CHED has launched the Allied Health Experiential Assistance for Deserving Students, more commonly called the AHEAD Grant, a one-time financial assistance program meant to help students shoulder the cost of clinical training, internship, and other Related Learning Experience requirements.
According to CHED’s AHEAD Grant portal, the program provides a one-time ₱25,000 grant for qualified allied-health students who are completing their Related Learning Experience or RLE hours.
The AHEAD Grant is a government financial assistance program for students in health-related college programs.
The funding for the AHEAD Grant came from a ₱500-million allocation proposed by Senator Bam Aquino during the 2026 national budget deliberations. The assistance was intended to help nursing and allied health students shoulder RLE-related expenses, including costs connected to clinical training and internships.
Unlike regular tuition scholarships, this grant focuses on expenses connected to RLE, clinical duty, internship, practicum, and other hands-on training requirements.
For many nursing and allied health students, these requirements are not optional. They are part of the course and are needed before a student can graduate. However, they can also be expensive because students often have to pay for transportation, uniforms, medical requirements, insurance, lodging, food, and other training-related costs.
This is the gap that the AHEAD Grant aims to address.
In health-related courses, learning does not happen only inside the classroom. Students are also required to train in hospitals, clinics, communities, laboratories, and other health facilities.
This training is called Related Learning Experience or RLE.
For students, RLE is where they apply what they learned in school to real-life situations. For example, nursing students may be assigned to hospitals for clinical duty, while other allied health students may undergo laboratory, community-based, or field-based training.
The problem is that these requirements often come with extra costs. RLE expenses may include transportation, lodging, food, uniforms, medical clearances, insurance, and other related costs. For some students, these expenses can become a major burden, especially during the final years of their course.
Qualified students may receive a one-time ₱25,000 financial assistance under the AHEAD Grant.
This means the assistance is not a monthly allowance and not a recurring scholarship. It is a one-time subsidy meant to help cover training-related expenses.
The program is intended for qualified students taking nursing and other allied health programs with a Related Learning Experience component.
Based on CHED’s online guidelines preview, applicants must be Filipino citizens, enrolled in a CHED-recognized bachelor’s degree program, and enrolled in courses with an RLE component.
CHED has identified several health-related and allied medical programs as priority courses under the AHEAD Grant.
These include:
Students should still check the official CHED AHEAD Grant portal or coordinate with their school or CHED Regional Office to confirm whether their program is included and whether they meet the complete qualifications.
The AHEAD Grant is meant to help cover costs related to RLE, internships, practicums, and clinical or community-based training.
These may include expenses such as:
For students who have to travel to hospitals, clinics, laboratories, or community assignments, the grant may help ease some of the financial pressure that comes with completing their training requirements.
Students may apply through the official CHED AHEAD Grant Portal at ahead.ched.gov.ph.
The portal allows students to create an account and submit their application online.
Interested students and higher education institutions are also advised to coordinate with their respective CHED Regional Offices for the complete guidelines, application timeline, and documentary requirements.
While applicants should still check the official portal and their CHED Regional Office for the final documentary requirements, students who are interested in applying should prepare basic school and identity documents ahead of time.
These may include documents that can help prove:
Students should make sure that all details in their school records, email address, and application documents are accurate before submitting.
No.
The AHEAD Grant is different from a regular tuition scholarship.
A tuition scholarship usually helps pay for tuition and school fees. The AHEAD Grant is focused on expenses connected to hands-on training requirements, especially RLE, clinical duty, internship, practicum, and community-based training.
This distinction is important because many students may already receive tuition support but still struggle with out-of-pocket expenses during clinical training.
The AHEAD Grant comes at a time when many Filipino students continue to face financial challenges while pursuing health-related degrees.
For nursing and allied health students, the final years of study can be especially demanding. Aside from classes and exams, they must also complete long hours of clinical or field training. These requirements are necessary for graduation, but they can also become a financial burden.
By providing a one-time ₱25,000 subsidy, the AHEAD Grant may help qualified students continue their training, complete their course requirements, and move closer to becoming part of the country’s healthcare workforce.
For students who are already struggling with the cost of RLE and internship, this assistance may not cover everything, but it can provide much-needed relief at a critical stage in their education.
The CHED AHEAD Grant is a one-time ₱25,000 financial assistance program for qualified nursing and allied health students who are completing RLE, internship, clinical training, or similar hands-on course requirements.
Students who believe they are qualified should visit the official CHED AHEAD Grant Portal and coordinate with their school or CHED Regional Office for the latest requirements and application schedule.
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