Radical Research Ideas for Early Career Scientists
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11 December 2025: The limits for submission restriction periods have been lowered, so fewer project managers will receive a submission restriction period. For applications submitted from 1 January 2025 onwards, submission restriction periods will be calculated according to the new rules.
Last updates
The limits for the submission restriction have been adjusted downwards, with effect from 1 January 2025. The call text has been somewhat restructured, where some information has been moved from the call text to FRIPRO's information page.
We have specified the requirement relating to the project administrator.
Purpose
The purpose of this call is to fund curiosity-driven and bold research that can contribute to advancing the state-of-the-art. This call is the first step in phased funding and is aimed at researchers who want to test particularly bold research ideas. The ideas must be so bold that the risk of failure is too high to justify starting a large project, but where the research could have a significant impact on the field if the project is successful. Project managers for successful research idea projects may later apply for larger FRIPRO projects and be prioritized there.
About the call for proposals
New knowledge often arises in unexpected ways and in areas that are impossible to predict. Therefore, free, basic research is important for scientific and academic renewal, and can form the basis for more applied research, business development and policy-making. The Research Council will contribute to this, and we are therefore announcing funding for basic and applied research projects in all research areas, where the project ideas come from the scientists themselves.
We are willing to invest in bold research that has the potential to provide significant advances in the field, even if it also has a significant risk of failing. Radical Research Ideas is specifically designed for this purpose, giving researchers the opportunity to test their particularly bold research concepts. These are ideas that are initially too immature or radical and lack sufficient preliminary results to succeed within the ordinary FRIPRO calls for proposals. Applicants will, through this project, have the opportunity to obtain such results and thus lay the foundation for a larger project.
The application must convince at least two out of three peer reviewers
Applications for Radical Research Ideas will be evaluated and graded by three reviewers on a scale of A-C, where A is the highest mark. To make way for the particularly bold ideas, we do not require consensus in the peer review. You only need to convince two out of the three reviewers that your idea is worth pursuing, and it is sufficient that one of them loves the idea. We do not count the lowest mark. To be qualified for funding, the two best marks must therefore be either A-A or A-B.
The available budget in 2025 may fund 15-60 projects. The call is planned to continue in the following years, and any qualified applications that are no granted funding because of insufficient funds in 2025, will compete for funding also in 2026. All applications compete for funding in three rounds. More information regarding our application processing is found under “Administrative procedures” below, and about how we select applications for funding on FRIPROs information page.
Phased funding of Radical Research Ideas
Project managers who are granted a Radical Research Ideas project can later apply for a FRIPRO project based on the results from this project. Qualified applications will compete for funding from a prioritized amount of funding for this purpose. Qualified applications that are not granted funding from this amount, will in addition participate in the competition for funding in FRIPRO on an equal footing with other FRIPRO applications.
Five calls for ground-breaking research
Radical Research Ideas is one of five calls for proposals within FRIPRO/ground-breaking research. We want to reach researchers at different levels of their research careers and different stages of their research. We therefore have five calls for proposals, with different project sizes and objectives, and different requirements for the project manager's experience:
- Researcher Project with International Mobility (International Mobility): 0-7 years after PhD, with research stay(s) abroad
- Radical Research Ideas for Early Career Scientists (Radical Research Ideas, this call): 2–7 years after PhD, short project to find out if your most riveting research idea is viable
- Researcher Project for Early Career Scientists (Early Career Scientists): 2–7 years after PhD, to gain experience in leading a research project
- Researcher Projects for Experienced Scientists (Experienced Scientists): 6+ years after PhD
- Top Researchers: 6+ years after PhD for the project manager and 2+ years after the PhD for at least one other project participant. A large project with the goal of making the research community world-leading in its field.
Do you meet the experience requirements for several of the calls and are unsure which one you should choose? Our general recommendation is to choose one of the calls that has the lowest experience requirements for the project manager. Here, we expect a better chance of reaching the top of the competition for funding. Please also read the objectives and framework for each call for proposals you can apply for, and then choose the one that best suits your project idea. For a comparison of the five calls, see FRIPROs information page.
When can you submit your application and when will you receive an answer?
