Accelerator funding
The Innovation Accelerator helps scale proven solutions that improve the lives of forcibly displaced and stateless people by providing funding, technical support, and partnerships to turn successful pilots into sustainable, system-level impact across humanitarian contexts.
Vision & objective
Humanitarian challenges are becoming increasingly complex as displacement situations grow more protracted and interconnected. At the same time, technology, financing models, partnerships, and approaches to service delivery are rapidly evolving, creating new opportunities to strengthen protection, inclusion, and assistance for forcibly displaced and stateless people.
Across UNHCR and the wider humanitarian sector, many innovative initiatives successfully demonstrate impact at pilot stage but struggle to move beyond localized implementation. While promising solutions often show operational value and community relevance, they frequently lack the long-term support, institutional pathways, partnerships, and investment needed to scale sustainably across systems and contexts.
The UNHCR Innovation Accelerator exists to help close this gap between successful experimentation and sustainable, system-level impact.
The Accelerator supports the transition from proof of concept to broader adoption by enabling high-potential innovations to grow, adapt, and strengthen their contribution to protection outcomes at scale. Its ambition is to help foster more adaptive, collaborative, and future-ready approaches to humanitarian response, approaches capable of responding to evolving displacement challenges while remaining participatory, ethical, and grounded in humanitarian and human rights principles.
The Accelerator recognizes that transformative change cannot be achieved by any one actor alone. Meaningful progress requires collaboration across refugee-led organizations, communities, governments, humanitarian and development actors, academia, and the private sector to collectively shape solutions that are sustainable, scalable, and responsive to real operational needs.
About the Accelerator
Support may include
- Technical guidance and operational support
- Catalytic funding and mentoring
- Partnership brokering and consortium-building
- Access to wider networks, expertise, and learning opportunities
- Evidence generation and learning support to strengthen adoption and long-term impact
The Accelerator brings together a diverse ecosystem of actors, including UNHCR operations, refugee-led organizations, governments, UN agencies, NGOs, academia, development actors, and private sector partners.
Its approach is grounded in three core principles:
Diverse partnerships
The Accelerator promotes partnerships between UN agencies, NGOs, refugee-led organizations, governments, academia, and the private sector to combine expertise, strengthen delivery, and support scale. Collaboration and consortium-building help initiatives move beyond isolated pilots.
Evidence & learning
The Accelerator supports evidence-based scaling through learning on impact, adoption, operational effectiveness, and sustainability across different contexts. Shared learning and storytelling help strengthen initiatives and support scale-up.
Sustainability
The Accelerator supports innovations in moving from pilots toward sustainable scale and long-term impact. It emphasises engagement with refugee-led organizations and community actors, alongside operational readiness, financing approaches, and pathways to scale.
Ready to scale your innovation?
Have a proven solution with potential for sustainable scale? Join the UNHCR Innovation Accelerator.
What the Accelerator offers
Selected teams can expect the following support:
- Strategy and governance: The Accelerator helps teams strengthen their overall approach for growing and sustaining their innovation, refining the overall value proposition. This includes support on objective setting, planning for scale, multi-year programming, integrating solutions into wider delivery in displacement settings, building evidence, and navigating different processes where needed.
- Partnership brokering and ecosystem navigation: The Accelerator connects teams with refugee-led organizations, donors, researchers, private sector partners, and UNHCR colleagues to support testing, improvement, and scale.
- Technical support: Teams receive access to technical expertise and practical advice to help refine their solutions, adapt them to new contexts, strengthen operational readiness, and plan for long-term sustainability.Learning: The Accelerator supports teams to capture lessons, measure progress, and build evidence on what works. It also helps teams strengthen storytelling, communications, and visibility so they can share their experience and attract wider support.
- Resource mobilization: The Accelerator helps teams identify fundraising opportunities, engage potential donors and partners, and strengthen pitches and presentations to mobilise additional support for scaling.
- Financial support: Selected initiatives may receive some catalytic funding to support activities such as testing in new locations, technical improvements, partnership development, operational preparation, and evidence generation. Funding levels will depend on the needs and scale of each initiative.
Eligibility & application process
The Accelerator selection process is multi-stage and designed to identify high-potential scaling initiatives while strengthening collaboration between organizations throughout the process.
The expression of interest (EoI) stage is open to organizations with proven concepts supporting forcibly displaced people that are ready to scale.
Applicants are encouraged to form collaborative partnerships bringing together operational, technical, strategic, and community expertise across UN agencies, NGOs, private sector companies, academia, development partners, and community-based organizations.
Through the online platform, applicants submit evidence on their proof of concept, operational relevance, scaling ambition, partnership ecosystem, and expected impact.
Applications are screened for eligibility, technical readiness, and strategic relevance, while the Secretariat also identifies opportunities for thematic collaboration and partnership-building across submissions.
Selected applicants may then participate in networking and collaboration processes to strengthen proposals ahead of the full proposal stage.
Selected applicants are invited to submit full proposals. Applications at this stage must be led by – or jointly submitted with – either UNHCR teams or refugee-led organizations (RLOs).
Partnerships between humanitarian, development, and other actors are strongly encouraged where they demonstrate shared ownership and clear pathways to scale.
UNHCR applicants may include country operations, regional bureaux, HQ divisions, or cross-functional teams, with clear institutional ownership and implementation arrangements.
Projects must demonstrate an existing proof of concept or pilot implementation, including operational testing, preliminary results, and user validation. Concept-only proposals are not eligible and may be better suited to the Innovation Incubator or associated Innovation Funds.
