Kod CSS i JS

15 September 2023 r.

The National Science Centre (the “NCN”) has launched the OPUS 26 LAP/Weave call for research projects. The call is open to proposals for research projects carried out in international bilateral or trilateral cooperation under the Weave Programme as well as projects carried out with the use of large international research equipment by the Polish research teams. The call is addressed at researchers at all stages of their academic careers, who are planning:

  • research projects without the participation of foreign partners (OPUS proposals),

EXAMPLE: A research project carried out by a research team affiliated with a Polish institution.

  • research projects implemented by Polish research teams with the use of large international research equipment (OPUS proposals),

EXAMPLE: A research project carried out by a research team affiliated with a Polish institution, using data from the Gaia space mission launched by the European Space Agency in 2013.

  • research projects with the participation of foreign partners that do not apply for funding for that purpose under the Weave programme (however, foreign teams may apply for funding under other research-funding programmes that are not co-launched by the NCN pursuant to the LAP under the Weave programme) (OPUS proposals),

EXAMPLE: A research project carried out by a research team affiliated with a Polish institution (applying for NCN funding of the Polish part of the research project), in partnership with Spanish partners that seek independent funding for the Spanish part of the project from other sources.

  • research projects in additional partnership with foreign partners that do not apply for funding for that purpose under the Weave programme and with additional use of large research equipment (OPUS proposals),

EXAMPLE: A research project carried out by a research team affiliated with a Polish institution (applying for NCN funding for the Polish part of the research project), using data from the Gaia space mission launched by the European Space Agency in 2013, in partnership with Spanish partners that seek independent funding for the Spanish part of the project from other sources.

  • research projects within the framework of LAP cooperation under the Weave programme, i.e., in cooperation with foreign research teams from the Czech Republic, Austria, Slovenia, Germany, Switzerland, Luxembourg or Belgium-Flanders that seek parallel funding of the projects from their respective research-funding agencies under the Weave programme, i.e., to FWF, GAČR, ARIS, DFG, SNSF, FNR and FWO (OPUS LAP proposals),

EXAMPLE: A research project carried out by a research team affiliated with a Polish university (applying for NCN funding of the Polish part of the project) in partnership with a German research team that seek funding from the DFG within the framework of the Weave programme.

  • research projects within the framework of LAP cooperation under the Weave Programme, in partnership with foreign partners that do not seek funding for that purpose under the Weave Programme or with the additional use of large research equipment  (OPUS LAP proposals).

EXAMPLE: A research project carried out by a research team affiliated with a Polish institution (applying for NCN funding of the Polish part of the project) in partnership with a German research team applying for DFG funding within the framework of the Weave programme and in partnership with Spanish partners that seek independent funding for the Spanish part of the project from other sources.

PLEASE NOTE: International cooperation is not obligatory under the OPUS 26 call and proposals submitted in partnership with foreign partners will not be given preferential treatment over proposals submitted without such partnerships.

PLEASE NOTE: In response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the NCN Council has decided that proposals submitted in response to NCN calls must not provide for any collaboration between Polish and Russian entities. Proposals providing for such collaboration will be rejected as ineligible.

The call budget amounts to 300,000,000 PLN.

Proposals must be submitted electronically via the OSF submission system available at https://osf.opi.org.pl, in compliance with the proposal submission procedure.

Submission deadline for proposals in the OSF submission system: 15 December 2023, 4 p.m..

PLEASE NOTE: OPUS LAP proposals drafted by a Polish research team in partnership with foreign research teams must be submitted to the NCN via the OSF submission system by 15 December 2023, at 4 p.m.. Each foreign research team involved in a project must also submit a funding proposal, including a set of required documents, to its respective research-funding agency, by the date and in accordance with the terms and conditions specified thereby.

Proposals are submitted as follows:

  • research teams from Austria: to the FWF;
  • research teams the Czech Republic: to the GAČR;
  • research teams from Slovenia: to the ARIS;
  • research teams from Germany: to the DFG;
  • research teams from Switzerland: to the SNSF;
  • research teams from Luxembourg: to the FNR; and
  • research teams from Belgium-Flanders: to the FWO.

The call results will be published as follows:

OPUS proposals OPUS LAP proposals

within 6 months of the proposal submission date

 

by the end of June 2024  

within 11 months of the proposal submission date, depending on the date the evaluation is approved by the partner institutions from other countries

 

by the end of November 2024

 

Call timeline for OPUS LAP proposals:

  • in partnership with foreign research teams from Austria, the Czech Republic, Slovenia, Switzerland, Luxembourg and Belgium-Flanders: end of July 2024
  • in partnership with foreign research teams from Germany: end of October 2024

 

Please, read the call documents in this call text.