This is an open-ended call for proposals, with ongoing application reception and processing. This means that you can submit an application at any time as long as you are not subject to a waiting period or submission restriction period. We process the applications as they are received. The project for which you are applying must have a planned project start 8-18 months after you submit the application. Read more under "Requirements relating to the project manager", and under "Administrative procedures" about application processing and application processing time.
We have made a video where we go through the application form: FRIPRO ongoing application reception and processing (video in Norwegian).
The call is available in both Norwegian and English. The text of the Norwegian call for proposals is legally binding. In the event of changes, the call text that appears at the time you submit the application applies to your application.
Who is eligible to apply?
Only approved Norwegian research organisations may apply. See here for the list of approved Norwegian research organisations.
Who can participate in the project?
Project Owner
The research organisation listed as the Project Owner in the application form must have approved the submission of the application.
Project administrator
The project administrator registered in the application form must be an administrative representative at the project owner organisation, for example head of department, head of research, or someone else at the research organization with the formal authority to approve contracts. This person will be formally responsible for the application, and will be our contact person in case there are project changes etc.
Important: The project manager and the project administrator cannot be the same person. Applications where the same name is registered for these two roles, must be withdrawn and submitted again with the correct information, or they will be rejected.
Project manager
- Experience: You must have an approved doctorate or been approved with associate professor competence, and the period between the date of defence of your doctoral dissertation and the day you submit your application must be between two and seven years. If more than seven years have passed since you defended your dissertation, you may apply to subtract statutory leaves of absence, compulsory military or civilian service, seeking asylum or sick leave in accordance with our rules for subtracting time. Read more on FRIPRO's information page, under «Who can apply?”.
- Ongoing project: You may submit an application for Radical Research Ideas even if you have an ongoing FRIPRO/groundbreaking research project.
- Waiting period and submission restriction period : You cannot be the project manager for an application for a Research Ideas if you have a waiting period or submission restriction period in FRIPRO/ground-breaking research. As the project manager for an application for one of the five calls for ground-breaking research, you will have a one-year waiting period calculated from the date you submitted the application until you can be the project manager for a new application for one of the five calls. The waiting period also means that you can only be the project manager for one application for one of the five calls for proposals for ground-breaking research at a time. For three of the five calls, you may also be subject to a submission restriction period of 1-2 years if the application receives marks below the set limits from the panel assessing it. Applications for Research Ideas do not result in a submission restriction period, regardless of marks, but if you have a submission restriction period after submitting a proposal to one of the other calls, you cannot be the project manager for a proposal for Research Ideas. Read more on FRIPRO's information page, under «Who can apply?”.
- Employment requirements: You must be employed in at least 20 per cent of a full-time position at the Project Owner (research organisation) for the entire duration of the project period. You can be employed in a position as researcher or another academic position. You may, but do not have to, be employed by the Project Owner when you submit your grant application
Project participants, partners and subcontractors
Research Ideas may be carried out either by the project manager alone or in collaboration with several R&D employees.
Project participants are individuals/researchers. Project partners and subcontractors are organisations. All persons who will be involved in the project must be employed by either the Project Owner, a project partner or a subcontractor while participating in the project. Subcontractors and persons associated with subcontractors must not be mentioned by name in the application, but the work to be done by subcontractors can be described. You must enter all the researchers you have mentioned in the application under "project participants" in the application form. If the application is approved, you must have cooperation agreements with all project partners.
Read more about project partners and subcontractors on FRIPRO's information page.
A project partner may not have two different roles in the project. This means that a subcontractor may not serve as Project Owner or partner in the project at the same time.
What can you seek funding for?
You can apply for funding to cover actual costs necessary to carry out the project. The Project Owner must obtain information about costs from the project partners. These costs are to be entered in the cost plan under the relevant cost category.
Support may be granted to cover the following costs:
- Payroll and indirect expenses. Costs related to researcher time (including the position of the project manager) at the research organisations participating in the project.
- For applications submitted in 2025, our support for personnel and indirect costs in the higher education sector is limited to our rates for funding of research fellowships. If the rates do not cover all costs for recruitment positions in the university and university college or institute sector or for research positions in the university and university college sector, we assume that you cover the difference with your own funding. For research positions in the institute sector, you must use the hourly rates that the department has reported to us.
