Federal grant program covering skilled trades training goes live
The Workforce Pell Grant program, established under President Trump’s big, beautiful bill in July 2025, allows students to leverage Pell Grants for shorter-term vocational programs
Image: NEIT
July 1 marked the official launch of a federal program that allows U.S. students to tap Pell Grants to pay for short-term workforce training programs spanning a range of industries, including the skilled trades.
Catch up quick: Pell Grants have historically served as a key source of student aid, helping low-income individuals offset the cost of college; however, the grants have been limited to programs at least 600 hours and 15 weeks long.
- The Workforce Pell Grant program, established under President Trump’s big, beautiful bill in July 2025, expands eligibility, allowing students to leverage Pell Grants for shorter-term vocational programs.
What’s happening: According to final regulations released by the Education Department in May, schools and states can now begin getting programs approved for the grants.
- To qualify, programs must be offered by accredited institutions; run between eight and 15 weeks, covering 150 to 599 clock hours; and clear certain completion-rate and job-placement thresholds, among other requirements.
- Go deeper
Why it matters: The program could help expand the HVAC and plumbing industries’ workforce pipelines by lowering the financial barriers to entry.
- By 2033, roughly 100,000 new recipients a year would receive grants of about $2,220 apiece, according to federal estimates.
Yes, but: Standing up a new federal program is “not a matter of flipping a switch,” the Association of Community College Trustees (ACCT) wrote last week, as schools will need to retool systems, and state governors have to sign off on each program before it’s submitted to the Department of Education for final approval.
- “In many places, meaningful student access will likely build over time and become more visible in 2027 and beyond,” ACCT added. “July 1 is the starting line for implementation, not the finish line for impact.”
What they’re saying: “No single program will fix the workforce shortage overnight, but Workforce Pell gives contractors a real new tool for attracting and training the next generation of [professionals],” ACCA wrote in June.
The big picture: The Workforce Pell Grant program is part of a broader effort by the Trump administration to bolster the skilled trades by investing in apprenticeships and modernizing workforce programs.
- Meanwhile, U.S. enrollment in HVAC and plumbing programs at public two-year colleges, as of the spring semester of this year, is up 64 and 47 percent, respectively, compared to spring 2021, as Homepros recently reported.
Keep reading
Residential water heater shipments slide in March, Q1
Shipments of residential gas storage water heaters fell 2.9 percent year-over-year during the month, while electric water heater shipments declined by 5.7 percent
U.S. heating demand climbs 12% in December
The number of December Heating Degree Days jumped 12 percent compared to 2023, according to data from the National Weather Service
Heat pump startup Jetson lands $50 million investment
Founded in 2024, the Vancouver-based company last year launched its flagship product, Jetson Air, a “smart, central heat pump system”