Show all»

Hide all«

Eligible applicants

Proposals may be submitted by entities specified in the specified in the Act on the National Science Centre, i.e.:

  1. universities;
  2. federations of science and HE entities;
  3. research institutes of the Polish Academy of Sciences, operating pursuant to the Act on the Polish Academy of Sciences of 30 April 2010 (Journal of Laws of 2020, item 1796, as amended);
  4. research institutes operating pursuant to the Act on Research Institutes of 30 April 2010 (Journal of Laws of 2020, item 1383, as amended);
  5. international research institutes established pursuant to separate Acts, operating in the Republic of Poland;

5a. Łukasiewicz Centre operating pursuant to the Act on the Łukasiewicz Research Network of 21 February 2019 (Journal of Laws of 2020, item 2098);

5b. institutes operating within the Łukasiewicz Research Network;

  1. Polish Academy of Arts and Sciences;
  2. other institutions involved in research independently on a continuous basis;
  3. groups of entities comprising at least two entities mentioned in sections 1-9 or at least one institution as such together with at least one company;
  4. scientific and industrial centres within the meaning of the Act on Research Institutes of 30 April 2010 (Journal of Laws of 2020, item 1383, as amended);
  5. research centres of the Polish Academy of Sciences within the meaning of the Act on the Polish Academy of Sciences of 30 April 2010 (Journal of Laws of 2020, item 1796);
  6. scientific libraries;
  7. companies operating as R&D centres within the meaning of the Act on Certain Forms of Support for Innovative Activity of 30 May 2008 (Journal of Laws of 2021, item 706);
  8. legal entities with registered office in Poland;

13a. President of the Central Office of Measures;

  1. natural persons and
  2. companies conducting research in another organisational form than laid down in sections 1-13.

Which proposal should be submitted (OPUS or OPUS LAP)?

Who may act as a principal investigator?

Researchers (whether or not they are PhD holders) whose scientific achievements include at least one research paper published or accepted for publication, can act as principal investigators. In the case of research in the arts, the principal investigator must have at least one paper published or accepted for publication or at least one artistic achievement or achievement in research in art completed. The proposal must include an artistic work and/or achievement covering the period of the last 10 years before the proposal submission year (as of 2013). In specific cases, this period can be extended (by long-term (in excess of 90 days) documented sick leaves or physiotherapy leaves granted on account of being unfit to work. In addition, this period may be extended by the number of months of a childcare leave granted pursuant to the Labour Code and in the case of women, by 18 months for every child born or adopted child, whichever manner of accounting for career breaks is preferable).

In the case of OPUS LAP proposals, a principal investigator of each research team involved in the project must be specified, i.e., two principal investigators in the case of bilateral cooperation and three in the case of trilateral cooperation, including a principal investigator for the Polish research team and principal investigator(s) for the foreign research team(s).

PLEASE NOTE: As of this call edition, a narrative CV is available. We recommend using the annexed (optional) template of the principal investigator’s academic and research track record.

PLEASE NOTE: The principal investigator for the Polish research team must reside in Poland for at least 50% of the project duration period and be available to the host institution for the project. The foregoing obligation does not apply to evidenced project-related business trips or holiday, time off work and other absence from work governed by the applicable laws.

Furthermore, the principal investigator for the Polish research team must be employed at the host institution for the Polish part of the research project for the entire project duration period pursuant to at least a part-time employment contract. The employment requirement does not apply to persons receiving pension under the social insurance scheme.

What is the Weave Programme?

The Weave programme relies on multilateral cooperation between the research-funding institutions associated in Science Europe and is aimed at simplifying the proposal submission and evaluation procedure concerning multilateral international research projects. The programme follows the Lead Agency Procedure (LAP) which is a new proposal review standard adopted by European research-funding institutions, designed to make it easier for international research teams to seek funding for joint research projects, as well as to streamline the process of proposal review by research-funding institutions. The procedure rests on the following key principles:

  • the use of domestic calls carried out by partner agencies to perform a merit-based evaluation of domestic as well as international bilateral and multilateral proposals, which compete on equal terms with domestic proposals;
  • trust in the quality of peer review among cooperating institutions.

