Udall Scholarships

Location:
Multiple Locations,
United States
Term: Academic Year

Provide support to students committed to the environment, tribal public policy or Native American health care

The next application deadline is Feb 10, 2026
See other program dates

A program of the Morris K. Udall and Stewart L. Udall Foundation, Udall Scholarships provide support to college sophomores and juniors committed to careers related to the environment, tribal public policy, or Native American health care. To this end, the foundation awards up to 55 scholarships each year to individuals nominated by their undergraduate institutions.

Scholarships are offered in three categories:

  1. to students who have demonstrated commitment to careers related to the environment, including policy, engineering, science, education, urban planning and renewal, business, health, justice, economics, and other related fields; or

  2. to students who have demonstrated commitment to careers related to tribal public policy, including fields related to tribal sovereignty, tribal governance, tribal law, Native American education, Native American justice, natural resource management, cultural preservation and revitalization, Native American economic development, and other areas affecting Native American communities; or

  3. to students who have demonstrated commitment to careers related to Native American health care, including health care administration, social work, medicine, dentistry, counseling, and research into health conditions affecting Native American communities, and other related fields.

Each scholarship provides funding for tuition and other educational expenses, a four-day orientation, and access to a mentoring network of environmental and health and tribal policy professionals within the Native American community.

Is the Udall Scholarship right for me? Visit the Udall website to learn more about each category and to assess its fit with your interests and goals.

Eligibility

Candidates must be U.S. citizens, permanent residents, or nationals, and enrolled as full-time college sophomores or juniors at the time of application; candidates must also be pursuing a bachelor's degree full-time in the year following the submission of application. Candidates must be committed to careers related to the environment, or committed to careers in tribal public policy or Native American health care.

University nomination

Columbia University may nominate a total of eight eligible undergraduates for consideration each year. Students in Columbia College, Columbia Engineering and the School of General Studies who will be current sophomores or juniors at the time of application are eligible. The internal campus competition places students into consideration for nomination. Students may not apply directly for this fellowship without first having been nominated.

Columbia students apply for nomination by clicking "Start Your Application" and completing all application materials before the internal deadline. Letters of recommendation should be submitted directly to ugrad-urf@columbia.edu by the internal deadline as well.

Fact Sheet

Discipline:
Arts and Architecture, Foreign Language Learning, Humanities, Social Sciences, STEM
Eligibility:
Columbia College, Columbia Engineering, Columbia General Studies, Fellowships, Junior, Sophomore, U.S. Citizen, U.S. Permanent Resident
Fellowship Type:
Experiential, Public Service
Location:
Multiple Locations,
United States
Region:
North America
Term:
Academic Year

Dates & Deadlines

Academic Year
2026
Application Deadline: 
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
Notes: 
Internal deadline