February

1) Jeannette Rankin National Scholar Grant

Why It Slaps: This is one of the strongest fits for older hybrid/blended learners because it is built for nontraditional students, not just fresh-out-of-high-school applicants. If your hybrid path looks like “work, family, community college or first bachelor’s, and a flexible schedule,” this one is a real fit. It is especially strong for women and nonbinary students 35+ who need a program that understands adult-life pressure, not just GPA talk.

Amount: Unrestricted scholar grant; the current national page does not post one fixed public dollar amount.

Deadline: The 2026 cycle closed February 13, 2026; the foundation says the next application period is opening November 2026.

Apply/info: Official Jeannette Rankin National Scholar Grant page

March

2) Get Educated Online College Scholarship

Why It Slaps: This is one of the cleanest direct matches on the internet for hybrid/blended students because the sponsor is explicitly funding students in accredited online degree programs. Many hybrid students get lumped into the same flexibility-first bucket as distance learners, so this is a much sharper target than random general scholarship pages. It is also a nice outside scholarship to stack on top of school aid.

Amount: $1,000

Deadline: March 15 or October 15.

Apply/info: Official GetEducated scholarship page

3) College JumpStart Scholarship

Why It Slaps: I like this one because it openly includes college students and non-traditional students, which keeps the door open for many blended learners who do not fit the classic freshman profile. It is also refreshingly simple: the program is focused on educational goals, not campus residency or a bunch of format restrictions. For students building a hybrid schedule around work or family, that simplicity matters.

Amount: $1,000

Deadline: March 31, 2026 for the currently posted cycle.

Apply/info: Official College JumpStart Scholarship page

April

4) Return2College Scholarship

Why It Slaps: This one is unusually useful for blended students because the eligibility language is broad and practical. It covers people starting higher education soon as well as current full-time or part-time students, which is exactly where many hybrid learners land. It is a particularly good fit for adults returning to school, career-changers, and students whose schedules are too messy for “traditional student only” scholarship rules.

Amount: $1,000

Deadline: April 30, 2026.

Apply/info: Official Return2College scholarship page

5) Phoenix® Bachelor’s Scholarship

Why It Slaps: This is a solid institution-based option for hybrid/blended learners who are specifically targeting a flexible adult-serving university. The big advantage is that it is built for new and returning students with work experience, which lines up well with the profile of many blended learners. It is not universal money, but it is very actionable for the right student.

Amount: Up to $1,000

Deadline: The page currently shows April 30, 2026 for the April cycle and May 31, 2026 for the May cycle.

Apply/info: Official Phoenix® Bachelor’s Scholarship page

6) Current Student Scholarship — Bachelor’s (University of Phoenix)

Why It Slaps: Already enrolled hybrid/blended students often ignore internal school scholarships because they assume the big money is outside the college. That is a mistake. This one is worth watching if you are already in the University of Phoenix system and performing well academically, because it rewards progress you have already made instead of forcing you to restart the scholarship hunt from scratch.

Amount: Up to $2,000

Deadline: The current page shows April 30, 2026 for the April cycle.

Apply/info: Official Current Student Scholarship — Bachelor’s page

7) Niche $2,000 No Essay Scholarship

Why It Slaps: This is not hybrid-specific, but it is hybrid-friendly because it does not care whether your classes are fully online, blended, or on campus. It is fast, clean, and useful as a “keep my pipeline moving” scholarship while you work on slower institutional or essay-based awards. For students juggling remote modules and in-person sessions, quick-entry scholarships like this are worth stacking, not dismissing.

Amount: $2,000

Deadline: April 30, 2026.

Apply/info: Official Niche $2,000 No Essay Scholarship page

Every Month

8) Sallie $2,000 No Essay Scholarship

Why It Slaps: This is one of the better monthly “easy stack” scholarships because the official page is clear, the sponsor is recognizable, and the application burden is low. It is a good match for hybrid/blended students who do not have tons of time and need scholarships they can keep re-entering without rebuilding a whole packet every month. It should never be your only play, but it is a smart side play.

Amount: $2,000

Deadline: Monthly; Sallie says it is a monthly contest and that applicants can enter each month.

Apply/info: Official Sallie $2,000 No Essay Scholarship page

9) College Ave $1,000 Monthly Scholarship

Why It Slaps: This is another practical pipeline-filler for flexible learners. The main strength is consistency: one winner is chosen every month, and the site explicitly says you can come back and enter again. For hybrid students trying to piece together tuition support from multiple smaller sources, predictable monthly entries are useful because they fit around busy terms, work shifts, and commuting.

Amount: $1,000

Deadline: Monthly; College Ave says you can enter its $1,000 scholarship once every month.

Apply/info: Official College Ave promotions page

May

10) ScholarshipOwl $2,026 No Essay Scholarship

Why It Slaps: This one is not a prestige scholarship, but it is a live, easy-entry, current-cycle option that can help hybrid students keep momentum. The official page shows a current deadline, current winner announcements, and a verified listing. That makes it more usable than a lot of dead-end scholarship pages floating around search results. Treat it as a quick-entry add-on, not your main plan.