This allows for funding proposals for joint projects that involve at least two research teams from different countries to conduct joint research to be reviewed only at one institution, known as the lead agency, relevant to one of the teams involved in the project, under a scheme from its regular call portfolio. The results of merit-based evaluation performed by the lead agency are approved by all the other institutions co-launching the call, which award funding to research projects recommended for funding as a result of that evaluation.

In the case of OPUS 26, the LAP cooperation is possible under the Weave programme cooperation between the NCN and:

  • FWF – Austrian Science Fund;
  • GAČR – Czech Science Foundation;
  • ARIS – Slovenian Research and Innovation Agency;
  • DFG – German Research Foundation;
  • SNSF – Swiss National Science Foundation;
  • FNR - Luxembourg National Research Fund;
  • FWO - Research Foundation – Flanders.

The Polish research team is the coordinating applicant that submits OPUS LAP proposals to the NCN. The NCN as the lead agency under OPUS 26 will perform the merit-based evaluation of OPUS LAP funding proposals for research projects carried out by research teams from Poland, as well as the Czech Republic, Austria, Germany, Slovenia, Switzerland, Luxembourg and Belgium-Flanders.

In the future, the NCN cooperation is to be extended by other research-funding institutions participating in the Weave programme which has replaced NCN’s bilateral international cooperation programmes with Germany (BEETHOVEN), Austria (MOZART), Switzerland (ALPHORN) and multilateral cooperation programme (CEUS).

PLEASE NOTE: Proposals for research projects carried out in bilateral or trilateral cooperation between research teams from Poland, Austria, the Czech Republic, Germany, Slovenia, Switzerland, Luxembourg and Belgium-Flanders in which the FWF, GAČR, DFG, ARIS, SNSF, FNR and FWO act as the lead agency can be submitted under the Weave-UNISONO call.

PLEASE NOTE: Under OPUS 26, international cooperation is not required and proposals submitted in partnership with foreign partners will not be given preferential treatment over proposals that involve no such cooperation.

Are there any restrictions on submitting proposals for research projects under NCN calls?

Restrictions on submitting proposals are laid down in Chapter III of the Regulations on awarding funding for research tasks funded by the National Science Centre as regards research projects.

A researcher may be named as the principal investigator in only one proposal which means that in the present edition of NCN calls, a researcher can only be named once as the principal investigator in an OPUS proposal, OPUS LAP proposal or SONATA proposal.

PLEASE NOTE: Proposals covering research tasks overlapping tasks specified in another proposal submitted earlier may only be submitted after the funding decision has become final.

The total number of NCN projects managed by a researcher and proposals submitted to the NCN and subject to evaluation or recommended for funding in which that researcher is named as the principal investigator, must not be more than two, or three if the researcher manages at least one project funded under an international NCN call or has submitted at least one proposal to an international NCN call. The foregoing limits do not apply to the projects or proposals in the following calls: PRELUDIUM BIS and/or DIOSCURI.

The table below illustrates the eligible funding requests.

Number of NCN research projects I manage 1 and proposals 2 I have submitted to the NCN Can I submit another funding proposal?

Total

Research projects OR proposals in domestic calls3

Research projects OR proposals in international calls4

domestic call

international call

0

0

YES

YES

1

1

YES

YES

2

2

0

NO

YES

2

1

1

YES

YES

2

0

2

YES

YES

≥3

3

NO

NO

Explanation:

1 Project management applies to the period from the date of signing the funding agreement under NCN calls until the date of submitting the final report on the project performance.

2 The limit applies to proposals pending evaluation or recommended for funding.

3 Research projects or proposals under NCN calls: OPUS, PRELUDIUM, SONATINA, SONATA, SONATA BIS, MAESTRO and research projects under HARMONIA andSYMFONIA.

4 The calls launched by the NCN in collaboration with foreign research-funding agencies include:

  • calls launched under EU-funded programmes, e.g., ERA-Net and European Partnerships (UNISONO, POLONEZ, POLONEZ BIS);
  • non-EU-funded calls launched by the networks of research-funding institutions, including within the framework of LAP cooperation (OPUS LAP/ WEAVE, WEAVE UNISONO, IMPRESS-U);
  • bilateral calls of the NCN and foreign partner institutions (GRIEG, POLS, IDEALAB, BEETHOVEN, BEETHOVEN CLASSIC BEETHOVEN LIFE, CEUS, MOZART, ALPHORN, DAINA, SHENG).

What are the topics covered by the call?

Basic research proposals may be submitted to the call in any of 26 NCN panels within three areas:

  • HS – Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences;
  • ST – Physical Sciences and Engineering;
  • NZ – Life Sciences.

