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CASRAI
Grant Compliance & Budgeting

Formulating MSCA Budgets for Veterinary Medicine

A comprehensive financial planning guide to aligning proposal budgets with Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions regulations. Master the categorisation of eligible direct expenses and institutional overhead rules specifically for Veterinary Medicine research projects.

1. Financial Alignment & Eligibility Standards

Securing research funding from Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions requires meticulous adherence to both financial eligibility standards and administrative regulations. For projects in the domain of Veterinary Medicine, budgets must be constructed using realistic cost projections that are directly tied to the scientific methodology. Under-budgeting may jeopardise project execution, while over-budgeting or including ineligible costs often leads to immediate rejection during administrative screening.

Proposals in Veterinary Medicine typically balance personnel funding for graduate research assistants with specialized archival access fees, digital digitization costs, and open-access publishing charges that conform to MSCA requirements.

Verified Funder Portfolio Scale

According to independent, open-science bibliometric indexing from OpenAlex, the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (MSCA) has funded a cumulative portfolio of 43,842 peer-reviewed publications. These funded works have accumulated a massive total of 1,202,144 citations across the global scientific record, indicating the high scholarly impact of their funding programs. Aligning your Veterinary Medicine budget sheets with their eligibility standards is critical to securing a share of this prestigious funding footprint.

Proposal teams must submit all budget items in the host institution's local currency, mapping them to the specific electronic submission environment (Funding & Tenders Portal). Every cost item must be justifiable as necessary, reasonable, and allocable to the project.

2. Direct vs. Indirect Cost Categorisation

A primary point of auditing compliance is the strict division between Direct Costs (expenses directly attributable to the execution of the research project) and Indirect Costs (institutional overheads, facility maintenance, and central administrative support).

Overhead recovery is streamlined under **MSCA** regulations for **Veterinary Medicine** projects: indirect costs are strictly capped at a 25% flat-rate contribution applied to eligible direct costs, excluding any direct subcontracting fees.

For MSCA proposals, the indirect cost rate is structured as: Fully funded institutional unit costs. This rate must be applied correctly to the modified total direct cost base according to your institution's negotiated rate agreement or the flat rate set by the funder.

Expense CategoryEligibility & Rules for Veterinary MedicineFunder Guidance & Justification
Graduate Research AssistantDirect Cost (Personnel) (Estimated: £2,200 / month)To assist with primary literature mapping, dataset cleaning, and draft compiling for Veterinary Medicine projects.
Archival & Library Fee AccessDirect Cost (Access) (Estimated: £450 / year)To obtain rare manuscripts, digital archives, and pay-to-access historic collections for Veterinary Medicine studies.
Open Access Publishing APCsDirect Cost (Dissemination) (Estimated: £2,200 / paper)Directly supports immediate open-access dissemination of Veterinary Medicine results in accordance with MSCA policies.

3. Step-by-Step Budget Justification Protocol

The budget justification (or budget narrative) is a critical component of the application reviewed by both financial auditors and peer reviewers. To draft a compliant narrative:

Specific Funder Directives for MSCA

Applications submitted to the **Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (MSCA)** for **Veterinary Medicine** research are routed through the **Funding & Tenders Portal**. Europe-centric proposals must calculate gross personnel salaries with extreme precision, integrating actual national pension and insurance contributions. Budget portability is highly supported, allowing investigators to move active funding across eligible host institutions in accordance with **MSCA** rules.

  • Provide granular detail: Do not use lump sums. Break down personnel costs by calendar months or percentage of effort.
  • Demonstrate direct linkage: For every cost, explain how it supports a specific task or objective in the research plan for Veterinary Medicine.
  • Cite institutional policies: Reference verified institutional rates for fringe benefits, travel mileage, and indirect cost bases to validate your numbers.
  • Verify supplier quotes: For major equipment purchases or specialized laboratory assays, upload or reference formal vendor quotes.

Pre-Award Framework, Cost Sharing & Post-Award Governance

Pre-award research offices supporting grant development and pre-award grant management for MSCA awards in Veterinary Medicine must evaluate all eligible direct lines early in the application process. Funding agencies like the MSCA typically allocate resources through either categorical grants (strictly restricted to specified project budgets and detailed direct lines) or block grants (flexible institutional allocations with broad application scopes). The study's grant proposal timeline must allow sufficient room for internal sign-off, subcontractor approvals, and the formal clearance of any required matching funds or cost sharing on grants. Effective project execution is governed by post-award grant management guidelines, which mandate establishing a robust subaward agreement research with co-investigators. This compliance framework enforces strict effort certification research timesheets and close financial coordination to support cohesive team science research across all participating sites.

4. Frequently Asked Questions

How should sub-awards and sub-contracts be budgeted?

Sub-awards must include a separate detailed budget and justification from the collaborating institution. The lead institution may charge indirect costs on the first portion of each sub-award in accordance with the MSCA guidelines.

What happens if our institution's overhead rate exceeds the funder's cap?

The funder's overhead cap is non-negotiable. If your institution's standard negotiated indirect cost rate is higher than the MSCA cap of Fully funded institutional unit costs, your institution must accept the capped rate or absorb the difference as cost sharing.

Funder & Discipline Specs

FunderMSCA (European Union)
Submission PortalFunding & Tenders Portal
Crossref Funder ID100010665
Indirect Cost Rate CapFully funded institutional unit costs
Discipline TargetVeterinary Medicine

Compliance Checklist

  • All cost calculations checked for mathematical accuracy.
  • No general office supplies or administrative salaries listed as direct costs.
  • Overhead applied correctly using the specified rate cap: Fully funded institutional unit costs.
  • All direct costs aligned with the tasks of Veterinary Medicine research.

Referenced across the research world

University of Cambridge logoColumbia University logoUniversity of Edinburgh logoHarvard University logoUniversity of Oxford logoPrinceton University logoStanford School of Medicine logoUniversity College London logoORCID logoCrossref logoUniversity of Cambridge logoColumbia University logoUniversity of Edinburgh logoHarvard University logoUniversity of Oxford logoPrinceton University logoStanford School of Medicine logoUniversity College London logoORCID logoCrossref logo
  • University of Cambridge logo
  • Columbia University logo
  • University of Edinburgh logo
  • Harvard University logo
  • University of Oxford logo
  • Princeton University logo
  • Stanford School of Medicine logo
  • University College London logo
  • ORCID logo
  • Crossref logo

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