Sacramento, California – Sacramento’s independent restaurants are being reminded that help is available this month, as City Councilmember Phil Pluckebaum of District 4 promotes the opening of applications for the Restaurants Care Resilience Fund, a statewide grant program aimed at small food businesses that continue to carry the weight of rising costs, staffing pressures and unexpected setbacks.
The program is not limited to Sacramento, but Pluckebaum’s message places a local spotlight on a resource that could matter for neighborhood eateries across the city. “Applications for the Restaurants Care Resilience Fund are now open!” the councilmember shared, pointing eligible independent restaurants and commercial caterers toward the latest round of funding.
Applications are open from June 1 through June 30, 2026. Each grant is worth $5,000, and the money can be used in several practical ways. Businesses may put the funds toward kitchen equipment, technology upgrades, employee retention, worker training or sudden hardships that put pressure on daily operations. Previous recipients may also apply again, as long as the new application is for a different restaurant location or concept.
For many small restaurants, a grant of this size can help cover the kind of expense that often arrives without warning: a broken piece of equipment, a needed system upgrade, or the extra cost of keeping trained workers on staff. That flexibility is part of the reason the program has become a continuing support tool for California’s food industry.
The Restaurants Care Resilience Fund is run by the nonprofit California Restaurant Foundation. Since launching in 2021, the fund has awarded more than $11 million through 2,087 grants to independent restaurants, caterers and food trucks across 50 California counties. Recipients have included burger spots, taquerias, bakeries and other local businesses, many of them single-unit operators. According to program details, about 90% of past recipients have operated only one location, with an average of 10 years in business.
The fund grew out of pandemic-era relief and hardship support, including earlier worker grants of up to $2,500, and later expanded into a broader resilience program. Past grants have helped businesses respond to COVID-related disruptions, Los Angeles fires, Hollywood strike impacts and other difficult moments. Kitchen equipment has been the most common use, followed by employee training and retention.
For 2026, the goal is to support 256 independent restaurants and commercial caterers with $5,000 grants. General eligibility includes California-based independent restaurants or commercial caterers with one to five locations, annual revenue of up to $3 million per location, and at least one full year in business, or a recent expansion into a brick-and-mortar site.
Organizers say the application is mobile-friendly and generally takes 30 to 60 minutes to complete. “Here for our restaurant community, — Restaurants Care Team,” the post says.
More information, including eligibility details, FAQs and the application checklist, is available here.