PLEASE NOTE: Proposals are reviewed within the panels to which they have been submitted (e.g., HS1, ST1, NZ1). The principal investigator selects the panel. The panel cannot be changed once the proposal has been submitted. If an incorrect panel is selected, proposals may be rejected.

What is the project’s duration?

Under the call, projects can be carried out over the period of:

OPUS proposals OPUS LAP proposals
  • 12 months
  • 24 months
  • 36 months
  • 48 months
  • cooperation with research partners from Austria, Switzerland, Slovenia, Luxembourg and Belgium-Flanders:
    • 24 months
    • 36 months
    • 48 months
  • cooperation with research partners from Germany or the Czech Republic:
    • 24 months
    • 36 months

 

PLEASE NOTE:

  • No trilateral cooperation between Poland, the Czech Republic and Belgium.
  • Project duration must be the same (if possible) or as similar as possible for all research teams involved in the project.

What type of positions are held by the research team members?

Apart from the principal investigators, research tasks in the projects may also be performed by co-investigators, including students, PhD students, post-docs and senior researchers.

PLEASE NOTE: Senior researchers must not be involved in research projects covered by OPUS-LAP proposals.

A post-doc type post is a full-time post, scheduled by the project’s principal investigator for a person who has been conferred a PhD degree within 7 years before employment in the project. This period may be extended pursuant to the Types of costs in research projects funded by the National Science Centre.

PLEASE NOTE: A post-doc must have been conferred a PhD degree by another institution than the one planned to employ them at this post or must have completed a continuous and evidenced post-doctoral fellowship of at least 10 months in another institution than the host institution for the project and in another country than the one in which they have been conferred a PhD degree. A prospective post-doc must be selected in an open call.

PhD students collecting NCN scholarships must be selected in an open call.

A senior researcher position is a full-time employment position co-financed by the host institution to provide employment at this position and scheduled by the principal investigator for a person who has been conferred a PhD degree at least 7 years before the proposal submission date, has completed a foreign fellowship(s) and has expertise, unique competencies, and experience necessary to perform the tasks in the project.

The rationale of involvement of individual members of the research teams in the project is evaluated by the Expert Team. The proposal must include the description of competencies and tasks of individual members of the research team. More on the costs of salaries and scholarships can be found in the Types of costs in research projects funded by the National Science Centre.

The terms of the call do not specify the maximum number of research team members.

How should the Polish project budget be planned?

The project budget must be justified as regards the subject and scope of research and based on realistic calculations. In the OPUS call, the NCN has not set a maximum or minimum amount of the project budget. If an unjustified budget is planned, the proposal may be rejected.

The project budget includes direct costs and indirect costs.

Direct costs include:

  1. remuneration for the principal investigator: 170,000 PLN per annum if the principal investigator is employed pursuant to a full-time employment contract; otherwise, the principal investigator may be paid up to 3,000 PLN per month.
  2. remuneration for co-investigators in the project:
  • funds for full-time employment of post-doc(s): 140,000 PLN per annum (in well-justified cases, this amount may be increased);
  • funds for senior researchers: 70,000 PLN per annum. PLEASE NOTE: Remuneration of a senior researcher must be co-funded by the host institution in the amount of at least 70,000 PLN per annum; no senior researcher position in OPUS LAP proposals,
  • salaries and scholarships for students and PhD students (up to 10,000 PLN per each month of project duration);
  • additional remuneration for members of the research team. If the principal investigator is not employed full-time in the project, his/her remuneration is paid from the pool allocated for additional remuneration;
  1. purchase of research equipment, devices and software;
  2. purchase of materials and small equipment;
  3. outsourced services;
  4. business trips, visits and consultations (PLEASE NOTE: For OPUS LAP proposals: the costs of consultations and visits of co-investigators from research institutions that receive parallel project funding from FWF, GAČR, ARIS, DFG, SNSF, FNR or FWO are not eligible);
  5. compensation for collective investigators, and
  6. other costs crucial to the research project which comply with the Types of costs in research projects funded by the National Science Centre.

PLEASE NOTE: The costs of publication of monographs containing project results (for the purposes of §10 of the Regulation on evaluation of the quality of research activity issued by the Minister of Science and Higher Education of 22 February 2019 (Journal of Laws of 2019, item 392) are not eligible until successfully reviewed by the NCN.

Indirect costs include:

  • indirect costs of open access (OA) of up to 2% of direct costs that may only be spent on open access to publications and research data,
  • other indirect costs of up to 20% of direct costs that may be spent on the costs that are directly related to the project, including the cost of open access to publications and research data.

