic scoring to help trainees and job seekers prioritize which labs to inspect first.

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High-opportunity leads

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Likely hiring signals

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Training-friendly awards

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Average opportunity score

Run a search first to see where NIH data is pointing right now.

Filter for opportunity type

No results match the current opportunity filter. Switch back to “All results” or broaden the date range.

No Results Found

No principal investigators found for "F33" in the selected time period. Try adjusting your search terms or date range.

Search NIH grants by PI name

Looking for a specific principal investigator? The keyword search above looks up funded projects by topic. To search NIH grants by PI name (last name, first + last name, or partial name) and see every active and recent NIH award for that researcher, use the dedicated PI Funding Status tool.

How to Use PI Funding Data for Career Decisions

Finding the right principal investigator is one of the most important decisions in an academic career. Whether you are a postdoc looking for a mentor, a graduate student choosing a rotation lab, or a collaborator seeking a co-PI, NIH funding data provides objective signals about which investigators have active research programs and resources to support new team members.

A PI with a recently awarded R01 or equivalent grant is more likely to have budget for new personnel than one whose funding ended two years ago. The activity code tells you the type of grant: R01 and R35 awards typically support multiple lab members, while K-series awards are individual career development grants that may not fund additional positions. Understanding these distinctions helps you interpret search results accurately.

Look beyond the dollar amount. A $500,000 per year R01 at a high-cost institution may support fewer positions than a $300,000 award at a university with lower overhead rates. The project abstract and public health relevance statement reveal whether the PI's research direction aligns with your interests and expertise.

Understanding PI Grant Portfolios

A PI's grant portfolio reveals more than individual awards. Investigators with multiple active grants often run larger labs with more diverse projects, which can mean more opportunities for trainees. However, a PI with a single well-funded grant may offer more focused mentorship and a clearer path to publications.

Multi-PI grants (those with more than one principal investigator listed) indicate collaborative research and may involve trainees from multiple institutions. These can be excellent opportunities for interdisciplinary training but may also mean split attention from any single mentor.

Pay attention to the timing of awards. A PI who just received a new five-year R01 is in a different position than one whose grant ends next year. New awards often correspond to lab expansion and active recruiting, making them ideal targets for job seekers. The start and end dates shown in each result help you assess this timing.

Best Practices for Contacting Funded PIs

Once you identify a promising PI through this tool, the next step is outreach. NIH public records do not include email addresses, but you can usually find contact information through the PI's institutional profile page, lab website, or recent publications. Google Scholar, PubMed, and the PI's department website are reliable starting points.

When reaching out, reference the specific grant that caught your attention. Mentioning the project title and explaining how your skills relate to the funded work shows that you have done your homework. Keep your initial message concise: introduce yourself, explain your interest, attach your CV, and ask whether they anticipate openings.

Timing matters. Contacting a PI within the first year of a new award is ideal, as this is when they are most likely to be recruiting. If you find multiple promising PIs in the same field, prioritize those with the most recent award notices and activity codes that support trainee positions such as R01, U01, or P-series grants.

Frequently Asked Questions About PI Search

What does the opportunity score mean?

The opportunity score is a heuristic that combines award recency, funding amount, activity code type, and project characteristics to estimate how actionable a result might be for job seekers or collaborators. Higher scores suggest stronger signals, but always verify by reading the abstract and checking the PI's current lab page.

Why can't I find a PI I know has funding?

Name variations are the most common cause. Try searching with just the last name, or use different formats like "Smith, John" versus "John Smith." Some PIs also publish under different name variations or may have awards under a previous institutional affiliation.

Does this tool show all NIH-funded PIs?

The tool searches NIH RePORTER data for the keyword and year range you specify. It returns PIs whose funded projects match your search terms. PIs with grants in unrelated areas or whose projects use different terminology will not appear in keyword-filtered results.

What is the difference between "Likely hiring" and "Training-friendly" filters?

"Likely hiring" flags PIs with large new awards or activity codes typically associated with lab expansion. "Training-friendly" identifies awards that include training components or are at institutions known for postdoctoral programs. Both are heuristic filters to help prioritize your outreach.

