Skip to content
CharitiesAidWelfare, Federal Budget

New analysis shows youth housing supplement will boost national productivity through education and employment

Home Time Youth Housing Coalition 2 mins read

The Home Time Youth Housing Coalition, representing over 180 organisations across Australia, has launched a new report at Parliament House that synthesises existing and new research, revealing the productivity gain that a targeted youth housing supplement would deliver. 

The research highlighted examples of dedicated youth tenancies with support, in which housing stability increased from 27% to over 70%. Similarly, educational engagement increased from 28% to as high as 77%, and employment rates rose from 26% to as high as 90%.

For every dollar invested in youth housing, researchers estimate $2.60 in community benefit.

The report also outlines the economic cost of inaction, with billions of dollars spent each year on avoidable costs across various government systems. Youth homelessness costs governments $626 million each year in avoidable costs, early school leaving costs $315 million per year and disengagement from work and study costs $470 million per year.

It also reiterates the harm done to individual children and young people by early and prolonged homelessness and the negative impact this has on local communities across Australia.

Currently, young people experiencing homelessness get less income support than homeless adults, less access to existing social housing, and do not benefit from new funding for social housing available through the Housing Australia Future Fund.  

Home Time is calling on the Federal Government to introduce a targeted national youth housing supplement to provide young people with fair access to existing and new social housing. 

A youth housing supplement would make youth tenancies financially viable across the community housing sector, enable the national scaling of proven youth housing models, improve education and employment outcomes for young people and deliver long‑term fiscal and productivity gains to the Australian community.

Quote attributable to Shorna Moore, Home Time Youth Housing Coalition

“This report shows that investing in youth housing is one of the smartest investments governments can make in terms of community benefit and economic return. A youth housing supplement would deliver stability, opportunity and long‑term productivity dividends.”

“The current system locks young people out of social housing through financial barriers imposed on housing providers. With the third round of the HAFF opening last week, we must act in this budget to ensure young people can access new homes when they are tendered and built.”

Quote attributable to Kate Colvin, Homelessness Australia 

“We can end youth homelessness if we fix the structural barriers locking young people out of housing. A youth housing supplement is a simple and powerful reform that would change lives immediately.”

“The youth tenancies with support profiled in this research show the power of youth housing in turning around young lives and replacing fear and danger with the kinds of lives we want all our kids to have.”


About us:

About the Home Time Youth Housing Coalition

Home Time is supported by over 180 organisations, including Homelessness Australia, Australian Community Housing, National Shelter, Melbourne City Mission, Australian Youth Affairs Coalition, ACOSS, The Salvation Army, Anglicare Australia, Brisbane Youth Service, Mission Australia, Foyer Foundation, YFoundations and the Australian Services Union.


Contact details:

Daniel Scoullar, 0402 596 297, daniel@socialchangeprojects.com.au

More from this category

  • CharitiesAidWelfare, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 27/02/2026
  • 09:00
Bowel Cancer Australia

Australian age-specific clinical practice guidelines being developed for early-onset bowel cancer

Clinical practice guidelines specifically for young Australians with bowel cancer to be funded by Bowel Cancer Australia and developed in collaboration with the Australian…

  • Contains:
  • CharitiesAidWelfare, Government Federal
  • 26/02/2026
  • 17:47
Philanthropy Australia

Government misses another critical opportunity to encourage more giving in Australia

In response tothe Australian Government’s announcement of anincrease in the minimum distribution for Giving Funds, Philanthropy Australia has expressedconcernthatbroader reforms critical to unlocking giving tocharitieshave been sidelined. TodaytheAssistantMinister for Charities, the Hon Andrew Leigh MP, announced that the minimum distribution for Public and Private Giving Funds will increase to 6 per cent per year. Currently, Public and Private Giving Fundsare required todistribute4 and 5 per cent of their net assets eachyearrespectivelyas grants to eligible entities. Giving Funds are a key enabler of generosity for Australians, providing the structure fordonationsto flow to charities.But Australians want more community-based groups to beeligibleto receive…

  • CharitiesAidWelfare
  • 25/02/2026
  • 00:03
Oxfam Australia

Humanitarian organisations petition Israeli High Court as closure deadline approaches

The clock is ticking on a large part of the humanitarian response sustaining civilians in the occupied Palestinian territory. Thirty-seven international aid organisations have been ordered by Israeli authorities to cease operations in the occupied Palestinian territory by the end of February under revised Israeli registration rules. With efforts to force closures imminent, 19 leading humanitarian organisations have taken the unprecedented step of jointly petitioning the Israeli High Court to suspend the measures before irreparable harm is done to civilians who rely on their assistance. On 30 December 2025, the affected organisations were formally notified that their Israeli registrations would…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.