- For applications submitted on 1 January 2026 or later, new guidelines for payroll and indirect costs apply (only in Norwegian). The Research Council will then stop using lump-sum rates.
- Equipment. This includes operating and depreciation costs for scientific equipment and research infrastructure necessary to carry out the project.
- Operating expenses. Costs for other activities that are necessary to carry out the project's R&D activities. Purchase from subcontractors over NOK 100 000 must be specified.
You will find detailed and important information about what to enter in the project budget on our website on what to enter in the project budget.
Scope of funding
We can award funding of NOK 0.5-2 million per project under this call. We do not require own financing.
Ethics
The Research Council requires a high standard of research ethics in the projects we fund, and ethics is included in the assessment criterion for Research Quality. In the template for the project description, there is a separate section that deals with this. The description of ethics is first and foremost an assurance to the peers that there is a plan in place to deal with the most important ethical dilemmas in the project. If you need to describe this in more detail, this can be done elsewhere in the project description, for example under method selection, or you can do so in the data management plan(s) (see below).
The responsibility for ensuring that the research ethics standard is followed lies with the individual researcher and research institution (cf. the Act on the Organisation of Research Ethics Work, in Norwegian). The panel's assessment and the Research Council's decision on funding do not entail any research ethics approval.
Conditions for funding
We do not award state aid under this call. This means that the funding can only go to the research organisation's non-economic activity. We assume that the necessary accounting separation is in place. Our conditions for awarding and disbursing support for the first year, and any commitments and payments for subsequent years, can be found in our general terms and conditions for R&D projects on the information page What the contract involves.
If you are awarded funding for the project, you must update the application with extended budgets. There are also requirements for research security, action plans for gender equality, open access for scientific articles, data management plans, storage of research data and registration of studies involving humans. You can find more information about what you must do if your application is approved on FRIPRO's information page.
Relevant thematic areas for this call
The call covers all disciplines and research areas, and we are accepting applications for funding for both applied and basic research.
Ground-breaking research
Practical information
Requirements for this funding scheme
The application must be created and submitted via My RCN Web. This call for proposals is open-ended, which means that you can create and submit an application at any time. You can edit and save a created application until you submit it. It is the application that is submitted that is processed. You cannot change the application after you have submitted it.
If you wish to make any changes to an application after you’ve submitted it, you must withdraw it. You can do so by sending us an e-mail to fripro@rcn.no with a copy to the administrative officer of the application stating the ES number of the application. Applications withdrawn within one month of submission do not result in a waiting period. You may then create a new application as a copy of the old one, make any necessary changes, and submit it again.
The application must meet the following requirements:
- The application and all attachments must be written in English.
- Mandatory attachments must be included.
- The attachments must be in PDF format.
- Requirements relating to the project manager, the Project Owner, the research organisation and partners must be met.
- The project must have a planned start date between 8 and 18 months after submission of the application.
If the application does not meet the requirements in the list above, we will ask you to withdraw the application and possibly resubmit it where the deficiencies have been corrected. If the application is not withdrawn, it may be rejected. Project managers of rejected applications receive a one year waiting period.
Mandatory attachments
The mandatory attachments must be written in templates that can be found at the end of the call.
- project description, maximum 8 pages
- CV of the project manager, maximum four pages
- Documentation for subtracting time if you apply for a deduction for experience. (We don't have a template for this. The document must be uploaded under Attachments/Other items in the application form.)
Optional attachments
- Attach CVs for the most important project participants (if there are any)
- Each CV must be a maximum of 4 pages
- It is mandatory to use the CV template at the bottom of the call.
- Upload each CV as a separate attachment and select the attachment category "Curriculum vitae (CV)".
- You will assess which project participants are the most important, and in which cases it will be of importance in the application processing to assess the project participants' qualifications.
- If you wish, you can attach a brief description of competence or suggestions for up to three peers you believe would be suitable to assess your application. Reviewers must have their workplace outside of Norway and must have considerable experience within research. We are not obliged to use the suggestions, but can do so if necessary.
All attachments to the application must be submitted with the application.