How to use this well

Start broad, then narrow. Search a field first, then refine by timeframe once you understand who is currently active.

After you find a promising PI, cross-check them in Check PI Funding and review their institution, mechanism type, and project abstracts before reaching out.

What a match means

A result means the keyword appears relevant to the funded project data we searched. It does not guarantee the PI is hiring or that the grant is still active.

Use the abstract, award year, mechanism, and organization context to decide whether the record is strategically relevant.

Data limits

NIH records can lag, institutional names can vary, and some investigators publish or file awards under multiple name formats.

For details on source coverage and refresh cadence, read Data & Methodology.

Related guides

Companion guides for turning a PI search result into useful outreach or a job lead.

Career Guide8 min read

How Postdocs Can Find PIs with New NIH Funding

A tactical job-search guide for identifying recently funded labs, judging fit, and timing outreach to principal investigators.

Career Guide7 min read

How to Contact a PI: Finding Emails and Crafting the Perfect Message

Emailing strategies, outreach examples, and a workflow for turning NIH funding signals into focused PI conversations.

Career Guide10 min read

How to Read a New NIH Award Like a Hiring Signal

A practical framework for using newly funded NIH awards to judge whether a lab may be expanding, hiring, or worth contacting now.

Funding Strategy16 min read

How to Find NIH Funding Opportunities: A Step-by-Step Guide for Researchers

Learn how to find NIH funding opportunities using the NIH Guide, Grants.gov, FOAs, NIH RePORTER, and program officer outreach.

Principal investigators who received NIH awards in the last 90 days, organized by research area. Use this as a starting point for postdoc searches, collaborator outreach, or competitor scans. Counts and labs refresh daily.

Alzheimer's disease

Neurodegeneration, biomarkers, and disease-modifying therapies.

  • Carlos Cruchaga WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY, MO
    CONGAS: "Caribbean Omics 'N' Genomics for Alzheimer Study"
    $101,153 · awarded Feb 25, 2026 · 3U01AG084514-01A1S1
  • Carlos Cruchaga WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY, MO
    CONGAS: "Caribbean Omics 'N' Genomics for Alzheimer Study"
    $3,086,339 · awarded Feb 19, 2026 · 1U01AG084514-01A1
  • HARALD SONTHEIMER UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA, VA
    Extracellular matrix and memory impairments in Alzheimer disease
    $709,066 · awarded Apr 7, 2026 · 5R01AG085359-03
  • Keith Josephs MAYO CLINIC ROCHESTER, MN
    The neurobiology of two distinct subtypes of neurodegenerative apraxia of speech: phenotypes of Alzheimer disease related 4-repeat tauopathies
    $643,670 · awarded Apr 1, 2026 · 5R01DC014942-09
  • DMITRIY YABLONSKIY WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY, MO
    Deep-Learning-Augmented Quantitative Gradient Recalled Echo (DLA-qGRE) MRI for in vivo Clinical Evaluation of Brain Microstructural Neurodegeneration in Alzheimer Disease
    $661,985 · awarded Mar 3, 2026 · 4R01AG082030-02

CRISPR & gene editing

Therapeutic gene editing, base editing, and prime editing.

  • Changchun Liu UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT SCH OF MED/DNT, CT
    Asymmetric CRISPR Approach for Nucleic Acid Quantification
    $643,849 · awarded Mar 30, 2026 · 2R01EB023607-06A1
  • William Pu BOSTON CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL, MA
    A modular system for murine CRISPR genome and epigenome editing
    $267,000 · awarded Mar 27, 2026 · 5R21OD037909-02
  • Naama Aviram SLOAN-KETTERING INST CAN RESEARCH, NY
    Molecular mechanisms of memory formation and tolerance in CRISPR-Cas systems
    $249,000 · awarded Apr 2, 2026 · 5R00GM148720-04
  • Mats Ljungman UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN AT ANN ARBOR, MI
    Precision targeting of bladder cancer using CRISPR
    $582,849 · awarded Feb 17, 2026 · 5R01CA285730-03
  • Shannon Miller SCRIPPS RESEARCH INSTITUTE, THE, CA
    Development of potent and safe CRISPR tools for in vivo gene editing using directed evolution
    $230,000 · awarded May 5, 2026 · 5R21EB036298-03

Cancer immunotherapy

Checkpoint inhibitors, CAR-T, TIL therapy, and beyond.

