
Alzheimer’s Research UK Fellowships are designed for promising PhD qualified non-clinical researchers who have delivered previous research projects with evidence of impactful outputs and have clear plans to establish their own research ‘niche’.
Provided for salary and contribution towards research, animal and travel costs.
Duration: Up to three years
If you are clinically-qualified, please apply through our Clinical Research Training Fellowship or Clinical Research Fellowship schemes.
Applications open – 8th of December 2025
Eligability
The purpose of Research Fellowships is to support excellent non-clinical researchers in the early stages of their career to begin an independent project in a well-supported environment, thereby supporting their eventual trajectory to independence. For a detailed description of the skills and training you will be expected to demonstrate, please read our Early Career Researcher Framework.
The scheme is intended for PhD-qualified non-clinical researchers who have delivered previous research project(s) with impactful outputs, such as publications and conference presentations, and demonstrate an upward trajectory. Prospective Fellows should be starting to accumulate a tool-box of new skills that will serve as a strong basis for future independent research activity, whilst being increasingly recognised for their specialist expertise. Researchers who already hold tenure are not eligible to apply.
The prospective fellow and Lead Supervisor must be based in a UK academic/research institution. However, the application can include researchers or institutions outside the UK.
Fellows are required to have secured a Supervisor(s), a senior established investigator in the institution where the Fellowship is to be held. The Supervisor will provide the facilities required for the research programme, will have oversight of the Fellow and their research programme, and will contribute actively to the further training of the Fellow. Supervisors must have a contract (fixed term or tenure) with the host institution covering the proposed duration of the Fellowship.
Fellowships must be applied for by the prospective Fellow, not the Supervisors.
If the project requires ethical approval and/or Home Office licences, the award is dependent upon the requisite approvals being granted.
See Home Office for any Visa information, if needed.
For more information, and to apply, please visit GOV.UK or the UKRI website.
See our Eligibility Guidelines for further information.
Review
Alzheimer’s Research UK is a member of the Association of Medical Research Charities and follows their guidelines for best practice in peer review. Grants are awarded entirely on scientific merit in relation to ARUK’s remit and on the basis of open competition. The quality of the application and applicants is the key determinant of outcome, although the strength of the dementia research environment within the institution is also considered.
Triage
Three expert panel members from our Grant Review Board (GRB), who are not conflicted carries out an in-depth assessment of the applications drawing on their specific areas of expertise, and score each application A triage of the applications is carried out by a sub-set of GRB members to determine which applications move forward in the review process. Scoring and Review criteria are available here.
Rebuttal Opportunity
Before final review, applicants are given the opportunity to respond to the feedback from the GRB members. This rebuttal stage allows applicants to address any concerns or questions raised by the reviewers, providing clarifications or additional information to support their application. For prospective fellows, this will be in the form of live rebuttal during the interview process.
Lived Experience Review
Those applications which have human volunteers are sent for Lived Experience Review. As part of the application, applicants are required to write a Plain English proposal, which are sent to volunteers from the Lived Experience Involvement Group for comments, and for scoring. The comments are made available to the GRB members and incorporated into discussion at the board meeting.
Fellowship Interviews
As part of our review process, interviews will be conducted alongside the Grant Review Board (GRB) meeting. The interview panel will consist of a subset of the GRB members, individuals with lived experience of dementia, and the Director of Research at Alzheimer’s Research UK.
During the interview, prospective Fellows will be asked to deliver a 5 minute PowerPoint presentation outlining their work. This presentation provides an opportunity to showcase their research and discuss its potential impact.
Final Funding Approval
Based on the in-depth discussions and assessments, the GRB makes recommendations for funding.
Success rates
In the last three years Alzheimer’s Research UK has received 51 applications for Research Fellowships. 8 of these projects were awarded funding.
Applications are made via our grant application website.
Grant schemes only appear on this website when the round is open and we are accepting new applications.
Visit funding web page
(https://www.alzheimersresearchuk.org/grants/research-fellowship/)
