Government Grant Scam Check: How to Verify a Business Funding Offer

Answer first: A real public funding program should be traceable to an official government or agency source, and it should not require suspicious upfront fees for guaranteed approval. This page is a before-applying check, not a promise that your business qualifies.

Last checked: June 3, 2026.

Quick Decision Table

#CheckWhy it matters
1Search the exact program name on an official domain.Check the official source before acting.
2Avoid offers that promise guaranteed funding or ask for payment to release a grant.Check the official source before acting.
3Check whether the application portal matches the agency page.Check the official source before acting.
4Verify contact emails and phone numbers against the official website.Check the official source before acting.
5Save screenshots before sending any business documents.Check the official source before acting.

Official Sources To Start With

Before You Apply Or Claim

Do not start from a social post, a forwarded PDF, or a paid list alone. Start from the official program page, then work backward to your documents. A useful business support check should answer three questions: who runs the program, who can use it, and what proof is required.

  • Search the exact program name on an official domain.
  • Avoid offers that promise guaranteed funding or ask for payment to release a grant.
  • Check whether the application portal matches the agency page.
  • Verify contact emails and phone numbers against the official website.
  • Save screenshots before sending any business documents.

How To Read The Program Page

Read eligibility first, not the benefit amount. A large funding amount is irrelevant if the business type, location, industry, owner status, project date, or purchase timing does not fit. Then read the application method and deadline. If the page links to a guideline, notice, form, or portal, treat that document as part of the rules.

Keep the wording precise. A grant, rebate, tax credit, deduction, loan, subsidy, certification, and support service are not the same thing. Each one changes when you apply, what proof you need, and who makes the decision.

Common Mistakes

  • Using an old deadline from a third-party article.
  • Applying with a business name that does not match registration or tax records.
  • Paying a vendor before a pre-approval program allows the purchase.
  • Assuming a high search result means the program is official.
  • Ignoring post-award reporting, receipts, or claim requirements.

FAQ

Is every grant consultant a scam?

No. The warning sign is a promise of guaranteed government money, hidden fees, or a portal that cannot be traced to the official program owner.

Is this a guarantee of eligibility?

No. This guide helps you check official sources before you apply. Final eligibility depends on the current program rules and the agency, lender, or tax authority decision.

What should I save for my records?

Save the official program page, guideline PDF if available, deadline, application ID, emails from the official portal, and documents you submitted.

Editorial note: Business Support Check summarizes public sources for pre-application checks. It does not provide legal, tax, accounting, or financial advice.