During the project implementation, the host institution must agree with the principal investigator the coverage of at least 25% of the indirect costs. Any expenditure made from that amount must meet the eligibility criteria laid down herein.

PLEASE NOTE: Please note: In the case of publications governed by the NCN’s Open Access Policy, open access expenses must not be planned as direct costs.

If unjustified costs are planned, a proposal may be rejected.

PLEASE NOTE: An OPUS LAP proposal must contain a budget table listing project costs of all foreign research teams involved in the project, drafted in accordance with the respective rules of the FWF, GAČR, DFG, ARIS, SNSF, FNR and FWO. Choose and complete a budget table section in Excel appropriate for the research team.

The budget must include the costs requested by foreign research teams from the FWF, GAČR, DFG, ARIS, SNSF, FNR and FWO identical with the costs specified in the NCN proposals submitted to the said institutions, as well as justifications for the amounts entered. Foreign project budgets in the budget table are subject to a merit-based evaluation to verify whether the project costs are reasonable as regards the subject and scope of research. PLEASE NOTE: If the costs in the budget table are not justified, the proposal may be rejected.

The costs in the budget table must be entered in EUR (budgets of research teams from Austria, Slovenia, Germany, Luxembourg and Belgium-Flanders) and in CZK (budgets of research teams from the Czech Republic) or in CHF (budgets of research teams from Switzerland), according to the following exchange rates:

  • 1 EUR = 4.5940 PLN
  • 1 CZK =0.1885 PLN
  • 1 CHF = 4.8067 PLN

A completed budget table must be annexed to OPUS LAP proposals.

PLEASE NOTE: In the case of OPUS LAP proposals, research projects carried out by the Polish research teams as of 2025 may be planned in the OSF submission system.

To find out more information and examples of the budget table, please read the Guidelines for Polish research teams submitting OPUS LAP proposals.

Open Access publication of research results

Together with other European cOAlition S agencies, the National Science Centre has drafted its Open Access Policy. In accordance with its vision of open access to research results and publications, the NCN requires that all research results should be made available in full and immediate open access. In accordance with the principles of Plan S, the National Science Centre recognizes the following publication routes as compliant with its open access policy:

  1. publication in open access journals and on open access platforms registered, or with pending registration, in the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ);
  2. publication in subscription journals (hybrid journals[1]), as long as the Version of Record (VoR[2]) or the Author Accepted Manuscript (AAM[3]) is published, by the author or publisher, in an open repository immediately upon the article’s online publication;
  3. publication in journals covered by an open access licence within the framework of so-called transformative agreements, inscribed in the Efficiency and Standards for Article Charges registry (ESAC-registry).

    Publication in transformative journals (TJ[4]); whereas transformative journals must meet the criteria laid down in the Guidelines on the Implementation of Plan S and must allow open access publication of original scientific articles. This publication route (3) only applies to articles accepted for publication or published before 31 December 2024.

Papers must be published using the CC-BY licence. In the case of transformative journals, the CC-BY-SA licence can also be used. Furthermore, the CC-BY-ND licence can be used (regardless of the publication route selected).

More information on open access publication terms / instructions can be found here, as amended.

Furthermore, please read the NCN’s Open Access Instructions.

In grant agreements concluded after 1 January 2021, the data underpinning the scientific publications resulting from the project funded by the NCN must be well-documented pursuant to the FAIR Principles standing for machine or manual Findability, Accessibility, Interoperability or Reusability (the so-called “FAIR Data”). Where possible, data must be made available in the repository, according to the Creative Commons Public Domain licence (CC0[5] licence). The data citation principles laid down in the Declaration of Data Citation Principles by FORCE 11 and the TOP Guidelines must be complied with. Metadata describing the data sets must be in line with the OpenAIRE.


[1]A hybrid journal is a subscription journal in which some of the articles are open access and some require payment of a publication fee.

[2]VoR is a version of record published in a journal with its own typeface and branding. Other terms: published version or publisher’s pdf.

[3]AAM is the final manuscript version created by the author, including all the revisions introduced after the peer review, and accepted for publication in the journal. Other terms: post print, accepted author manuscript.

[4]A transformative journal is a journal that is actively committed to transitioning from a subscription journal to a partially or fully Open Access journal. The current list of journals which have been afforded the Transformative Journal Status is available at https://www.coalition-s.org/plan-s-compliant-transformative-journals.

[5] CC0 licence is a licence that allows the distribution of data to public domain. Pursuant to the licence, authors can give up their intellectual property rights to the extend allowed by domestic law; the licence does not affect patent rights, rights of publicity or privacy. 

