NIH S10 Program Fundamentals
The NIH S10 Shared Instrumentation Grant program exists to ensure that institutions with active NIH-funded research can acquire and maintain cutting-edge scientific equipment. The program recognizes that modern biomedical research depends on instruments too expensive for individual grants.
• S10 OD028 (Major): Instruments costing >$600K, single award per institution per cycle.
• S10 OD025 (Standard): Instruments costing 100K–600K, the most common mechanism.
• Shared use requirement: The instrument must serve at least three NIH-funded PIs with distinct projects.
Unlike research grants (R01, R21), S10 does not fund personnel, supplies, or indirect costs beyond equipment installation. The institution must commit to maintenance, training, and a user fee structure that ensures sustainability.
Application success depends on three factors: instrument justification (why this instrument and this vendor), user base strength (number and quality of NIH-funded projects), and institutional commitment (matching funds, space, technical support).
Common S10 Application Mistakes
• Weak user base: Applications with fewer than three strong R01-level users are unlikely to score well. Aim for 5–10 funded investigators with clear need for the instrument.
• No institutional commitment letter: Reviewers expect a detailed letter committing maintenance funds, dedicated space, and technical staff. Vague promises hurt.
• Wrong mechanism: Requesting a 200KinstrumentthroughtheOD028majormechanism(>600K) wastes reviewer time. Match instrument cost to mechanism.
• Duplicate instruments: If your institution already has a similar instrument, you must justify why the existing one is insufficient — age, capacity, capability gaps.
• Ignoring the fee structure: S10 reviewers want to see a realistic user fee model that will sustain the instrument after the grant period. Core facilities without fee structures score poorly.
• Late vendor quotes: Budget justification requires a detailed vendor quote. Obtaining this takes weeks — start early.