Teams will further develop a structured scaling proposal outlining their pathway to scale, partnership approach, financial considerations, risks, and intended impact. Proposals will be reviewed by technical experts from inside and outside UNHCR to develop a shortlist of high-potential initiatives.
Meaningful engagement with refugee-led organizations and community actors throughout design, implementation, and scaling is strongly encouraged.
Shortlisted teams will present their initiatives to the Steering Committee through a pitch and selection process. Final decisions are informed by technical review panels, partnership readiness, strategic relevance, and scaling potential.
Apply for the Innovation Accelerator
The first ever call for applicatons to the Innovation Accelerator is now open. The application deadline for submission of expressions of interest is 12 July 2026 at 11:59 PM CEST (Geneva time).
Selection criteria
Expressions of interest are assessed through a staged process designed to identify initiatives with demonstrated proof of concept, credible scaling potential, strong institutional ownership, and meaningful partnership ecosystems.
Clearly defines a relevant problem or opportunity affecting forcibly displaced people. Challenge articulation demonstrates understanding of the underlying barriers and root causes. The solution presents a meaningful improvement over existing approaches and articulates a clear value proposition.
Demonstrates evidence of real-world implementation, including preliminary results, operational learning, and user validation or adoption. Evidence should support the viability and relevance of the innovation model.
Demonstrates credible potential for replication, adaptation, transferability, or broader uptake across different contexts and operational environments.
Articulates a realistic and coherent pathway toward scale, including clear next steps, understanding of constraints and dependencies, identification of relevant actors and contexts, and evidence of demand or operational relevance.
Demonstrates strong ownership and operational anchoring. Applicants should articulate relevant partnerships with and between UNHCR entities, other UN entities, NGOs, refugee-led organizations, private sector, and other strategic partners. Clear roles, openness to further collaboration, and ecosystem approaches are strongly encouraged.
Demonstrates the potential for meaningful and plausible impact at greater scale, with clearly identified impact for communities, and integration of age, gender, and diversity (AGD) considerations into the design and scaling approach.
FAQs
If you’re acting on behalf of an organization working to support forcibly displaced people, then most likely! At the expression of interest stage, we are welcoming applications from a wide variety of types of organization who have demonstrated the potential of an innovative solution or approach.
As applicants move through the Innovation Accelerator selection process though, the full proposals submission must be led or co-led by either a UNHCR team or a refugee-led non-profit organization and as such strong partnerships and collaboration are essential.
If your initiative has not yet been tested in a real-world context, UNHCR teams and refugee-led organizations may be better suited for the Innovation Incubator and its associated Innovation Funds.
Not at all. The Accelerator is designed both as a selection mechanism and a development mechanism. Teams continue refining their scaling approach, partnerships, and implementation pathways throughout the Accelerator process. Some key information is requested at both expression of interest and full proposal stage, however, to support the overall selection and greater specificity will only increase chances of progress.
Innovations may involve new technologies, operational models, partnership structures, financing approaches, community-led approaches, or institutional processes. The focus is not only on novelty, but on the potential to significantly improve protection, inclusion, assistance, or self-reliance outcomes for forcibly displaced and stateless people and their host communities. Regarding thematics, projects supported through the Accelerator focus on a wide range of thematic and operational areas. The expression of interest stage is intended to cast a wide net and understand the areas of priority for different stakeholders. Following this, the Accelerator Secretariat will prioritize key thematic focus areas.
Applications go through a multi-stage process. First, expressions of interest will go through a two-step screening: an eligibility vetting and a minimum standards review. Following this process, the Accelerator Secretariat will create thematic clusters, in which promising EoIs will be placed to build full proposals, strengthen collaboration with other applicants and partners, and coalesce around the most promising initiatives. Full proposals will then go through a technical review, before a final selection by the Innovation Accelerator Steering Committee.
Applications are assessed on the basis of their:
Problem and solution value
Proof of concept and evidence
Scaling potential and readiness
Scaling pathways and feasibility
Institutional ownership and partnerships
Impact at scale
No, but only one initiative should be submitted per expression of interest form. Teams are encouraged to minimize the number of submissions and prioritize quality, strategic relevance, and partnership strength rather than submitting multiple overlapping proposals.
For UNHCR applicants, expressions of interest should demonstrate institutional ownership and operational anchoring across relevant UNHCR entities. Applicants should identify a lead project owner and demonstrate appropriate operational and strategic engagement across Country, Regional, and/or HQ levels where relevant.
The Accelerator may provide catalytic seed funding to help initiatives move from early scaling ambition into practical delivery. This funding is intended to support the first stages of implementation and scaling readiness, including activities such as operational preparation, partnership development, community and refugee-led organization participation, testing and adaptation in new contexts, and evidence generation.
The Accelerator is designed to help position initiatives for longer-term sustainability and future resource mobilization, rather than act as a sole source of long-term financing. Funding levels will therefore vary depending on the maturity, scope, and needs of each initiative. While support of up to USD 250,000 may be available in exceptional cases, most initiatives are expected to receive lower levels of catalytic support appropriate to their stage and scaling pathway.
Seed funding will prioritise activities that strengthen meaningful participation and leadership of refugee-led organizations and community actors within the initiative. It may also support early scaling and implementation activities such as partnership development, operational testing, technical adaptation, implementation readiness, and evidence generation that help position initiatives for future resource mobilization and broader impact.
The funding is intended as catalytic support to help initiatives move into the next stage of growth and scale. It is therefore not designed to cover ongoing operational costs or long-term staffing commitments.