Proposal form

The information required in the proposal:

PLEASE NOTE: The information below must be entered in English.

OPUS proposals OPUS LAP proposals

1. Information on the principal investigator, including:

  • information on his/her academic and research career and research experience, as well as 1-10 papers; for research in art, 1-10 most important papers published or artistic achievements and achievements in research in art;
  • information on research project management or other research funding under NCN calls or under other national or international calls;

in the proposal submission year or over the period of 10 years prior to the proposal submission year (including applicable breaks);

1. Information on the principal investigators (principal investigator for the Polish research team and principal investigator(s) for the foreign research team(s)), including:

  • information on his/her academic and research career and research experience, as well as 1-10 papers; for research in art, 1-10 most important papers published or artistic achievements and achievements in research in art;
  • information on research project management or other research funding under NCN calls or under other national calls;

in the proposal submission year or over the period of 10 years prior to the proposal submission year (including applicable breaks);

2. key information on the proposal and host institution for the project (also in Polish);

2. key information on the proposal and host institutions for the project (information for Polish entities also in Polish);

3. work plan (also in Polish);

3. work plan including research tasks performed by the Polish research team (also in Polish) and by each foreign research team involved in the project;

4. information on the scope of work carried out by the co-investigators in the project;

5. summary of the project;

6. abstract for the general public (also in Polish);

7. short project description with bibliography (up to 5 pages, A4);

8. full project description with bibliography (up to 15 pages, A4);

9. information on research projects carried out in international cooperation and related benefits (required only for projects performed with the use of large international research equipment by the Polish research teams or in cooperation with foreign partners);

9. information on research projects carried out in international cooperation and related benefits (only for projects performed pursuant to the LAP cooperation or with the use of large international research equipment by the Polish research teams or in cooperation with foreign partners);
PLEASE NOTE: The NCN does not require any documents (agreements) confirming the LAP cooperation between Polish and foreign research teams.

10. information on ethical aspects of research

11. information on the data management plan concerning data generated or used in the course of a research project, as required by the proposal;

12. project budget drafted in accordance with the Regulations;

12. Polish project budget drafted in accordance with the Regulations and foreign project budget included in the budget table drafted in accordance with the respective rules of the FWF, GAČR, ARIS, DFG, SNSF, FNR and FWO.

OPUS PROPOSAL FORM

OPUS LAP PROPOSAL FORM

Can proposals in this call include application for state aid?

Proposals in the call may include application for state aid, except where funding is requested by an individual. For more information, please go to the State Aid section.

In the case of research projects carried out in a host institution for which project funding constitutes state aid, funds for students and PhD students can only be planned in the form described in the category “salary for students and PhD students” in the Types of costs in research projects funded by the NCN.

PLEASE NOTE: The documents needed to apply for state aid must be signed with a qualified electronic signature in the PAdES format.

PLEASE NOTE: Further to the need to amend the Regulation of the Minister of Science and Higher Education of 9 September 2015 on the terms and procedures of granting state aid via the National Science Centre, state aid will only be granted to those applicants whose projects are recommended for funding, provided that state aid amendments introduced by the Regulation in question are accommodated. If a project needs to be modified, the applicants will be notified thereof prior to signing the agreement.

What is the proposal evaluation procedure?

Proposals are subject to an eligibility check and merit-based evaluation. Eligibility check is made as follows:

OPUS proposals OPUS LAP proposals

NCN coordinators

NCN coordinators and partner institutions, such as FWF, GAČR, ARIS, DFG, SNSF, FNR and FWO, when proposals are submitted by the foreign research teams, according to their respective rules.

Only complete proposals that comply with the requirements of the call text are eligible for a merit-based evaluation.

PLEASE NOTE: Under OPUS 26, OPUS LAP proposals are evaluated together with other proposals submitted to the call.

Proposals approved as eligible are subject to a merit-based evaluation performed in two stages:

Stage I: Evaluation by an Expert Team formed by the NCN, based on the data included in the proposal and annexes thereto, with the exception of the full project description. Individual reviews are drafted by two members of the Expert Team acting independently. In the case of a proposal which is assigned an auxiliary NCN Review Panel specifying disciplines covered by other NCN review panels than the one to which the proposal was submitted, the Chair of the Expert Team may decide to seek another review from a member of another Expert Team (interdisciplinary proposals).

Then, based on the discussions, a list of proposals recommended for stage II of evaluation is compiled by the Expert Team at the first meeting.

