The site is expected to become a virtual centre of excellence providing information and advice for young people, teachers and practitioners.
The Camelot Foundation is keen to hear from organisations working in partnership that have a record of providing online services covering self-harm or young people's mental health.
Applications must be submitted by 28 July and a decision will be made on 11 December.
The Foundation published Truth Hurts earlier this year, based on a two-year inquiry into self-harm that it gave funding to the Mental Health Foundation to carry out. The report says young people who self-harm are more likely to turn to peers for help than practitioners or relatives.
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