Amount: $2,026

Deadline: May 1, 2026.

Apply/info: Official ScholarshipOwl $2,026 scholarship page

June

11) UMGC Phi Theta Kappa Scholarship

Why It Slaps: This is one of the best verified transfer-friendly options in this guide. If your hybrid/blended route started in community college or a transfer pathway, PTK membership can actually turn into real money here. I especially like that UMGC is built around flexible adult-serving education, so this is not an award bolted onto a traditional-campus mindset. It is a smart fit for academically strong transfer students.

Amount: Up to $3,000 per year

Deadline: June 15 annual priority deadline.

Apply/info: Official UMGC Phi Theta Kappa Scholarship page

12) UMGC Donor Scholarships

Why It Slaps: This is a strong umbrella opportunity because one annual application can put eligible students in front of a large donor-funded scholarship pool. For hybrid/blended students who are already in a flexible, adult-serving university ecosystem, that matters. It is also a better use of time than spraying applications everywhere, because the school is matching students to multiple donor-funded options through one process.

Amount: Varies; UMGC says it offers more than 100 donor-funded scholarships each year.

Deadline: June 15 priority deadline.

Apply/info: Official UMGC Donor Scholarships page

13) WGU Online Access Scholarship

Why It Slaps: This is one of the most relevant awards anywhere for hybrid-like or heavily remote learners because it tackles the actual barrier many flexible students face: technology and internet access. That is a real pain point for students whose education depends on home connectivity, devices, webcams, and stable service. It is not just symbolic aid. It is targeted support for the infrastructure that flexible learning requires.

Amount: Varies

Deadline: June 30, 2026.

Apply/info: Official WGU Online Access Scholarship page

14) WGU AI Edge Scholarship

Why It Slaps: For hybrid/blended students going into AI or tech-adjacent programs, this is one of the better school-based awards live right now. The value is real, the deadline is clearly posted, and the award is tied to future-ready programs rather than vague marketing language. If your learning format is flexible because you are trying to upskill while working, this is exactly the kind of institutional award worth prioritizing.

Amount: Up to $5,000

Deadline: June 30, 2026.

Apply/info: Official WGU AI Edge Scholarship page

Rolling / Varies

15) Imagine America Adult Skills Education Program (ASEP)

Why It Slaps: This is a strong pick for adults in career-focused hybrid, technical, and skills-based programs. The page is built around adult learners, participating career colleges, and practical training areas like IT, medical, mechanics, business, and design. That makes it especially useful for students whose education is not a classic dorm-campus experience. For workforce-minded learners, this is one of the better targeted fits.

Amount: $1,000 tuition grant

Deadline: Apply through the scholarship portal and selected participating school; the main page does not post one single national cutoff date.

Apply/info: Official Imagine America ASEP page

16) ASU Online Scholarships

Why It Slaps: This is a strong institutional route for students whose blended or flexible schedule is tied to ASU Online. The biggest reason it belongs here is that ASU plainly states that online students are eligible for scholarships, grants, and other aid, and it points students toward FAFSA plus additional scholarship searching. That makes it a good “big-school flexible learner” option, especially if you want an established university system.

Amount: Varies

Deadline: Varies by scholarship.

Apply/info: Official ASU Online scholarships page

FAQ

Are there many scholarships that literally say “hybrid” or “blended learning”?

Not really. Most verified official pages I found use language like online, distance learning, adult learner, part-time, or school-specific online-campus wording instead. That is why this guide focuses on awards hybrid students can actually use, not just keyword matches that look good in search.

Can hybrid students apply for scholarships labeled “online students”?

Very often, yes, but only when the official eligibility page actually fits the way your program is coded by the school. If your hybrid program is administered through the school’s online/flexible division or uses the same student status, these scholarships can be a strong fit. Always check the official program language before assuming.

Do hybrid/blended students still need FAFSA?

Yes. Several of the school-based options in this guide either require FAFSA or strongly push students to file it early, especially for institutional and donor-funded aid. Skipping FAFSA is one of the easiest ways to lose money at flexible-learning schools.

Are monthly no-essay scholarships worth the time?

Yes, as a side strategy. They are usually lower-effort and easier to re-enter, which is great for busy hybrid students. But they should sit next to FAFSA, school scholarships, transfer awards, and donor-funded campus aid, not replace them.

What should a hybrid/blended student prioritize first?

Start with the school-based money that best matches your format, transfer history, and enrollment status. Then stack outside scholarships like Get Educated, Return2College, and the monthly sweepstakes entries. The strongest real-world combo is usually institutional aid + FAFSA + a few outside scholarships, not one miracle scholarship.

Related links

These live pages on ScholarshipsAndGrants.us fit this topic well and should help with internal linking:

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