Stage II: Proposals are submitted to at least two external reviewers who make individual reviews based on the data included in the proposal and annexes thereto, with the exception of the short project description. Then, based on the reviews of the reviewers and discussions at the second meeting, a ranking short list of proposals recommended for funding is compiled by the Expert Team at the second meeting.

The Expert Team recommends only those OPUS LAP proposals for funding that are among 20% of proposals with the highest rank among all those submitted to the OPUS call under individual NCN review panels. Following the merit-based evaluation, the NCN provides the partner institutions with information on the results thereof together with a list of projects recommended for funding for their approval. The proposal approval procedure performed in partnership with the foreign research teams from Germany is described on the DFG website (see Points 3 and 4). The NCN Director awards funding for research projects to be performed by the Polish research teams, provided that the partner institutions award funding to the foreign research teams.

To find out more on the proposal evaluation procedure, please read the Proposal evaluation procedure for the Expert Teams and watch our  tutorial video.

PLEASE NOTE: Proposals are reviewed within the panels to which they have been submitted (e.g., HS1, ST1, NZ1). The panel is selected by the principal investigator. The panel must not be changed once the proposal has been submitted. Auxiliary NCN Review Panels allow to choose experts and reviewers to perform the merit-based evaluation of proposals. The Chair of the Expert Team may decide that interdisciplinary proposals be subject to another review by an expert from another panel.

What is reviewed in the evaluation of proposals?

The evaluation of proposals is mainly focused on:

  1. compliance with the basic research criterion;
  2. quality and innovative nature of research or tasks to be performed;
  3. impact of the research project on the advancement of the scientific discipline;
  4. assessment of the feasibility of the proposed project;
  5. scientific achievements of the principal investigator, including publications in renowned academic press/ journals;
  6. assessment of the results of research projects conducted by the principal investigator, funded by the NCN or from other sources;
  7. relevance of the costs to be incurred with regards to the subject and scope of the research and
  8. preparation of the proposal and compliance with other requirements of the call text.

The proposal evaluation criteria are available here.

In addition, the following aspects are evaluated in the case of OPUS LAP proposals:

  • a balanced and complementary contribution of all research teams in the project. This is to say that the contribution of each team involved in the project must be significant and is necessary, and their respective tasks should complement one another to create a coherent joint research project,
  • academic and research career of foreign principal investigators and
  • completion of other research projects by the principal investigators of foreign research teams.

PLEASE NOTE: Scientific track record, unique competences and expertise of prospective senior researchers as well as rationale of their employment are subject to a merit-based evaluation. If the foregoing terms are not met and/or justification is missing, the proposal may be rejected.

PLEASE NOTE: Proposals with a zero score or “no” decision agreed by the Expert Team in any reviewed criterion (except for the data management and ethics issues in research) must not be recommended for funding.

Who performs the merit-based evaluation of proposals?

Proposals are evaluated in the review panels (e.g., HS1, ST1, NZ1). Experts are selected by the NCN Council from among outstanding Polish and foreign researchers who are at least PhD holders. Expert teams are established for each call edition. The composition of the Expert Team is subject to the number and subjects of proposals submitted to each panel.

When and how will the results be announced?

The call results are announced on the NCN website and communicated to the applicants by way of a decision by the NCN Director as follows:

OPUS proposals OPUS LAP proposals

within 6 months of the proposal submission date, by the end of June 2024

within 11 months of the proposal submission date, subject to the date the evaluation is approved by the partner agencies, by the end of November 2023.

The call timeline for OPUS LAP proposals:

  • in partnership with foreign research teams from the Czech Republic, Austria, Slovenia, Switzerland, Luxembourg and Belgium-Flanders: end of July 2024
  • in partnership with foreign research teams from Germany: end of October 2024.

PLEASE NOTE: Polish research teams must provide the merit-based evaluation documents to their partner teams involved in the project (co-applicants) for review.

Detailed information

Please read the Information for Applicants/ OPUS proposals on the NCN website and Guidelines for Polish research teams submitting OPUS LAP proposal/s.

Should you have any more questions, please contact us by e-mail at: informacja@ncn.gov.pl or by phone at

Useful information

If you are intending to submit a proposal to the OPUS 26 call:

  1. read all call documents included in the call text, in particular:
  1. obtain data from the host institution for the project that is required to complete the proposal and find out about the internal procedures that may affect the proposal and project performance (cost planned in the project, procedure for acquiring signature(s) of authorised representative(s) of the entity to confirm submission of the proposal);
  2. if a group of Polish entities applies, a research project cooperation agreement must be drafted;
  3. acceptance letters from publishers must be prepared to confirm that the paper has been accepted for publication (when the scientific achievements section includes papers accepted for publication that have not been published yet).