  • TERRY SHEPPARD KEYSTONE SYMPOSIA, CO
    Cancer Immunotherapy: Basic Mechanisms Informing Clinical Applications & Combinations
    $5,000 · awarded Mar 3, 2026 · 1R13CA310704-01
  • Veronika Fedirko UNIVERSITY OF TX MD ANDERSON CAN CTR, TX
    Gut Microbiome and Cancer Immunotherapy Outcomes in Advanced Renal Cell Carcinoma
    $927,329 · awarded Mar 3, 2026 · 5R01CA255322-05
  • Yuwen Zhu UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO DENVER, CO
    The GPR171 pathway in cancer immunotherapy
    $355,706 · awarded Apr 2, 2026 · 5R01CA279398-04
  • ANDREW WIEMER UNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT STORRS, CT
    Synthesis and evaluation of BTN3A1 ligands for cancer immunotherapy
    $374,171 · awarded May 1, 2026 · 5R01CA266138-05
  • Wei Hu YALE UNIVERSITY, CT
    Novel Treg inactivating approach for cancer immunotherapy via targeted protein degradation
    $482,312 · awarded Apr 6, 2026 · 1R01CA295942-01A1

GLP-1 & metabolic disease

Diabetes, obesity, and weight-loss therapeutic mechanisms.

  • ZHIPING PANG RUTGERS BIOMEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES, NJ
    Synaptic and circuit mechanisms of central GLP-1 signaling in energy balance
    $479,051 · awarded Apr 23, 2026 · 5R01DK131452-05
  • Madhusmita Misra UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA, VA
    Bone metabolism in adolescents undergoing GLP-1 receptor agonist therapy
    $471,776 · awarded Apr 24, 2026 · 5R01HD118635-07
  • STEVEN SCHWENDEMAN UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN AT ANN ARBOR, MI
    Remote Loading of Melanocortin and GLP-1 Peptides in Polymers for Treatment of Obesity
    $231,000 · awarded Apr 17, 2026 · 1R56DK141545-01A1
  • Jessica Barson DREXEL UNIVERSITY, PA
    Suppression of ethanol dependence-induced maladaptive appetitive and consummatory behavior by the GLP-1 system
    $564,306 · awarded May 5, 2026 · 1R01AA031732-01A1
  • MICHAEL CAMILLERI MAYO CLINIC ROCHESTER, MN
    A Randomized, placebo-controlled trial of the effects of Long-Acting GLP-1 or Dual Incretin (GLP-1 and GIP) Modulation on Gastrointestinal Functions and Relationship to Weight Loss
    $322,800 · awarded Apr 9, 2026 · 5R01DK142606-02

Long COVID

Post-acute sequelae and chronic infection-driven illness.

  • Alexei Tumanov UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS HLTH SCIENCE CENTER, TX
    Lymphotoxin-dependent control of long COVID
    $234,715 · awarded Feb 13, 2026 · 1R21AI185790-01A1
  • Amal Amer OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY, OH
    Role of the Non-canonical Inflammasome in SARS-CoV-2-mediated Pathology and Coagulopathy
    $2,974,582 · awarded Apr 21, 2026 · 5P01AI175399-03
  • Alba Azola JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY, MD
    Blood-Brain Barrier Integrity and Immune Dynamics in Neuropsychiatric Sequelae of Post-SARS-CoV-2 onset ME/CFS versus Pre-Pandemic ME/CFS Patients
    $633,378 · awarded Apr 17, 2026 · 1R01NS147100-01
  • DANIELLE REED MONELL CHEMICAL SENSES CENTER, PA
    Inflammation and chemosensory loss
    $2,654,249 · awarded Feb 26, 2026 · 1P50DC022549-01A1
  • Jarred Younger UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA AT BIRMINGHAM, AL
    Low-dose naltrexone (LDN) for the treatment of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS)
    $556,686 · awarded Mar 6, 2026 · 1UG3NS141843-01A1