On March 25, the White House and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced that HHS’s Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) would be awarding $6.1 billion in supplemental funding grants to the nation’s 1,376 federally qualified community health centers (FQHCs). The funds were allocated from the $7.6 billion for FQHCs that was included in the recent $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan Act law. As supplemental funding, it is important to understand that this $6.1 billion is in addition to the $5.6 billion of Section 330 federal grant funding that health centers were already scheduled to receive this year. Last year, health centers received a $1.3 billion supplemental grant award from the CARES Act. This award is nearly five times larger. For each individual center, the award sizes vary based on size as determined by the following HRSA formula: a base value of $500,000, plus $125 per patient reported in the 2019 Uniform Data System (UDS), plus $250 per uninsured patient reported in the 2019 UDS. With $6.1 billion spread across 1,376 health centers, the average award size is $4.4 million per center with larger centers receiving awards of over $20-30 million dollars. To put those numbers into context, the average annual revenue for a health a center from all sources (including payer reimbursements and grants) is approximately $20 million per year. Thus, on average these grants represent about twenty percent of a health center’s annual budget.