Before the proposal is submitted to the NCN:

  1. check that the information in and annexes to the proposal are correct. The verification of the proposal for completeness in the OSF submission system by pressing the Sprawdź kompletność [Check completeness] button does not guarantee that the information has been entered correctly and that the required annexes have been attached;
  2. check if the tabs have been completed in the correct language;
  3. disable the final version of the proposal to the NCN;
  4. download and sign the confirmation of proposal submission (principal investigator and authorised representative(s) of the entity);

PLEASE NOTE: In the case of OPUS LAP proposals, the NCN does not require any documents (agreements) confirming the LAP cooperation between Polish and foreign research teams, nor does it require OPUS LAP proposals or documents attached thereto to be signed by members of the foreign research teams.

  1. attach the confirmation of proposal submission with a signature.

Once the proposal is completed and relevant annexes attached, the proposal must be submitted to the NCN electronically via the OSF submission system using the Wyślij do NCN [Send to NCN] button.

In addition, in the case of OPUS LAP proposals, each foreign research team involved in a project must submit a funding proposal, together with a set of required documents, to its respective partner institution (FWF, GAČR, ARIS, DFG, SNSF, FNR and FWO), by the date and according to the rules specified thereby. If the partner institution requires applicants to submit a copy of the OPUS LAP proposals to its respective submission system, a complete English language version of the OPUS LAP proposal in PDF format must be generated following submission of the OPUS LAP proposal to the OSF submission system, and sent to the foreign research team.

Once the call for proposals has been closed:

  1. evaluation of proposals will be carried out;
  2. after each stage of evaluation, the funding decision by the NCN Director will be announced;
  3. if a proposal is recommended for funding, an OPUS or OPUS LAP funding agreement will be entered into; and
  4. the project will be carried out pursuant to the funding agreement and Regulations on the implementation of research projects, fellowships and scholarships. In the case of OPUS LAP proposals, research projects must be performed by the Polish and foreign research teams according to the rules of the NCN and respective partner institutions.

In the event of a breach of the call procedure or other formal infringements, the applicant may appeal against the decision of the NCN Director with the Committee of Appeals of the NCN Council. The appeal must be lodged within 14 days of the effective delivery of the decision.

Please read the rules according to which the NCN processes personal data. In the case of OPUS LAP proposals, the following partner institutions are joint controllers of personal data:

Data processing information applicable to the Weave programme is available here.

In the case of OPUS LAP proposals in partnership with research teams from Germany, DFG is the data recipient (www.dfg.de/en/service/privacy_policy).

Call documentation

  1. Terms and conditions of the OPUS call   
  2. Rules for research projects carried out within the framework of LAP cooperation
  3. Regulations on awarding funding for research tasks funded by the National Science Centre as regards research projects
  4. NCN panels
  5. Regulations on awarding scholarships in the NCN-funded research projects
  6. Costs in research projects funded by the National Science Centre
  7. OPUS and OPUS LAP proposal form template
  8. Budget table / OPUS LAP proposals
  9. Research project cooperation agreement (compulsory if a group of entities applies)
  10. State aid
  11. Guidelines for Polish research teams submitting OPUS LAP proposals
  12. Guidelines for applicants to complete the proposal in the OSF submission system
  13. Guidelines for applicants to complete the Data Management Plan form in the research project
  14. Guidelines for applicants to complete the Ethics Issues form in the research project
  15. Open Access Policy at the NCN, as amended.
  16. Instructions: Open Access Policy at the NCN
  17. Code of the National Science Centre on research integrity and applying for research funding
  18. Proposal submission procedure

Documents applicable to the evaluation of proposals:

  1. Proposal evaluation criteria
  2. Expert Teams of the National Science Centre – formation and appointing
  3. Proposal evaluation procedure for the expert teams
  4. Service of decisions of the NCN Director
  5. Appealing against the NCN Director’s decisions

Documents to be read before commencing NCN projects:

  1. OPUS and OPUS LAP agreement templates
  2. Order on the implementation of inspection procedure at the registered office of the institution
  3. Guidelines for entities auditing the implementation of research projects funded by the National Science Centre
  4. Evaluation of monographs in research projects funded by the National Science Centre
  5. NCN Council Resolution on collaboration with the Russian Federation within the framework of NCN-funded grants