Attachments other than those mentioned here as mandatory and optional, as well as any websites that you link to in the application, will not be included in the assessment of the application.
Be careful to upload the correct attachment type, as there are no technical restrictions on what kind of templates it is possible to upload in the application form.
Assessment criteria
The peer reviewers assess applications on the basis of the following criterion:
Overall assessment
In addition, the application will be assessed by the following points:
• The project is designed in such a way that the research will result in answers to the project’s research questions, hypotheses and objectives.
• The project is necessary to find out if the research idea is worth developing further in a larger research project.
• The research questions, hypotheses and project objectives are clearly and adequately specified.
• The research approaches and methods are credible and appropriate.
• The project manager and any project participants are appropriate to carry out the project.
Any risk that the research will not be successful should not negatively affect the mark.
Administrative procedures
Each application is evaluated by three peer reviewers according to the evaluation criterion. They must all have generalist or specialist expertise in the application. Write your application so that it can be understood by peers with general expertise in the research field.
The three reviewers do not discuss the application among themselves to reach a consensus, but give their own written evaluation and assign a mark on an A-B-C scale, defined as follows:
- A – Excellent: The research idea is exciting, particularly ambitious and unique, and challenges the state-of-the-art. The project is necessary and will result in answers to the project objectives. The remaining elements of the criterion are adequately covered and appropriate.
- B – Good: The research idea is ambitious and unique and challenges the state-of-the-art. The project is necessary and will result in answers to the project objectives. The remaining elements of the criterion are adequately covered and appropriate.
- C – Weak: The project does not adequately fulfill the criterion. The quality is not at the level described for the higher marks for one or more elements of the criterion.
You can find information about how we find peer reviewers and what information they receive on the FRIPRO information page, under How are applications processed, and when will I receive a result?
The combination of the marks from the three reviewers determines whether the application is eligible for funding or not and how it is ranked. We always disregard the weakest of the three marks (shown as “Reviewer 3” in the table below). To be eligible for funding, the application may have up to one C and at least one A. The two best marks must therefore be either A-A or A-B. The combination A-A results in the highest rank 1, whereas the combination A-B results in rank 2. All other combinations are non-qualified.
The table below shows the different grade combinations, which qualify for funding and which do not, and the ranking of the qualified ones.
|
Reviewer 1 |
Reviewer 2 |
Reviewer 3 |
Rank |
|
A |
A |
A |
1 |
|
A |
A |
B |
1 |
|
A |
A |
C |
1 |
|
A |
B |
B |
2 |
|
A |
B |
C |
2 |
|
B |
B |
B |
Not qualified |
|
B |
B |
C |
Not qualified |
|
A |
C |
C |
Not qualified |
|
B |
C |
C |
Not qualified |
|
C |
C |
C |
Not qualified |
After the peer review, the portfolio board for ground-breaking research makes a decision on funding or rejection, according to established allocation principles, which you will find on the FRIPRO information page. The principles largely use random selection within each ranking, are intended to ensure distribution across FRIPRO's three subject areas, and apply special consideration for gender where there is gender imbalance. The portfolio board processes all applications that have been peer-reviewed approximately every other month. The first allocation is in December 2025.
Applications that are not eligible for funding will be rejected. Applications that qualify for funding are included in the competition for funding in three decision rounds. This also applies across calendar years. If your application qualifies, but is not granted in the first decision round, it will be given a second chance in the next decision round. If it is not granted then either, it will be included in a third and final round. Applications that are included in their second or third round will compete on an equal footing with applications that compete in their first round.
The application processing time for each application will vary, depending on factors such as the number of applications received within the same subject area, the availability of peer reviewers and coincidences. The average application processing time is estimated to be 4 months for applications that receive a response in the first round of decisions in which they are processed, with variations of 2-8 months. If your application is included in several rounds, it will take 2-4 months longer before you receive an answer to your application compared to an application that is either rejected or that is awarded funding in its first round of decision.
We will announce which applications were awarded funding about every two months. Applicants will also receive a letter on My RCN Web.
Create application
Applications for Radical Research Ideas for Early Career Scientists should be created on My RCN Web. Application templates should be filled and uploaded in the application.
Create applicationMessages at time of print 11 December 2025, 15:13 CET